United States v. Gurney and Others

8 U.S. 333, 2 L. Ed. 638, 4 Cranch 333, 1807 U.S. LEXIS 391
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1808
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 8 U.S. 333 (United States v. Gurney and Others) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Gurney and Others, 8 U.S. 333, 2 L. Ed. 638, 4 Cranch 333, 1807 U.S. LEXIS 391 (1808).

Opinion

Marshall, Ch. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court as follows, viz : — This case comes on upon a special demurrer to a replication filed by the plaintiffs to a plea of payment after the day. The replication is double, and consequently ill. But it is a known rule, that a demurrer brings all the pleadings before the court; in consequence of which, judgment must be rendered against him who has committed the first fault; or, which will most generally produce the same result, for him who, upon the whole record, shall appear to be entitled to their judgment. It, therefore, becomes necessary, to examine the plea of the defendants. By their agreement with the secretary of the treasury, they were bound to pay to the bankers of the United States, in Amsterdam, the sum of 500,000 guilders in the following manner, viz., 230,000 guilders on or before the first day of February; 170,000 guilders on or before the first day of March ; and the remaining 100,000 guilders on or before the first day of June, in the year 1803. The first payment was made on the day, and the last before the day, but the second payment was made on the 13th day of May, instead of the first day of March. On the effect of this payment, the whole case depends.

The defendants plead, that they did, on the 13th day of May, at Amsterdam, pay to the bankers of the United States, for the use of the United *205 States, the sum of 170,000 guilders. The replication admits this payment as pleaded, but denies that it was accepted, received and allowed by the United States in payment and satisfaction of the same sum which was payable on the first of March. The replication proceeds to aver that the said sum of 170,000 guilders was not paid on the first day of March, nor had the defendants paid the damages of twenty per cent, which were stipulated, in case of failure to pay on the day.

The fact, upon these pleading, appears to be, that the payment was received by the United States, without any *stipulation respecting the effect of that receipt, upon their agreement with the defendants. *- If payment to the bankers of the United States, the persons to whom by agreement the money was to be paid, was not payment to the United States, it would not be a payment to the use of the United States, which the plea avers, and the replication in terms admits. In such case, the replication, instead of averring that this sum was not accepted in satisfaction of the same sum, payable at an earlier day, would have averred, and ought to have-averred, that it was not accepted at all, and was not a payment to the use of the United States, in which case, instead of a special replication, issue might have been tendered on the plea. The court, then, understands the fact, as stated in the pleadings, to be, that the money was received without any agreement whatever, and the law must determine the effect of such a payment.

The payment made to the bankers, in Amsterdam, being, then, an actual payment to the United States, the inquiry is, whether it was such a payment, and is so pleaded, as to bar this action ? It is admitted, that the statute of Anne, which allows payment after the day to be pleaded, is in force in Pennsylvania, but it is contended, that this bond is not within that statute ; or, if it is, that this plea is not good under it. If this be a bond within the statute of Anne, on which the court gives no opinion, yet by that statute, the payment must be of the whole sum actually due, or the action for the penalty is not barred. In this case, the sum due on the first of March was-paid on the 13th of May, without interest or damages.

By the United States, it is contended, that damages at the rate of twenty per centum on the sum of 170,000 guilders were then due ; by the defendants, it is contended, that no interest was due. *The words of the [-*343 contract, to which each party refers, are not precisely the same in * the condition of the bond, and in the articles of agreement which are referred to by the bond. There is no contradiction between them ; but there is a variance in this, that the condition of the bond expresses more fully than the articles, the idea of the parties, that in case of failure to perform the contract at Amsterdam, the demand for payment was to be made in Philadelphia. The words of the condition are, “ or in case the said sums shall not be paid as aforesaid, then to repay to the United States the value of the said 500,000-guilders, at the rate of exchange current in Philadelphia, at the time demand of payment is made, together with damages at the rate of twenty per cent., in the same manner as if bills of exchange had been drawn for the said sum,, and they had been returned protested for non-payment, and lawful interest for any delay of payment that may take place after the demand.”

The defendants were merchants, residing and carrying on trade in Philadelphia, in which place the contract was made, and by the law of the state, *206 bills of exchange returned unpaid, under protest, are liable to twenty per cent, damages. It is sufficiently obvious, from these circumstances, and from the words of the condition, that the parties contemplated a repayment in Philadelphia, in the event of non-payment in Amsterdam.

It is contended by the plaintiffs, that the instant the failure to pay the 170,000 guilders, on the first of March, had taken place, a full and complete right to the stipulated damages was vested in the United States, without any further act on their part; and that a payment of the principal sum on the succeeding day would not have relieved the defendants from those damages. In this opinion, the court does not concur with the counsel for the United States.

Contracts are always to be construed with a view to the real intention of the parties. In this contract, the object of the United States was to remit t0 their bankers in Amsterdam a sum of money, for which they had *oeJ casion in Europe. The heavy damages to be incurred by the defendants, in the event of their failing to made their stipulated payments in Amsterdam, were considered as a compensation for the disappointments produced by the non-payment of the money at that place, in such time as to answer the purposes of the contract. Whether payment at the same place, on a subsequent day, would answer these purposes, was for the United States to determine. They might accept it, or they might reject it, and claim whatever the law of their contract would give them. In the event of non-payment in Amsterdam, at the time stipulated, the defendants are to repay to the United States the value of the guilders they shall have failed to pay in Amsterdam, “ at the rate of exchange current in Philadelphia, at the time demand of payment is made, together with damages at the rate of twenty per cent.” The fair interpretation of this agreement is, that the demand is to be made in Philadelphia, that the money is to be repaid in Philadelphia, and that the damages are upon the money there to be repaid. Had a part of the sum of 170,000 guilders been paid on the first of March, it will scarcely be contended that damages would have accrued on that part. A repayment of it could not have been demandable in Philadelphia. It appears to the court, that the acceptance of any part of the sum due in Amsterdam, on a subsequent day, is a waiver of the claim to damages, in Philadelphia, on the sum so accepted, for that sum cannot be demanded in Philadelphia.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 U.S. 333, 2 L. Ed. 638, 4 Cranch 333, 1807 U.S. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gurney-and-others-scotus-1808.