Taylor v. Turley

33 Md. 500, 1871 Md. LEXIS 13
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 20, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 33 Md. 500 (Taylor v. Turley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Turley, 33 Md. 500, 1871 Md. LEXIS 13 (Md. 1871).

Opinions

Stewart, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Suit was instituted in the Court below, by the payee against the maker, to recover upon the promissory note of the following tenor:

[501]*501“ $9,000. Two years after date, with interest from date, I promise to pay to ¥m. IT. Turley, nine thousand dollars, in current bankable funds, and I am to have the privilege, at any time, of paying after six months from this date.
“February 7th, 1863. N. Gr. Taylor.”

The signature of the defendant to the note was admitted. The plaintiff maintained that he is entitled to recover the nine thousand dollars, with interest, in the currency of the United States. The defendant on the contrary, insists — 1st. That the contract was void, because made upon a loan of Confederate money; 2d. That it was a wagerihg contract, and, therefore, not enforcible; 3d. That the holder of the note, in any event, is only entitled to be paid according to the value of Confederate money, at the time and place where the note was given, compared with United States legal tender currency.

The case w7as tried before the Court below, without the intervention of a jury, by consent of the parties. The Court, after finding the facts, was of the opinion that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the debt in the currency of the United States, and on the 1st of November, 1869, ordered judgment to be entered for the plaintiff. To this the defendant has excepted.

Where the suit is referred to the determination of the Court below, without the aid of a jury, our review is confined to the decision of the law upon the facts agreed to, or found by the Court, it is not our province to determine whether the Court below has correctly found the facts, but whether the law has been applied to the facts. When the case is thus determined below and brought here, the facts should be distinctly found and stated, in order that the questions of law arising thereon may be disposed of by this Court. See Tinges vs. Moale, 25 Md., 484.

The right of the plaintiff to recover, and to what extent, depends upon the legal sufficiency of the facts found to con[502]*502stitute a contract obligatory upon the parties, and the character of the contract.

The well settled principles governing contracts and their construction, will enable us to dispose of this case. We will first consider the defendant’s objection, that the note was a nullity, because the consideration was a loan of Confederate notes.

The Confederate Government, consisting of the eleven States, under whose direction and authority civil war was carried on for upwards' of four years, was recognized as supreme in most of the territory embraced within their limits. It was the government de facto, during the time, within its' military lines. The rights and obligations of a belligerent, in its military character, were recognized by the United States.

In all matters of government therein, its power could not be questioned. 'Civil obedience to its authority was not only a necessity, but the duty of the inhabitants, without which civil order was impossible. This was the government that issued the Confederate notes, which were, not made a legal tender, and were only payable “after the ratification of a treaty of peace between the Confederate States and the United States of America.” These notes were used as money, in the transactions of the people, within the military’ limits of these States.

From its actual supremacy within the territory where this currency circulated, and the necessity of civil obedience of all who remained in it, it must be regarded by the Courts of Law as if it had been issued by a foreign government temporarily occupying a part1 of the United States.

From these considerations, it results that contracts, stipulating for payment in that currency, are binding and operative to the extent of their just obligation.

These plain principles of public law in relation to the legality of contracts under such circumstances, are unquestionable. So far from the state of war existing at the time, [503]*503rendering contracts, made during its pendency, nullities, it is the duty of the Courts, in expounding them, strictly to maintain their validity. In aid of the preservation of social order and civil government, and the maintenance of individual obligation and good faith, they must regard the governing power prevailing at the time, as having authority sufficient for this purpose.

It would, without reason, add to the calamities of war, if the mei’e fact of its pendency annihilated the contracts of parties made under the same governing authority. Such is not the rule in regard to the contracts of individuals disconnected from the belligerent operations.

Uo civilized Court of justice has ever sanctioned such a doctrine. On the contrary, the bona fide and legitimate contracts made under governments of every description, in war as well as peace, are enforcible in our Courts, unless contra bonos mores — against public policy or some positive law.

The Confederate States having held the occupancy and actual supremacy, at the time the note in question was given, of that part of Tennessee where -the parties contracted, the currency allowed by that authority could constitute a sufficient consideration to support the contract between these parties.

These principles of public law were fully discussed and clearly announced by the Supreme Court of the United States, in the recent case of Thorrington vs. Smith, 8 Wallace, 1, which was a bill in equity to enforce the vendor’s lien, for the balance of the purchase money for the sale of lands in the State of Alabama, for $45,000, proved to have been worth, in gold, but $3,000, upon which $35,000 had been paid in Confederate money, and a note for the remaining $10,000 given, to be paid one day after date, which the Supreme Court, under the circumstances of that case, where there was no specific description of the currency in which the note vras to be paid, said, must be understood and construed as intending Confederate notes. The Court below had dis-[504]*504affirmed the legality of the contract and dismissed the bill, but the Supreme Court reversed this ruling, and recognized the contract — thus deciding the very question involved here. There is no difference between that case and this, as to the legality of the contract; both were made within the Confederate limits, and in reference to Confederate money.

But the defendant also objects that this was a wagering contract, because made to depend upon the contingencies of war, and, therefore, void.

A contracting party may oblige himself to pay, in any commodity not prohibited by law, or contra bonos mores, however fluctuating its value. Because the value, at the time of payment, may be uncertain, is no reason, per se, why the contract should be set aside. If this-were so, but few contracts could be sustained, for the great mass of contracts depend upon contingencies.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Md. 500, 1871 Md. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-turley-md-1871.