Walker v. Jeffries

45 Miss. 160
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 45 Miss. 160 (Walker v. Jeffries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Jeffries, 45 Miss. 160 (Mich. 1871).

Opinion

Tarbell, J.:

On the 12th day of August, 1861, James Gr. Jeffries and forty others entered into a written obligation in the ordinary form of a promissory note, with a “seal,” however, added to their respective signatures, by which the signers jointly and severally promised, for. value received, to pay B. P. Walker or order the sum of $3,882 32, one day after its date, with interest at 10 per cent. To recover the amount due on this note, the payee instituted a suit against the makers, in the circuit court of Panola county, in May, [163]*1631867. At the November term of that court the defendants appeared and interposed three special pleas, setting up an illegal consideration. The first avers, that “the writing obligatory sued on was executed by them for the loan to them by plaintiff of the sum of money therein specified, which said loan was made by plaintiff to defendants, with an agreement between plaintiff and defendants, that defendants should use said money to arm and equip a company of men, known as the De Soto light dragoons, for the purpose of carrying on a war against the government of the United States. Defendants say that said money was used for the purpose, and that the consideration aforesaid was the only consideration of said writing obligatory,” etc. The second states, that the plaintiff being a member of said military company, and desirous of aiding the organization in procuring uniforms and equipments, proposed to the defendants that if they would execute and deliver to him the writing obligatory sued on, he would loan to the company the money specified to assist in the purchase of arms, etc., to enable the company to engage in war against the United States; that the writing was executed and the money loaned in consideration of such understanding and purpose ; that the money was used by the company in the purchase of uniforms, arms, etc., and that the writing was executed for such consideration' and purpose and none other.

The third alleges, that “the company aforesaid was organized by the government of the Confederate States to make war on the United States,” and then proceeds as in the second.

The plaintiff demurred to these pleas, but the court overruled the demurrer, when the plaintiff replied, denying, their truth and taking issue thereon. .

Upon this issue the cause was tried at the November term, 1868, of the circuit court, resulting in a- verdict for defendants. A motion for a new trial upon the following grounds: 1st. The court erroneously refused to charge the jury on plaintiff’s motion; 2d. The court erroneously charged [164]*164the jury on the motion of the defendants; and, 3d. Said verdict is contrary to law and the evidence,” was overruled.

The instructions of the court upon which the jury acted were, on the part of plaintiff, as follows: “'1st. In the trial of the issue in this cause, the burden of proof is upon the defendants, and it is incumbent on them to establish the defense set up to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury, and, unless the jury are so reasonably satisfied, they will find for the plaintiff; 2d. Unless the jury believe from the testimony that the defendants’ pleas, or one of them, have been proved, they will find for the plaintiff.”

On request of defendants, the court gave the following charge: “If the jury believe from the evidence that a company of soldiers called the De Soto light dragoons was raised for the service of the Confederate States, and to carry on the war then being waged against the United States, and that the plaintiff loaned the money sued for, for the purpose of arming and equipping said company, and that the money was used for that purpose, and that the writing sued on was given to secure the repayment of said money, then the law is with defendants, and the jury must find for them.”

The court refused to give the following instructions requested by plaintiff’: “1st. If the jury believe .from the testimony that the consideration of the writing obligatory sued upon was money loaned by the plaintiff to defendant, not upon any agreement that the money should be used for the purpose of arming and equipping a military company to engage in the war against the government of the United States, but simply with a knowledge on the part of the plaintiff, that defendants intended to use it for that purpose, then the consideration is not illegal;” and “2d. If the jury believe from the testimony that the plaintiff refused to loan money to any member of a military company, who were about to engage in war against the government of the United States, but that he loaned to others, the defendants, who did not belong to any military organization, with a [165]*165knowledge that the defendants intended to use it for the purpose of arming and equipping such military company, then the consideration is not illegal.”

The record contains a bill of exceptions giving in full ' the testimony elicited on the trial, together with the exceptions taken by the plaintiff to the rulings of the court.

■ The following are alleged as errors of the court below: 1st. The court erroneously overruled plaintiff’s demurrer to defendant’s pleas ; 2d.' The court erroneously refused to give to the jury the first and second charges asked for plaintiff; 3d. The court erroneously gave to the jury the first and second charges asked by defendants; 4th. The verdict is contrary to law and evidence; 5th. The court erroneously refused to’set aside the verdict and grant the plaintiff a new trial.

Waiving a discussion of the questions raised by the demurrer to the pleas as unnecessary, if not unprofitable, we Shall confine our examination of this case to the solitary point presented by the two instructions on behalf of the plaintiff, refused by the court. The proposition for our solution is this, if the consideration of the writing sued on was money loaned by the plaintiff to the defendants, not upon any agreement that the money should be used for arming and equipping a military company to engage in war against the government of the United States, but simply with a knowledge on the part of the plaintiff that the defendants so intended to use the money, is the obligation or contract in such case legal ?

Since the cases of Brooks v. Martin, 2 Wall. 70, and Gilliam v. Brown, 43 Miss. 641, there can be no doubt as to the answer to this question. The transaction in the case at bar is, as were the transactions in the authorities referred to, past and executed. The war, in the progress of which the note sued on was created, is terminated. All the parties to this suit' were alike hostile to the United States government, and they were severally amenable to its violated laws. For their unlawful acts, the government had the option to prose[166]*166cute and punish these parties. As to the successful government, so far as the transactions involved in this litigation are concerned, they are also now of the past. This action is instituted to settle the rights of parties, who were all alike citizens of the states engaged in war against the United States, to mutual transactions pending hostilities. Were this an action to recover the purchase price of the arms and equipments which this money, according to the evidence, paid for, the case would be entirely different. It is alleged by the defense, and the proof goes to show, that the note upon which this suit is brought was given for the loan of money in the expectation that the money so obtained would be devoted to arm and equip troops to be employed in hostility to the federal authority, and that it was so used.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 Miss. 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-jeffries-miss-1871.