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FAW v. MARSTELLER

U.S.
Jan 1, 1804
6 U.S. 10 (1804)

Opinion

FEBRUARY TERM, 1804.

The circuit court decreed, that the rents which accrued during the existence of paper money should be reduced according to the scale for the time when they became payable, but that the subsequent rents should be paid in specie. From this decree Faw appealed, and the case was now argued by Swann and Mason for the appellant; and by E.J. Lee, Jones, and Key, for the appellee.

For the appellant, it was conterded,

1. That this was a contract within the letter and spirit of the 2d section of the act of assembly of Virginia before mentioned, passed in November 1781, c. 22, (Chancery revision of the laws, p. 147, ) and entitled, "an act directing the mode of adjusting and settling "the payment of certain debts and contracts, and for "other purposes;" and therefore,

2. It was not within the 5th section of that act.

1. This is a contract made in current money of the state, within the period contemplated by the act, payable at a future day or days, for the payment of money, and is therefore within the very words of the 2d section of the act. This point was decided by the court of appeals in Virginia, in the case of Watson and Hartshorne v. Alexander, 1 Wash. 340. The object of that section was to provide for contracts in which the fact of depreciation had increased the ideal value of the consideration of the contract. It is proved in the present case, that the rent was high if payable in specie. It is therefore a case within the spirit as well as within the words of the section; for it is reasonable to presume that the high rent was agreed to be given in consequence of the depreciated state of the paper currency.

2. The 5th section could not mean to provide for cases which were within the spirit of the 2d; because that would be to render the latter section a mere nullity. There would be no use in fixing a scale, if the court were to make a rule according to the circumstances of each particular case.

But the 5th section was intended for the benefit of debtors only. Every case of equity in favour of creditors was provided for by the exception in the 2d. The only two cases particularly specified in the 5th section to authorise the equitable interposition of the court, are, where the money has been tendered and refused, or where the non-payment is owing to the creditor. In both these cases, the equity is in favour of the debtor. The act then proceeds, "or where other circumstances "arise, which in the opinion of the court, would render "a determination according to the above table unjust; "in either case it shall be lawful for the court to award "such judgment as to them shall appear just and equitable." "The two cases are only put by way of example, to show the nature of those other circumstances which will justify the court in departing from the general rule.

In the present case there are no such other circumstances as come within the intention of the legislature; nothing like the examples which they have stated.

The act of assembly is founded upon the idea that every contract for the payment of current money made within the period described, is to be considered prima facie, a contract for the payment of paper money. This idea is founded in reason, because during that period it was almost the only circulating medium. Gold and silver were scarcely known.

But if the 5th section was intended for the benefit of creditors, as well as debtors, still it authorises the court to interfere only in cases attended with extraordinary circumstances. No such circumstances appear in the present case. It was an ordinary and a common contract not differing from the great mass of cases which the legislature intended to subject to the operation of the scale.

At the time when this contract was made, May, 1779, the parties could have had no idea of a scale of depreciation. It was even in a manner criminal to doubt the faith of the money. It might have appreciated until it gained the par of gold and silver. It was therefore natural that they should have had an expectation that the rents would at some future time be payable in specie. — Such must also have been the expectation of all those who made contracts for the payment of current money at distant future periods, and therefore that circumstance cannot vary this case from all others where the money was to be paid in future. The injury arising from that expectation was the very evil which the Legislature intended to guard against.

Argument, for the Appellee.

1. This case is not within the letter or the spirit of the 2d section of the act.

2. It is within the 5th section.

1. It is not within the spirit or letter of the 2d section.

The object of the Legislature was to prevent injury arising from the depreciation of paper money in cases where the contract was made with a view to that currency, and where the parties had not guarded themselves from the effect of its depreciation. The act was not expected to do abstract justice in each case, but to fix a rule which should produce a general good effect. It was predicated upon the idea that an equivalent ought to be paid for the consideration received. The consideration was presumed to pass at the time when the obligation was given, or the contract entered into; and if entered into between certain periods, the value of the consideration was supposed to have been measured by the paper medium. But where any thing on the face of the contract showed that paper money was not in contemplation, then the rule was not to apply; as where the contract was made for gold and silver, tobacco, or other specific thing. A contract therefore in which the parties did not estimate the value of the consideration by the paper medium, was not a contract within the spirit of the 2d section of this act of Assembly. So if the parties themselves had provided for the event of the depreciation and total failure of paper money, and had regulated the price accordingly, the case would be out of the spirit of the law; for the parties themselves had taken care to do the thing which the law supposed them to have neglected, and only for that reason provided a remedy.

Hence in the construction of this act, courts have always traced the contract up to the time when the consideration first moed from the plaintiff to the defendant, as in the case of Pleasants v. Bibb, 1. Wash. 8, where the bond was dated 1st of Feb. 1780, with condition to pay £ 105 on or before Dec. 17, 1781, with interest thereon from the 16 th of Feb. 1779, and it was decided that the debt arose in February 1779, and was to be reduced by the scale for that month. By the same reason, if the debt had been stated to have accrued before Jan. 1777, it would not have been reduced at all, yet it would, by the tender law, have been payable in paper money during its existence, but if not actually paid or tendered in paper during that time, it would not come within the act of Assembly of 1781.

Suppose a contract made in 1779, when the depreciation was twenty for one, and a bond given to pay £ 20 current money on delivery of a horse worth £ 20 current money in 1785. This is another case not within the spirit of the act.

Again, suppose a contract made in 1777, when the market price of wheat was 20 s. a bushel, payable in paper money, by which A. should bind himself and his heirs, to deliver to B. and his heirs, 1000 bushels of wheat per annum, for 1000 years, for which B. agrees for himself and his heirs, to pay ten shillings current money of Virginia per bushel on delivery. Would this contract be within the spirit of the act?

In the present case the lease creates no debt; it is only inducement. The debt arises only from the enjoyment of the property; and nil debet is a good plea, which it would not be if the debt was due by specialty. The consideration of the rent due at the end of any one year was the enjoyment for that year; and if the tenant should be evicted by a paramount title the rent would not be recoverable. The consideration for all the rents since 1781 has accrued since the passage of the law. If the debt in 1800 arises from the enjoyment of the preceding year, is it possible to measure the value of that enjoyment by the depreciated paper of 1779?

No consideration passed at the date of the deed, and no debt was then created.

It is impossible to conceive that an interminable contract, when a new debt is always rising from a new enjoyment, should be measured by the paper money and the enjoyment of 1779.

The act must have meant temporary, and not interminable contracts.

It could not have been the understanding of the parties at the date of the deed, that the rent was forever to be paid in the currency of 1779; which is the construction contended for by the appellant in his answer to the bill. No person had an expectation that paper money would last forever. It was not in the nature of things that it should. Nor is such a construction warranted by the expressions of the deed. The words are "to have and to hold the said lot unto the said Abraham "Faw, his heirs and assigns forever, yielding and "paying for the same, on the 5th day of August next "ensuing, and yearly and every year for ever on the "same day unto the said William Thornton Alexander, "his heirs and assigns, the sum of twenty-six pounds " current money of Virginia." And the covenant of Faw is that he will "yearly and every year, forever, "well and truly pay the aforesaid sum of twenty-six "pounds Virginia currency."

This can only mean money current at the times the rents shall become payable. It cannot be contended, that he could satisfy the terms of the lease by paying the rents since 1782 in paper money.

As this case is not within the spirit, so neither is it within the letter of the second section of the act.

The words are "all debts and contracts entered into "or made in the current money of this state, or of the "United States," "within the period aforesaid, now "remaining due and unfulfilled, or which may become "due at any future day or days, for the payment of "any sum or sums of money, c.

At the date of the deed this was neither a debt nor a contract, in the sense in which those terms are used in the act.

The whole clause must be taken together. The subsequent words explain the kind of debts and contracts intended.

The word debts means debita in præsenti, solvenda in futuro; such as debts due by instalments. But in the present case there was no debt at the date of the deed. If Faw had become bankrupt, the rents not accrued at the time of the bankruptcy could not be proved under the commission; and the certificate would be no bar to the recovery of the future rents. The reason is because there is no debt until after enjoyment. Each gale of rent is as a new and separate contract, and constitutes a new and separate debt.

The words " debts" and " contracts" are not used synonimously, but in contradistinction to each other; and the subsequent epithets are to be applied distributively — reddenda singula singulis. Thus the words "now "remaining due, or which may become due at any future day or days" are to be referred only to the word "debts"; and the expressions "unfulfilled" and "for "the payment of any sum or sums of money" are only applicable to the word "contracts." The meaning therefore is "debts now remaining due, or which may become due at any future day or days," and "contracts, for the payment of any sum or sums of money, now remaining unfulfilled."

It is clear then that this was not a debt within the meaning of the act.

The word contract evidently means such a contract as might be fulfilled. This is implied by the words "now remaining unfulfilled."

It must not only be a contract which might be fulfilled, but it must be then remaining unfulfilled. Now this is not a contract which can ever be fulfilled, strictly speaking; and if the rents had been paid up to the time of passing the act, it would have been fulfilled as far as it was possible ever to fulfil it. If the rents should be paid for a thousand years, it would still be as far from being fulfilled as it was the day of its date. But as the rents were not paid up to the time of passing the act, there was something for the act to operate upon, if it is to be considered as affecting the case at all. The rents then accrued constituted a debt "remaining due," and therefore, perhaps, they were properly subject to the scale. But the future rents constituted no debt; and the contract was constantly renovating and never could be discharged.

The case then is not within the statute. — But if it is, it is within the fifth section.

It has been urged that this section is for the benefit of debtors only. But surely the legislature of Virginia would not so violate the principles of justice, as to provide for the equity of debtors, without also providing for special cases in favour of creditors. The case of Watson Hartshorne v. Alexander, 1 Wash. 340, is full in our favour upon this point. The judgment in that case was not reversed on the merits, but upon a supposed impropriety in the manner of bringing the special circumstances of the case before the court below. But here it is not contended that the facts did not come properly before the court.

It appears that the rent was high at that time if payable in specie, but low if payable in paper money.

The deposition of Wise, who purchased the lot for Slye, states, that he understood at the time that the rents would be payable in specie when paper should cease to circulate.

What was the appellant's own opinion, appears by his having received from Saunders, £ 400, in specie, for a breach of Saunders' covenant to extinguish the rent. If the rent is to be reduced to the sum of £ 1, 3, 7, according to the appellant's idea, he will have received more than three hundred years purchase.

But the parties in this case, made their contract with a full knowledge of the depreciation of paper money. It had already greatly depreciated, and was continuing rapidly to depreciate.

They knew they were forming a contract, which would extend far beyond the possible existence of paper money. That temporary medium therefore could not have had much influence upon either of them. The chance of paying his rent, for some time, in a depreciated currency might have been some small temptation to the appellant to give a little higher rent, but it does not appear to have been a very high rent even if payable in specie, provided specie had been as plenty as it was before the existence of paper money. The small increase of the rent which the existence of paper money occasioned was compensated to the appellant by his right to pay it in a depreciated currency, during the existence of that currency; while the same increase of rent was a compensation to Alexander for his loss by the depreciation.

It was therefore a fair and equitable bargain, in which the subject of depreciation was completely and fairly settled by the parties themselves. This court therefore, as a court of equity, has nothing more to do than to carry into effect, the contract as it was understood by the parties at the time, by reducing to the scale, the rents which accrued during the existence of paper money, and by compelling a payment of the residue in specie.

The intention of the parties constitutes the contract; especially in equity. If it was their intention, (as seems to have been fully proved,) that the rent should be paid in paper money during its existence, and afterwards in specie, then it was a contract to pay the rent in gold and silver after a certain period; which period has by subsequent events been proved to be the 1st of January 1782. As to all the rents therefore which have since accrued it was a contract for gold and silver, and therefore expressly within the exception of the 2d section of the act.

Upon these principles the decree of the court below is founded, and if the court is now to form an equitable adjustment of the contract, it cannot be formed on surer ground than the intentions of the parties themselves, deliberately entered into, with a full knowledge of all the circumstances, and without even an allegation of fraud, mistake, or accident.

In reply, it was observed that the nature of the consideration makes no difference. The case is not varied whether the consideration be a horse, or land; — or the use of a horse, or the use of land — or whether an annuity forever, be granted in consideration of £ 1000 paid in hand — or whether it be a perpetual rent.

If the deed did not create a debt, yet it created a contract. It contains a covenant on the part of Faw to pay every year £ 26 Virginia currency. This is a contract obligatory upon him without enjoyment.

The intention of the parties has been resorted to. That intention can be learned only from the instrument itself. But if we do resort to extraneous evidence, it appears that current money was intended, and that paper money was most naturally within the contemplation of the parties, because there was little specie in circulation. The law was intended to carry into effect the intention of the parties.

It has been said that the consideration must be a past, and not an accruing consideration.

But here the consideration was past. The grantor had parted with his whole right and estate.

In an action of debt for rent upon a demise by deed, it is not necessary to aver occupation and enjoyment. The deed itself is the consideration.


THIS was an appeal by Faw, the original defendant, from a decree of the circuit court of the district of Columbia, sitting as a court of chancery at Alexandria, in July 1803.

The case, as stated by Marshall, ch. j. in delivering the opinion of the court, was as follows:

in the month of May, 1779, the executors of John Alexander in pursuance of a power contained in the will of their testator, set up to the highest bidder on a ground rent for ever, certain lots of land lying in the town of Alexandria.

One of these lots containing half an acre, was struck off to a certain Peter Wise, at the rent of £ 26 per annum, current money of Virginia. Wise bid for Jacob Sly, a citizen of Maryland, who transferred the lot to Abraham Faw, to whom the same was conveyed in fee-simple, by a deed bearing date the 5th of August, 1779, in which the said ground-rent of £ 26 per annum, current money of Virginia, was reserved.

In the year 1784, Abraham Faw divided the said half acre of ground into eight smaller lots, five of which he has sold, reserving a ground-rent for ever, amounting to £ 84 12 s per annum. One of these lots was conveyed by Faw, to Jacob Hess, in the year 1784, at the ground-rent of £ 25 16 s per annum, which lot has been since purchased by Philip Marsteller, the apellee, who has also purchased from the devisee of John Alexander, all his rights in, or issuing from the half-acre lot of ground conveyed to Abraham Faw. Thus Abraham Faw becomes liable to Philip Marsteller, for the rent accruing under the deed of August, 1799, who is himself liable to the said Faw, for the rent accruing on part of the same lot, under the deed executed by Faw to Hess, in November 1784.

In November, 1781, the legislature of Virginia, passed an act, calling paper money out of circulation: and also another act directing the mode for adjusting and settling contracts made in that currency.

The second section of this latter act, after stating, by way of preamble, that "the good people of the State "would labour under many inconveniences for want of "some rule, whereby to settle and adjust the payment "of debts and contracts entered into, or made between "the first day of January, 1777, and the first day of " January, 1782, unless some rule should be by law "established for liquidating and adjusting the same, so "as to do justice as well to the debtor as the creditor;" enacts that from and after the passing of the act, "all "debt and contracts entered into or made in the current "money of this State or the United States, excepting, " at all times, contracts entered into for gold and silve "coin, tobacco, or any other specific property, "within the period aforesaid, now remaining due, and "unfulfilled, or which may become due at any future "day, or days, for the payment of any sum or sums of "money, shall be liquidated, settled, and adjusted agreeably "to a scale of depreciation herein after mentioned "and contained; that is to say, by reducing the "amount of all such debts and contracts to the true "value in specie, at the days or times the same were "incurred or entered into, and upon payment of said "value so found, in specie or other money, equivalent "thereto, the debtors or contractors shall be forever "discharged of and from the said debts or contracts, "any law, custom, or usage to the contrary, in any "wise notwithstanding."

The fourth section establishes the scale of depreciation which shall constitute the rule by which the value of the debts, contracts, and demands, in the act mentioned, shall be ascertained; and the fifth section enacts, "that "where a suit shall be brought for the recovery of a "debt, and it shall appear that the value thereof "hath been tendered and refused; or where it shall appear "that the non-payment thereof hath been owing to "the creditor; or where other circumstances arise "which, in the opinion of the court, before whom the "cause is brought to issue, would render a determination "agreeable to the above table unjust; in either case "it shall and may be lawful for the court to award such "judgment as to them shall appear just and equitable."

The act then empowers the court to direct at what depreciation any judgment shall be discharged on a verdict given for damages, between the first day of January, 1777, and the first day of January, 1782, having "regard to the original injury or contract on which the "damages are founded, and any other proper circumstances "that the nature of the case will admit."

It was proved in the cause, that the contracts made by the executors of John Alexander excited at the time very great attention, and were the subject of general conversation. The prevailing opinion among the bidders was, that the rents would be paid in paper money so long as paper should be the circulating medium, after which they would be paid in specie. Such too was the opinion of Peter Wise, the purchaser of the particular lot which occasioned the existing controversy, and there is reason to suppose it was also the opinion of those who were disposing of the property; it was also thought the rent reserved was low, when considered as payable in paper, but high if to be paid in specie.

It was further proved, that a lot not more valuable than that which occasioned the present contest, was sold in 1774, on a ground-rent of £ 13 5 s per annum, forever, and that a lot less valuable was sold in the year 1784, on a ground-rent of £ 35 per annum. But it appeared from other parts of the testimony, that the lots which were sold in the year 1784, in Alexandria, on ground-rent, were contracted for so much above the value they afterwards bore, that the lessors in very many instances, were under the necessity of reducing the rents one half below the sum originally stipulated, and in some instances the reduction was still greater.


This suit was instituted to recover the rent in arrear, under the deed, executed in August 1779, a part of which rent had accrued during the circulation of paper money.

The circuit court decreed that the rents which became payable in the years 1780, and 1781, should be adjusted by the scale of depreciation, when they respectively became due, and that the rents accruing afterwards should be discharged in specie.

From this decree Faw appealed to this court, and it is alleged that the decree of the court below, is erroneous, because,

1st. The contract of August 1777, is within the 2d section of the act of the Virginia assembly, which has been cited. And if so,

2dly. That it is not within the 5th section of that act.

The descriptive words of the act of assembly are "all "debts and contracts entered into, or made, in the current "money of this state, or of the United States," "now remaining due and unfulfilled, or which may become "due, at any future day or days, for the payment "of any sum or sums of money." These words, it is urged, comprehend in express terms the very contract now before the court. That contract is an engagement entered into within the time specified by the act to pay several sums of current money in future. To make the case still stronger, contracts for gold and silver coin, tobacco, or any other specific property are expressly excepted out of the operation of the law. When those who introduced these exceptions, were so very cautious as expressly to take a contract for tobacco, or other specific property, out of the operations of a law made solely for money contracts, there are additional inducements to believe that every possible contract, not included within the exceptions, was designed to be comprehended in the general rule.

It is admitted in argument, by the council for the appellee, that the terms used in the first part of the section are such, that if they stood alone, they would include, in their letter, the case at bar: but it is contended, that there are subsequent words which limit those just quoted, so as to restrain their operation to contracts capable of being extinguished. These words are, that upon payment of what was the value of the debt or contract at the time it was entered into, "the debtors or "contractors shall be forever discharged of, and from "the said debts or contracts." These words, it is said, can only apply to temporary contracts, such as may be completely fulfilled, and from which the debtors or contractors may, in the language of the law, "be forever "discharged."

It will not be denied that there is much weight in this argument; but it does not appear to the court to be strictly correct. In searching for the literal construction of an act, it would seem to be generally true, that positive and explicit provisions, comprehending in terms a whole class of cases, are not to be restrained, by applying to those cases an implication drawn from subsequent words, unless that implication be very clear, necessary, and irresistible. In the present case, the implication does not appear to the court to be of that description. A contract for the payment of distinct sums of money, at different periods, is very much in the nature of distinct contracts. An action of debt lies for each sum as it becomes due, and when that sum is paid, the debtor or contractor is forever discharged from the contract to pay it. To understand in this sense the words of the act which are considered as restrictive, does not appear to the court to be such a violence to their natural import as to be inadmissible; and to understand them in this sense reconciles the different parts of the clause with each other.

But although the counsel for the appellee may not have established the literal construction for which they insist, yet so much weight is admitted to be in the argument, that if they succeed in showing the case to be out of the mischief intended to be guarded against, or out of the spirit of the law, the letter would not be deemed so unequivocal as absolutely to exclude the construction they contend for.

It is urged, that the mischief designed to be guarded against, is confined to temporary contracts, and that by the spirit of the law, and the construction it has received, the time when the consideration, on which the debt is founded, moved from the creditor, is the real date of contract.

But the court perceives no sufficient ground for saying that this case is taken out of the mischief or spirit of the law by either of the circumstances which have been relied on.

The only real reason for supposing that the law might not be designed to comprehend interminable contracts is, that as paper money must unavoidably cease to circulate during the continuance of the contract, the parties must have measured their agreement by a more permanent standard.

Very great respect, is certainly due to this argument, but it cannot be denied, that an agreement, which is to subsist for a very great length of time, as for a thousand years, would be entered into with precisely the same sentiments, as an agreement to subsist for ever. The contracting parties would be as confident in the one case, as in the other, that the agreement would subsist, after the paper currency would cease to circulate. Yet an agreement for a thousand years, would be within the very words and the spirit of the law, which plainly comprehends engagements for different sums of money, to become due in future at different periods. To suppose a distinction to have been contemplated between two such cases, is to suppose a course of reasoning too unsubstantial, and too finely drawn for the regulation of human action. It seems to be the date, and not the duration of the contract, which was regarded by the legislature. The act is applied directly to the date of contract, and the motive for making it, was, that contracts entered into during the circulation of paper money, ought in justice to be discharged, by a sum differing in intrinsic value, from the nominal sum mentioned in the contract, and that when the legislature removed the delusive standard, by which the value of the thing acquired had been measured, they ought to provide that justice should be done to the parties.

That the time when the consideration was received, constitutes the date of contract, according to the intention of the act seems not to be a correct opinion; nor, if correct, would it affect the present case.

If, for example, a contract had been entered into, in 1779, to be executed in 1789, whereby a specific sum in current money, was to be given for property then to be delivered, no doubt would be entertained, but that the case would come within the law, although the thing sold, would pass out of the vendor after the first of January 1782; yet the contract to pay the money, was entered into in 1779, and in the general legislative view of the subject, the value of the money at the date of the contract, is supposed to have regulated the price of the article.

If in the case of rents, this argument of the counsel for the appellees was correct, it would follow, that rents accruing during the circulation of paper money, or leases made before the first of January, 1777, were within the operation of the act. If enjoyment is the consideration, for which the rent becomes payable, and the date of the consideration is in the spirit of the act the date of contract, then rents accruing between the first of January, 1777, and the first of January, 1782, or leases made prior to the former period, would be payable according to the scale of depreciation, and rents accruing after the first of January, 1782, or leases made for a short term of years, when depreciation was actually at the rate of 500 for one, would be payable in specie at their nominal sum. These consequences follow inevitably, from the construction contended for, and yet it is believed, that no person would admit an exposition, which he acknowledged to involve them.

The position then, that the value of the money at the time of the consideration, for which it was to be paid, was received, if the standard by which the contract is to be measured, is not a correct one, and if correct, it would not apply to this case, because, the real consideration is found in the contract itself, by which the right to enjoy the premises, is conveyed from the grantor to the grantee. This right was defeated by subsequent events, but does not originate in those events.

The case cited from 1st Washington 8, by no means conflicts with this opinion. In that case it was decided that where a written instrument discloses on its face any matter which proves that the contract itself was of a date anterior to the paper, by which it is evidenced, as when a bond carries interest from a past day, the contract shall be considered as of a date antecedent to its execution, and the scale of that antecedent date shall be applied to it. The reason of this decision is, that the price of the article sold, was measured in nominal moneyaccording to its value, at the date of the original contract, and not according to its value when the instrument of writing was executed.

It is then the opinion of the court, that the contract of the 5th of August, 1779, comes within the second section of the act, "directing the mode of adjusting and settling the payment of certain debts and contracts, and for other purposes."

It remains to inquire, whether it is a case proper for the interposition of that equitable power which is conferred on the court by the fifth section of that act, and if so, in what manner, and to what extent that power ought to be interposed.

It is contended by the counsel for the appellant, that this case does not come within the fifth section of the act, because,

1st. That section is designed only for the benefit of debtors.

2d. No testimony out of a written contract can be admitted to explain it.

3d. If the testimony be admitted, it does not prove one of those extraordinary cases, which will be entitled to the benefits of that section.

1st. The fifth section is designed only for the benefit of debtors.

That the provisions of an act, for the regulation of contracts, should be designed uniformly to benefit one of the parties only, is at first view a proposition replete with so much injustice, that the person who would maintain it must certainly show, either that the words of the act will admit fairly of no other construction, or that legislative aid on one side only, was requisite in order to do right between the parties.

The counsel for the appellants endeavour to maintain both these propositions, and if they succeed in either, the case is clearly with them.

In reasoning from the words of the law, they say, that the two cases put, are by way of example, and as they are both cases, where the scale established by the act is to be departed from, for the benefit of the debtor, the general power afterwards given to the court ought to be considered as designed to furnish a remedy in other similar cases not occurring at the time to the legislature.

The words of the section are, "that where a suit shall be brought for the recovery of the debt, and it shall appear, that the value thereof hath been tendered and refused; or where it shall appear that the non-payment thereof hath been owing to the creditor; or where other circumstances arise, which in the opinion of the court, before whom the cause is brought to issue, would render a determination agreeable to the above table unjust; in either case it shall and may be lawful for the court to award such judgment as to them shall appear just and equitable."

The terms used in the third member of the sentence are certainly very comprehensive, and their general natural import does not appear to be so restrained by their connection with other parts of the section, as necessarily to confine their operation to cases where debtors only can derive advantage from them.

The legislature was performing a very extraordinary act. It was interfering in the mass of contracts entered into between the first of January, 1777, and the first of January 1782, and ascertaining the value of those contracts, by a rule different from that which had been adopted by the parties themselves. Altho' the rule might in the general be a just one, yet that it would often produce excessive injury to one or other of the parties, must have been foreseen. It was therefore in some measure necessary to vest in the tribunals applying this rule a power to relax its rigor in such extraordinary cases. This sentiment might produce the fifth section, and if it did, the general terms used, ought to be applied to the relief of the injured party, whether he was the creditor or the debtor.

The opinion that the creditor could not in the contemplation of the legislature be the injured party, because the scale of depreciation gave him the full value of his contract, does not seem to be perfectly correct. According to the law of the contract, all monies accruing under it, which were not received during the currency of paper, would be payable in such other money as might be current at the time of payment. It is impossible to say by any general rule what influence the knowledge of this principle might have on the parties, in every case where the contract was continuing and was to be fulfilled at future very distant periods. Unless the rule applying to such cases, possessed some degree of flexibility, it is apparent that the one or the other of the parties would often be injured, by the interference of the legislature with their contract, and this injury would most generally be sustained by the creditor, in all cases like that at bar, because in all such cases the conviction that a more valuable medium than that circulating at the time, would return during the continuance of the contract, must have had considerable influence on the parties in fixing the sum of money agreed to be paid.

There appears, therefore, nothing in the state of the parties to be affected by the fifth section of the act, which should prevent its application, either to creditors or debtors, as the real justice of the case may require.

But admitting the correctness of this opinion, it is contended that no circumstances can be given in evidence to explain a written contract, and therefore, it is said, that the judgment of the court in this case must be governed absolutely by the deed of August, 1779, unless other subsequent and independent events should control that deed.

The rule which forbids a deed to be contradicted, or explained by parol testimony, is a salutary one, and the court is not disposed to impair it. The application of that rule to this case, however, is not perceived. The testimony which brings this contract within the fifth section, neither contradicts nor explains the deed. It is not pretended that the deed was not executed on the consideration expressed on the face of it. But according to the law which existed when the deed was executed, that consideration would be payable only in gold and silver coin, when gold and silver coin should become the only currency of the country. The law changing the nominal sum of money, by which the debt should be discharged, and giving a general rule, by which a different sum, from that agreed on by the parties, is to be paid and received, authorises a departure from the rule where circumstances shall arise which render a determination agreeable to it unjust. The examination of these circumstances is not entered into for the purpose of contradicting or explaining the deed, but for the purpose of determining which of two rules given by the statute altering the law of the contract does really govern the case.

The argument, that the exception, if it receives the construction which the court seems inclined to give it, would destroy the rule, must be founded on a supposition that in every case the circumstances would be looked into, and a slight injustice in the application of the scale of depreciation to the contract, would be deemed a sufficient motive for departing from it. But this is not the opinion of the court, and it may very readily be perceived that the great mass of contracts made during the circulation of paper money, may be decided by a general scale estimating the value of those contracts, although there may be very strong features in some few cases, which distinguish them as of such peculiar character, that they are embraced by the clause which measures their value by the standard of justice.

But although the just construction of the 5th section of the law, admits a creditor, who would be greatly injured by the application of the general rule to his case, to show circumstances which authorise a departure from that rule; it is contended that such circumstances have not been shown in the cause under consideration.

It is said that the case ought to be an extraordinary one, that the circumstances ought to be uncommon which would warrant a departure from the general principle established for the government of contracts generally.

This is true, and the court would certainly not feel itself at liberty to exercise on a common occasion a discretionary power, limited only by the opinion entertained of the naked justice of the case.

But this appears to the court to be an extraordinary case. The evidence goes a great way in proving that the parties to the contract believed that the sums becoming due under it, would at no distant period be payable in specie only. This testimony is the more to be credited, because it is not easy to conceive any other motive for disposing of the property on the terms on which it was parted with; and still more, because such was the operation of the existing law on the contract when it was entered into. Under this impression, an impression warranted by the law of the land, a very valuable property has been conveyed away for what would have been, under the then existing law, a full consideration, but which a subsequent act of the legislature has reduced certainly to a tenth, perhaps to a twentieth of the real value of the estate disposed of.

Such a case is in the opinion of the court an extraordinary case, which is completely entitled to the extraordinary relief furnished by the act which has occasioned the mischief.

In inquiring to what extent this relief ought to be afforded, or, in the words of the law, what "judgment "will be just and equitable," the court can perceive no other guide, by which its opinion ought, in this case, to be regulated, but the real value of the property at the time it was sold. The record does not furnish satisfactory evidence of this value. It is proved that a lot not superior to that which occasioned the present contest, rented in the year 1774, for £ 13 5 s per annum, and that other lots, perhaps not equal to it, rented in 1784, for £ 25 per annum. It is even proved that a small part of the very lots, about the value of which the inquiry is now to be made, rented in the year 1784, on a ground rent forever, for £ 25 16 s per annum. These are very strong circumstances in support of the decree of the circuit court, fixing the rent at £ 26 per annum, the nominal sum mentioned in the lease. But a majority of the judges are of opinion that the value must be ascertained by a less erring standard.

Neither the value in 1774 nor in 1784, ought to regulate the rent. The value at the date of the contract, must be the sum which in equity and justice the lessee ought to pay, and as this value is not ascertained by the testimony in the record, it ought to be found by a jury. In finding this value however, the jury ought not to be governed by the particular difficulty of obtaining gold and silver coin at the time, but their conduct ought to be regulated by the real value of the property, if a solid equivalent for specie had been made receivable in lieu thereof. On these principles the court has directed the following decree.

This cause, which was abated by the death of the appellee and was revived in the name of his administrator, came on to be heard on the transcript of the record, and was fully argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, the court is of opinion that there is error in the decree of the circuit court in this, that the rents reserved in the lease in the proceedings mentioned, bearing date the 5th day of August, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and seventy-nine, and which were in arrear and unpaid, were decreed to be paid at their value according to the scale of depreciation when the same became due; and that those rents which accrued after the first of January 1782, are decreed to be paid according to the nominal sum mentioned in the lease; whereas, the annual rent reserved in the said lease, ought to be reduced to such a sum in specie, as the property conveyed, was, at the date of the contract, actually worth; to ascertain which, the evidence of the cause not being sufficient for that purpose, an issue ought to have been directed, according to the verdict on which, if satisfactory to the court, the final decree ought to have been rendered.

This court is therefore of opinion, that the decree rendered in this cause, in the circuit court for the county of Alexandria, ought to be reversed, and it is hereby reversed and annulled; and the court proceeding to give such decree as the circuit court ought to have given, doth decree and order that an issue be directed between the parties, to be tried at the bar of the said circuit court, in order to ascertain what was the actual annual value in specie, or in other money equivalent thereto, of the half acre lot of ground which was conveyed, by the executors of John Alexander, deceased, to Abraham Faw, on the 5th day of August 1779, and that in the account between the parties, in order to a final decree, the representatives of said Phillip Marsteller be allowed a credit for the rent which has accrued and which remains unpaid, estimating the said annual rent at such sum as the verdict of a jury, to be approved of by the said circuit court, shall ascertain the half acre lot of ground before mentioned, to have been fairly worth at the date of the contract under which the same is claimed by the said Abraham Faw.


Summaries of

FAW v. MARSTELLER

U.S.
Jan 1, 1804
6 U.S. 10 (1804)
Case details for

FAW v. MARSTELLER

Case Details

Full title:FAW v . MARSTELLER

Court:U.S.

Date published: Jan 1, 1804

Citations

6 U.S. 10 (1804)

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