On 27 June, 1821, the Legislature of the State of Missouri
passed an act entitled "An act for the establishment of loan
offices," by the third section of which the officers of the
treasury of the state, under the direction of the governor, were
required to issue certificates to the amount of $200,000, of
denominations not exceeding ten dollars nor less than fifty cents,
in the following form:
"This certificate shall be receivable at the treasury of any of
the loan offices in the State of Missouri in discharge of taxes or
debts due to the state for the sum of ___ dollars, with interest
for the same at the rate of two percentum per annum from this
date."
These certificates were to be receivable at the treasury, and by
tax gatherers and other public officers in payment of taxes or
moneys due or to become due to the state or to any town or county
therein and by all officers civil and military in the state in
discharge of salaries and fees of office, and in payment for salt
made at the salt springs owned by the state and to be afterwards
leased by the authority of the legislature. The twenty-third
section of the act pledges certain property of the state for the
redemption of these certificates, and the law authorizes the
governor to negotiate a loan of silver or gold for the same
purpose. A provision is made in the law for the gradual withdrawal
of the certificates from circulation, and all the certificates have
since been redeemed. The commissioners of the loan offices were
authorized to make loans of the certificates to citizens of the
state, assigning to each district a proportion of the amount of the
certificates, to be secured by mortgage or personal security, the
loans to bear interest not exceeding six percent per annum and the
loans on personal property to be for less than $200.
Held
that the certificates issued under the authority of the law of
Missouri, were "bills of credit," and that their emission was
prohibited by the Constitution of the United States which declares
that no state shall "emit bills of credit"
A promissory note given for certificates issued at the loan
office of Chariton in Missouri, payable to the State of Missouri,
under the act of the legislature "establishing loan offices" is
void.
The action was assumpsit on a promissory note, and the record
stated
"That neither party having required a jury, the cause was
submitted to the court, and the court having seen and heard the
evidence, the court found that the defendants did assume as the
plaintiff had declared; that the consideration for the note and the
assumpsit, was for loan office certificates, loaned by the State of
Missouri at her loan office in Chariton, which certificates were
issued under 'An act for establishing loan offices,', &c.,
held that it could not be doubted that the declaration is
on a note given in pursuance of the act of Missouri, and that under
the plea of
nonassumpsit, the defendants were at liberty
to question the validity of the consideration which was the
foundation of the contract and the constitutionality of the law in
which it originated. The record, thus exhibiting the case, gives
jurisdiction to this Court over the case on
Page 29 U. S. 411
a writ of error prosecuted by the defendants to this Court from
the Supreme Court of Missouri under the provisions of the
twenty-fifth section of the Judiciary Act of 1789."
Everything which disaffirms the contract, everything which shows
it to be void, may be given in evidence on the general issue in an
action of assumpsit.
In its enlarged and perhaps literal sense, the term "bill of
credit" may comprehend any instrument by which a state engages to
pay money at a future day, thus including a certificate given for
money borrowed. But the language of the Constitution itself and the
mischief to be prevented equally limit the interpretation of the
terms. The word "emit" is never employed in describing those
contracts by which a state binds itself to pay money at a future
day for services actually received, or for money borrowed for
present use. Nor are instruments executed for such purposes in
common language denominated "bills of credit." "To emit bills of
credit" conveys to the mind the idea of issuing paper intended to
circulate through the community for its ordinary purposes as money,
which paper is redeemable at a future day. This is the sense in
which the terms have always been understood.
The Constitution considers the emission of bills of credit and
the enactment of tender laws as distinct operations independent of
each other, which may be separately performed. Both are forbidden.
To sustain the one because it is not also the other -- to say that
bills of credit may be emitted if they be not made a tender in
payment of debts -- is in effect to expunge that distinct
independent prohibition and to read the clause as if it had been
entirely omitted.
It has been long settled that a promise made in consideration of
an act which is forbidden by the law is void. It will not be
questioned that an act forbidden by the Constitution of the United
States, which is the supreme law, is against law.
In 1823, an action of trespass on the case was instituted in the
Circuit Court for the County of Chariton in the State of Missouri
by the State of Missouri against Hiram Craig and others. The
declaration sets forth the cause of action in the following
terms:
"For that whereas heretofore, on 1 August in the year of our
Lord 1822, at the County of Chariton aforesaid, the said Craig,
John Moore, and Ephraim Moore made their certain promissory note in
writing bearing date the day and year aforesaid, and now to the
court here shown, and thereby and then and there, for value
received, jointly and severally promised to pay to the State of
Missouri, on 1 November, 1822, at the loan office in Chariton, the
sum of $199.99
Page 29 U. S. 412
and the two percentum per annum, the interest accruing on the
certificates borrowed, from 1 October, 1821, nevertheless the said
Hiram Craig, John Moore, and Ephraim Moore did not on 1 November or
at any time before or since, pay to the State of Missouri, at the
loan office in Chariton, the said sum of $199.99 or the two
percentum per annum, the interest accruing on the certificates
borrowed, from 1 October, 1821, but the same to pay,"
&c.
To this declaration the defendants pleaded the general issue,
and neither party requiring a trial by jury, the case was submitted
to the court on the evidence and the arguments of counsel. The
record contained the following entry of the proceedings of the
court:
"And afterwards, at a court began and held at Chariton, on
Monday 1 November, 1824, and on the second day of said court, in
open court, the parties came into court by their attorneys, and
neither party requiring a jury, the cause is submitted to the
court; therefore, all and singular the matter and things and
evidences being seen and heard by the court, it is found by them,
that the said defendants did assume upon themselves, in manner and
form as the plaintiffs, by their counsel, allege and the court also
finds that the consideration for which the writing declared upon,
and the assumpsit was made, was for the loan of loan office
certificates, loaned by the state at her loan office at Chariton,
which certificates were issued, and the loan made in the manner
pointed out by an Act of the Legislature of the said State of
Missouri, approved 27 June, 1821, entitled, 'an act for the
establishment of loan offices, and the acts amendatory and
supplementary thereto.' And the court does further find that the
plaintiff hath sustained damages by reason of the nonperformance of
the assumptions and undertakings of them, the said defendants, to
the sum of $237.79. Therefore it is considered,"
&c.
The defendants in the Circuit Court of the County of Chariton
appealed, in 1825, to the Supreme Court of the State of
Page 29 U. S. 413
Missouri, the highest tribunal in that state, where the judgment
of the circuit court was affirmed.
The defendants prosecuted this writ of error, under the
twenty-fifth section of the Judiciary Act of 1789.
The act of the Legislature of Missouri, under which the
certificates were issued which formed the consideration of the note
declared upon, was passed on 27 June, 1821. It is entitled "An act
for the establishment of loan offices, &c." The provisions of
the third, thirteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth, twenty-third and
twenty-fourth sections of the act, are all that have a connection
with the questions in the case which were before the court.
"Sec. 3. Be it further enacted that the auditor of public
accounts and treasurer, under the direction of the governor, shall,
and they are hereby required to issue certificates signed by the
said auditor and treasurer to the amount of $200,000, of
denominations not exceeding ten dollars, nor less than fifty cents
(to bear such devices as they may deem the most safe) in the
following form, to-wit: this certificate shall be receivable at the
Treasury or any of the loan offices of the State of Missouri, in
the discharge of taxes or debts due to the state, for the sum of $
_____, with interest for the same, at the rate of two percentum per
annum from this date, the ___ day of _____ 182_."
"Sec. 13. Be it further enacted that the certificates of the
said loan office shall be receivable at the treasury of the state,
and by all tax gatherers and other public officers, in payment of
taxes or other moneys now due, or to become due to the state or any
county or town therein, and the said certificates shall also be
received by all officers civil and military in the state, in
discharge of salaries and fees of office."
"Sec. 15. Be it further enacted that the commissioners of the
said loan offices shall have power to make loans of the said
certificates to citizens of this state, residing within their
respective districts only, and in each district a proportion shall
be loaned to the citizens of each county therein, according to the
number thereof, secured by mortgage or personal security, provided
that the sum loaned on mortgage shall
Page 29 U. S. 414
never exceed one-half the real unencumbered value of the estate
so mortgaged; provided also that no loans shall ever be made for a
longer period than one year, nor at a greater interest than at the
rate of six percent per annum, which interest shall be always
payable in advance, nor shall a loan in any case be renewed, unless
the interest on such reloan be also paid in advance; provided also
that the commissioners aforesaid shall never make a call for the
payment of any installment at a greater rate than ten percentum for
every six months, and that whenever any installment to a greater
amount than at the rate of ten percentum per annum be required, at
least sixty days previous notice shall be given to the person or
persons thus required to pay, and provided also that all and every
person failing to make payment shall be deprived in future of
credit in such office, and be liable to suit immediately, for the
whole amount by him or them due."
"Sec. 16. Be it further enacted that the said commissioners of
each of the said offices are further authorized to make loans on
personal securities, by them deemed good and sufficient, for sums
less than $200; which securities shall be jointly and severally
bound for the payment of the amount so loaned, with interest
thereon, under the regulations contained in the preceding section
of this act."
"Sec. 23. Be it further enacted that the general assembly shall,
as soon as may be, cause the salt springs and lands attached
thereto given by Congress to this state, to be leased out, and it
shall always be the fundamental condition in such leases that the
lessee or lessees shall receive the certificates hereby required to
be issued, in payment for salt, at a price not exceeding that which
may be prescribed by law, and all the proceeds of the said salt
springs, the interest accruing to the state, and all estates
purchased by officers of the several offices, under the provisions
of this act, and all the debts now due, or hereafter to be due to
this state, are hereby pledged, and constituted a fund for the
redemption of the certificates hereby required to be issued, and
the faith of the state is hereby also pledged for the same
purpose."
"Sec. 24. Be it further enacted that it shall be the duty of the
auditor and treasurer to withdraw, annually, from circulation
Page 29 U. S. 415
one tenth part of the certificates which are hereby required to
be issued,"
&c.
Page 29 U. S. 425
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court,
JUSTICES THOMPSON, JOHNSON, and McLEAN dissenting.
This is a writ of error to a judgment rendered in the court of
last resort, in the State of Missouri affirming a judgment obtained
by the state in one of its inferior courts against Hiram Craig and
others on a promissory note.
The judgment is in these words:
"And afterwards at a court, . . . the parties came into court by
their attorneys, and, neither party desiring a jury, the cause is
submitted to the court; therefore, all and singular the matters and
things being seen and heard by the court, it is found by them that
the said defendants did assume upon themselves, in manner and form,
as the plaintiff by her counsel alleged. And the court also finds
that the consideration for which the writing declared upon and the
assumpsit was made was for the loan of loan office certificates,
loaned by the state at her loan office at Chariton, which
certificates were issued, and the loan made in the manner pointed
out by an act of the Legislature of the said State of Missouri,
approved 27 June, 1821, entitled an act for the establishment of
loan offices, and the acts amendatory and supplementary thereto,
and the court do further find, that the plaintiff has sustained
damages by reason of the nonperformance of the assumptions and
undertakings of them, the said defendants, to the sum of $237.79,
and do assess her damages to that sum. Therefore it is
considered,"
&c.
The first inquiry is into the jurisdiction of the Court.
The twenty-fifth section of the Judicial Act declares
"That a final judgment or decree in any suit in the highest
court of law or equity of a state, in which a decision in the suit
could be had, where is drawn in question . . . the validity of a
statute of, or an authority exercised under any state, on the
ground of their being repugnant to the Constitution, treaties or
laws of the United States, and the decision is in favor of such
their validity, . . . may be re-examined, and reversed or affirmed
in the Supreme Court of the United States."
To give jurisdiction to this Court, it must appear in the
Page 29 U. S. 426
record 1. that the validity of a statute of the State of
Missouri was drawn in question on the ground of its being repugnant
to the Constitution of the United States; 2. that the decision was
in favor of its validity.
1. To determine whether the validity of a statute of the state
was drawn in question, it will be proper to inspect the pleadings
in the cause, as well as the judgment of the court.
The declaration is on a promissory note, dated on 1 August,
1822, promising to pay to the State of Missouri, on 1 November,
1822, at the loan office in Chariton, the sum of $199.99, and the
two percent per annum, the interest accruing on the certificates
borrowed from 1 October, 1821. This note is obviously given for
certificates loaned under the act, "for the establishment of loan
offices." That act directs that loans on personal securities shall
be made of sums less than $200. This note is for $199.99. The act
directs that the certificates issued by the state shall carry two
percent interest from the date, which interest shall be calculated
in the amount of the loan. The note promises to repay the sum, with
the two percent interest accruing on the certificates borrowed,
from 1 October, 1821. It cannot be doubted that the declaration is
on a note given in pursuance of the act which has been
mentioned.
Neither can it be doubted that the plea of
nonassumpsit
allowed the defendants to draw into question at the trial the
validity of the consideration on which the note was given.
Everything which disaffirms the contract, everything which shows it
to be void, may be given in evidence on the general issue in an
action of assumpsit. The defendants therefore were at liberty to
question the validity of the consideration which was the foundation
of the contract, and the constitutionality of the law in which it
originated.
Have they done so?
Had the cause been tried before a jury, the regular course would
have been to move the court to instruct the jury that the act of
assembly, in pursuance of which the note was given, was repugnant
to the Constitution of the United States,
Page 29 U. S. 427
and to except to the charge of the judges, if in favor of its
validity, or a special verdict might have been found by the jury,
stating the act of assembly, the execution of the note in payment
of certificates loaned in pursuance of that act, and referring its
validity to the court. The one course or the other would have shown
that the validity of the act of assembly was drawn into question on
the ground of its repugnancy to the Constitution, and that the
decision of the court was in favor of its validity. But the one
course or the other would have required both a court and jury.
Neither could be pursued where the office of the jury was performed
by the court. In such a case, the obvious substitute for an
instruction to the jury, or a special verdict, is a statement by
the court of the points in controversy, on which its judgment is
founded. This may not be the usual mode of proceeding, but it is an
obvious mode, and if the court of the state has adopted it, this
Court cannot give up substance for form.
The arguments of counsel cannot be spread on the record. The
points urged in argument cannot appear. But the motives stated by
the court on the record for its judgment, and which form a part of
the judgment itself, must be considered as exhibiting the points to
which those arguments were directed, and the judgment as showing
the decision of the court upon those points. There was no jury to
find the facts and refer the law to the court, but if the court,
which was substituted for the jury, has found the facts on which
its judgment was rendered, its finding must be equivalent to the
finding of a jury. Has the court, then, substituting itself for a
jury, placed facts upon the record, which, connected with the
pleadings, show that the act in pursuance of which this note was
executed was drawn into question, on the ground of its repugnancy
to the Constitution?
After finding that the defendants did assume upon themselves,
&c., the court proceeds to find
"that the consideration for which the writing declared upon and
the assumpsit was made, was the loan of loan office certificates
loaned by the state at her loan office at Chariton, which
certificates were issued and the loan made, in the manner pointed
out
Page 29 U. S. 428
by an act of the Legislature of the said State of Missouri,
approved 27 June, 1821, entitled"
&c.
Why did not the court stop immediately after the usual finding
that the defendants assumed upon themselves? Why proceed to find
that the note was given for loan office certificates issued under
the act contended to be unconstitutional, and loaned in pursuance
of that act, if the matter thus found was irrelevant to the
question they were to decide?
Suppose the statement made by the court to be contained in the
verdict of a jury which concludes with referring to the court the
validity of the note thus taken in pursuance of the act, would not
such a verdict bring the constitutionality of the act, as well as
its construction, directly before the court? We think it would;
such a verdict would find that the consideration of the note was
loan office certificates, issued and loaned in the manner
prescribed by the act. What could be referred to the court by such
a verdict, but the obligation of the law? It finds that the
certificates for which the note was given were issued in pursuance
of the act, and that the contract was made in conformity with it.
Admit the obligation of the act, and the verdict is for the
plaintiff; deny its obligation, and the verdict is for the
defendant. On what ground can its obligation be contested but its
repugnancy to the Constitution of the United States? No other is
suggested. At any rate, it is open to that objection. If it be in
truth repugnant to the Constitution of the United States, that
repugnancy might have been urged in the state, and may consequently
be urged in this Court, since it is presented by the facts in the
record, which were found by the court that tried the cause.
It is impossible to doubt that, in point of fact, the
constitutionality of the act, under which the certificates were
issued that formed the consideration of this note, constituted the
only real question made by the parties, and the only real question
decided by the court. But the record is to be inspected with
judicial eyes, and, as it does not state in express terms that this
point was made, it has been contended that this Court cannot assume
the fact that it was made or determined in the tribunal of the
state.
Page 29 U. S. 429
The record shows distinctly that this point existed, and that no
other did exist; the special statement of facts made by the court
as exhibiting the foundation of its judgment contains this point
and no other. The record shows clearly that the cause did depend,
and must depend, on this point alone. If in such a case, the mere
omission of the court of Missouri, to say, in terms, that the act
of the legislature was constitutional, withdraws that point from
the cause, or must close the judicial eyes of the appellate
tribunal upon it; nothing can be more obvious than that the
provisions of the Constitution, and of an act of Congress, may be
always evaded, and may be often, as we think they would be in this
case, unintentionally defeated.
But this question has frequently occurred, and has, we think,
been frequently decided in this Court.
Smith v.
State of Maryland, 6 Cranch 286.
Martin
v. Hunter's Lessee, 1 Wheat. 355.
Miller v.
Nicholls, 4 Wheat. 311.
Williams
v. Norris, 12 Wheat. 117.
Wilson v.
Black Bird Creek Marsh Company, 2 Pet. 245, and
Harris v. Dennie in this term are all, we think, expressly
in point. There has been perfect uniformity in the construction
given by this Court to the twenty-fifth section of the Judicial
Act. That construction is that it is not necessary to state, in
terms, on the record, that the Constitution, or a treaty or law of
the United States has been drawn in question, or the validity of a
state law, on the ground of its repugnancy to the Constitution. It
is sufficient if the record shows that the Constitution, or a
treaty or law of the United States must have been construed, or
that the constitutionality of a state law must have been
questioned, and the decision has been in favor of the party
claiming under such law.
We think, then, that the facts stated on the record presented
the question of repugnancy between the Constitution of the United
States and the act of Missouri to the court for its decision. If it
was presented, we are to inquire,
2. Was the decision of the court in favor of its validity?
The judgment in favor of the plaintiff is a decision in favor of
the validity of the contract, and consequently of
Page 29 U. S. 430
the validity of the law by the authority of which the contract
was made.
The case is, we think, within the twenty-fifth section of the
Judicial Act, and consequently within the jurisdiction of this
Court.
This brings us to the great question in the cause: is the act of
the Legislature of Missouri repugnant to the Constitution of the
United States?
The counsel for the plaintiffs in error maintain, that it is
repugnant to the Constitution, because its object is the emission
of bills of credit contrary to the express prohibition contained in
the tenth section of the first article.
The act under the authority of which the certificates loaned to
the plaintiffs in error were issued, was passed on 26 June, 1821,
and is entitled "an act for the establishment of loan offices." The
provisions that are material to the present inquiry, are
comprehended in the third, thirteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth,
twenty-third and twenty-fourth sections of the act, which are in
these words:
Section the third enacts:
"That the auditor of public accounts and treasurer, under the
direction of the governor, shall, and they are hereby required to
issue certificates, signed by the said auditor and treasurer, to
the amount of $200,000, of denominations not exceeding ten dollars,
nor less than fifty cents (to bear such devices as they may deem
the most safe), in the following form, to-wit:"
" This certificate shall be receivable at the Treasury, or any
of the loan offices of the State of Missouri, in the discharge of
taxes or debts due to the state, for the sum of $_____, with
interest for the same, at the rate of two percentum per annum from
this date, the ___ day of _____ 182-."
The thirteenth section declares:
"That the certificates of the said loan office shall be
receivable at the Treasury of the state, and by all tax gatherers
and other public officers, in payment of taxes or other moneys now
due to the state or to any county or town therein, and the said
certificates shall also be received by all officers civil and
military in the state, in the discharge of salaries and fees of
office."
The fifteenth section provides:
"That the commissioners
Page 29 U. S. 431
of the said loan offices shall have power to make loans of the
said certificates, to citizens of this state, residing within their
respective districts only, and in each district a proportion shall
be loaned to the citizens of each county therein, according to the
number thereof,"
&c.
Section sixteenth.
"That the said commissioners of each of the said offices are
further authorized to make loans on personal securities by them
deemed good and sufficient, for sums less than $200, which
securities shall be jointly and severally bound for the payment of
the amount so loaned, with interest thereon,"
&c.
Section twenty-third.
"That the general assembly shall, as soon as may be, cause the
salt springs and lands attached thereto, given by Congress to this
state, to be leased out, and it shall always be the fundamental
condition in such leases, that the lessee or lessees shall receive
the certificates hereby required to be issued, in payment for salt,
at a price not exceeding that which may be prescribed by law, and
all the proceeds of the said salt springs, the interest accruing to
the state, and all estates purchased by officers of the said
several offices under the provisions of this act, and all the debts
now due or hereafter to be due to this state, are hereby pledged
and constituted a fund for the redemption of the certificates
hereby required to be issued, and the faith of the state is hereby
also pledged for the same purpose."
Section twenty-fourth.
"That it shall be the duty of the said auditor and treasurer to
withdraw annually from circulation, one-tenth part of the
certificates which are hereby required to be issued,"
&c.
The clause in the Constitution which this act is supposed to
violate is in these words: "No state shall . . . emit bills of
credit."
What is a bill of credit? What did the Constitution mean to
forbid?
In its enlarged, and perhaps its literal sense, the term "bill
of credit" may comprehend any instrument by which a state engages
to pay money at a future day, thus including a certificate given
for money borrowed. But the language
Page 29 U. S. 432
of the Constitution itself, and the mischief to be prevented,
which we know from the history of our country, equally limit the
interpretation of the terms. The word "emit," is never employed in
describing those contracts by which a state binds itself to pay
money at a future day for services actually received, or for money
borrowed for present use; nor are instruments executed for such
purposes, in common language, denominated "bills of credit." To
"emit bills of credit" conveys to the mind the idea of issuing
paper intended to circulate through the community for its ordinary
purposes, as money, which paper is redeemable at a future day. This
is the sense in which the terms have been always understood.
At a very early period of our colonial history, the attempt to
supply the want of the precious metals by a paper medium was made
to a considerable extent, and the bills emitted for this purpose
have been frequently denominated bills of credit. During the war of
our revolution, we were driven to this expedient, and necessity
compelled us to use it to a most fearful extent. The term has
acquired an appropriate meaning, and "bills of credit" signify a
paper medium, intended to circulate between individuals, and
between government and individuals, for the ordinary purposes of
society. Such a medium has been always liable to considerable
fluctuation. Its value is continually changing; and these changes,
often great and sudden, expose individuals to immense loss, are the
sources of ruinous speculations, and destroy all confidence between
man and man. To cut up this mischief by the roots, a mischief which
was felt through the United States, and which deeply affected the
interest and prosperity of all; the people declared in their
constitution, that no state should emit bills of credit. If the
prohibition means anything, if the words are not empty sounds, it
must comprehend the emission of any paper medium, by a state
government, for the purpose of common circulation.
What is the character of the certificates issued by authority of
the act under consideration? What office are they to perform?
Certificates signed by the auditor and treasurer of the state, are
to be issued by those officers to the
Page 29 U. S. 433
amount of $200,000, of denominations not exceeding ten dollars,
nor less than fifty cents. The paper purports on its face to be
receivable at the treasury or at any loan office of the State of
Missouri in discharge of taxes or debts due to the state.
The law makes them receivable in discharge of all taxes or debts
due to the state or any county or town therein, and of all salaries
and fees of office, to all officers civil and military within the
state, and for salt sold by the lessees of the public salt works.
It also pledges the faith and funds of the state for their
redemption.
It seems impossible to doubt the intention of the legislature in
passing this act, or to mistake the character of these
certificates, or the office they were to perform. The denominations
of the bills, from ten dollars to fifty cents, fitted them for the
purpose of ordinary circulation, and their reception in payment of
taxes, and debts to the government and to corporations, and of
salaries and fees, would give them currency. They were to be put
into circulation -- that is emitted by the government. In addition
to all these evidences of an intention to make these certificates
the ordinary circulating medium of the country, the law speaks of
them in this character, and directs the auditor and treasurer to
withdraw annually one-tenth of them from circulation. Had they been
termed "bills of credit," instead of "certificates," nothing would
have been wanting to bring them within the prohibitory words of the
Constitution.
And can this make any real difference? Is the proposition to be
maintained that the Constitution meant to prohibit names, and not
things? That a very important act, big with great and ruinous
mischief, which is expressly forbidden by words most appropriate
for its description, may be performed by the substitution of a
name? That the Constitution, in one of its most important
provisions, may be openly evaded by giving a new name to an old
thing? We cannot think so. We think the certificates emitted under
the authority of this act, are as entirely bills of credit, as if
they had been so denominated in the act itself.
But it is contended that though these certificates should be
Page 29 U. S. 434
deemed bills of credit, according to the common acceptation of
the term, they are not so in the sense of the Constitution, because
they are not made a legal tender.
The Constitution itself furnishes no countenance to this
distinction. The prohibition is general. It extends to all bills of
credit, not to bills of a particular description. That tribunal
must be bold indeed, which, without the aid of other explanatory
words, could venture on this construction. It is the less
admissible in this case because the same clause of the Constitution
contains a substantive prohibition to the enactment of tender laws.
The Constitution therefore considers the emission of bills of
credit and the enactment of tender laws as distinct operations,
independent of each other, which may be separately performed. Both
are forbidden. To sustain the one, because it is not also the other
-- to say that bills of credit may be emitted, if they be not made
a tender in payment of debts -- is in effect to expunge that
distinct independent prohibition, and to read the clause as if it
had been entirely omitted. We are not at liberty to do this.
The history of paper money has been referred to, for the purpose
of showing that its great mischief consists in being made a tender,
and that therefore the general words of the Constitution may be
restrained to a particular intent.
Was it even true, that the evils of paper money resulted solely
from the quality of its being made a tender, this Court would not
feel itself authorized to disregard the plain meaning of words, in
search of a conjectural intent to which we are not conducted by the
language of any part of the instrument. But we do not think that
the history of our country proves either, that being made a tender
in payment of debts, is an essential quality of bills of credit, or
the only mischief resulting from them. It may, indeed, be the most
pernicious; but that will not authorize a court to convert a
general into a particular prohibition.
We learn from Hutchinson's History of Massachusetts, vol. 1, p.
402, that bills of credit were emitted for the first time in that
colony in 1690. An army returning unexpectedly from an expedition
against Canada, which had proved as disastrous as the plan was
magnificent, found the government
Page 29 U. S. 435
totally unprepared to meet their claims. Bills of credit were
resorted to, for relief from this embarrassment. They do not appear
to have been made a tender, but they were not on that account the
less bills of credit, nor were they absolutely harmless. The
emission, however, not being considerable, and the bills being soon
redeemed, the experiment would have been productive of not much
mischief, had it not been followed by repeated emissions to a much
larger amount. The subsequent history of Massachusetts abounds with
proofs of the evils with which paper money is fraught, whether it
be or be not a legal tender.
Paper money was also issued in other colonies, both in the north
and south, and whether made a tender or not, was productive of
evils in proportion to the quantity emitted. In the war which
commenced in America in 1755, Virginia issued paper money at
several successive sessions, under the appellation of Treasury
notes. This was made a tender. Emissions were afterwards made in
1769, in 1771, and in 1773. These were not made a tender; but they
circulated together; were equally bills of credit; and were
productive of the same effects. In 1775 a considerable emission was
made for the purposes of the war. The bills were declared to be
current, but were not made a tender. In 1776, an additional
emission was made, and the bills were declared to be tender. The
bills of 1775 and 1776 circulated together; were equally bills of
credit, and were productive of the same consequences.
Congress emitted bills of credit to a large amount, and did not,
perhaps could not, make them a legal tender. This power resided in
the states. In May 1777, the Legislature of Virginia passed an act
for the first time making the bills of credit issued under the
authority of Congress a tender so far as to extinguish interest. It
was not until March, 1781 that Virginia passed an act making all
the bills of credit which had been emitted by Congress, and all
which had been emitted by the state, a legal tender in payment of
debts. Yet they were in every sense of the word bills of credit,
previous to that time, and were productive of all the consequences
of paper money. We cannot then assent to the proposition
Page 29 U. S. 436
that the history of our country furnishes any just argument in
favor of that restricted construction of the Constitution, for
which the counsel for the defendant in error contends.
The certificates for which this note was given, being in truth
"bills of credit" in the sense of the Constitution, we are brought
to the inquiry:
Is the note valid of which they form the consideration?
It has been long settled that a promise made in consideration of
an act which is forbidden by law is void. It will not be questioned
that an act forbidden by the Constitution of the United States,
which is the supreme law, is against law. Now the Constitution
forbids a state to "emit bills of credit." The loan of these
certificates is the very act which is forbidden. It is not the
making of them while they lie in the loan offices, but the issuing
of them, the putting them into circulation, which is the act of
emission -- the act that is forbidden by the Constitution. The
consideration of this note is the emission of bills of credit by
the state. The very act which constitutes the consideration is the
act of emitting bills of credit in the mode prescribed by the law
of Missouri, which act is prohibited by the Constitution of the
United States.
Cases which we cannot distinguish from this in principle have
been decided in state courts of great respectability and in this
Court. In the case of the
Springfield Bank v. Merrick, 14
Mass. 322, a note was made payable in certain bills, the loaning or
negotiating of which was prohibited by statute, inflicting a
penalty for its violation. The note was held to be void. Had this
note been made in consideration of these bills, instead of being
made payable in them, it would not have been less repugnant to the
statute, and would consequently have been equally void.
In
Hunt v. Knickerbocker, 5 Johns. 327, it was decided
that an agreement for the sale of tickets in a lottery, not
authorized by the Legislature of the state, although instituted
under the authority of the government of another state, is contrary
to the spirit and policy of the law and void. The consideration on
which the agreement was founded being illegal, the agreement was
void. The books both of
Page 29 U. S. 437
Massachusetts and New York abound with cases to the same effect.
They turn upon the question whether the particular case is within
the principle, not on the principle itself. It has never been
doubted that a note given on a consideration which is prohibited by
law is void. Had the issuing or circulation of certificates of this
or of any other description been prohibited by a statute of
Missouri, could a suit have been sustained in the courts of that
state on a note given in consideration of the prohibited
certificates? If it could not, are the prohibitions of the
Constitution to be held less sacred than those of a state law?
It had been determined, independently of the acts of Congress on
that subject, that sailing under the license of an enemy is
illegal.
Patton v.
Nicholson, 3 Wheat. 204, was a suit brought in one
of the courts of this district on a note given by Nicholson to
Patton, both citizens of the United States, for a British license.
The United States was then at war with Great Britain, but the
license was procured without any intercourse with the enemy. The
judgment of the circuit court was in favor of the defendant, and
the plaintiff sued out a writ of error. The counsel for the
defendant in error was stopped, the court declaring that the use of
a license from the enemy being unlawful, one citizen had no right
to purchase from or sell to another such a license, to be used on
board an American vessel. The consideration for which the note was
given being unlawful, it followed of course that the note was
void.
A majority of the Court feels constrained to say that the
consideration on which the note in this case was given, is against
the highest law of the land, and that the note itself is utterly
void. In rendering judgment for the plaintiff, the court for the
State of Missouri decided in favor of the validity of a law which
is repugnant to the Constitution of the United States.
In the argument, we have been reminded by one side of the
dignity of a sovereign state, of the humiliation of her submitting
herself to this tribunal, of the dangers which may result from
inflicting a wound on that dignity; by the other, of the still
superior dignity of the people of the United States,
Page 29 U. S. 438
who have spoken their will, in terms which we cannot
misunderstand.
To these admonitions, we can only answer: that if the exercise
of that jurisdiction which has been imposed upon us by the
Constitution and laws of the United States, shall be calculated to
bring on those dangers which have been indicated, or if it shall be
indispensable to the preservation of the union, and consequently of
the independence and liberty of these states; these are
considerations which address themselves to those departments which
may with perfect propriety be influenced by them. This department
can listen only to the mandates of law, and can tread only that
path which is marked out by duty.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of the State of Missouri for
the first judicial district is
Reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter
judgment for the defendants.
MR. JUSTICE JOHNSON.
This is a case of a new impression, and intrinsic difficulty,
and brings up questions of the most vital importance to the
interests of this union.
The declaration is in the ordinary form, and the part of the
record of the state court which raises the questions before us is
expressed in these words:
"At a court . . . came the parties, . . . and neither party
requiring a jury, the cause is submitted to the court; therefore,
all and singular, the matters and things, and evidences, being seen
and heard by the court, it is found by them that the said
defendants did assume upon themselves in the manner and form as the
plaintiffs by their counsel allege, and the court also find that
the consideration for which the writing declared upon, and the
assumpsit was made, was for the loan of loan office certificates,
loaned by the state at her loan office at Chariton, which
certificates were issued and the loan made in the manner pointed
out by an act of the Legislature of Missouri, approved &c. And
the court do further find that the plaintiff hath sustained damages
by reason of the nonperformance of the assumptions and undertakings
aforesaid of them the said
Page 29 U. S. 439
defendants, to the sum, &c., and therefore it is considered
that the plaintiff recover,"
&c.
In order to understand the case, it may be proper to premise
that the territory now occupied by the State of Missouri, having
been subject to the Spanish government, was at the time of its
cession governed by the civil law as modified by the Spanish
government; that it so continued, subject to certain modifications
introduced by act of Congress, until it became a state; when the
people incorporated into their institutions as much of the civil
law as they thought proper, and hence their courts of justice now
partake of a mixed character, perhaps combining all the advantages
of the civil and common law forms. By one of the provisions of this
law the trial by jury is forced upon no one, is yet open to all,
and when not demanded, the court acts the double part of jury and
judge.
It is obvious, therefore, that the matter certified from the
record of the state court before recited is in nature of a special
verdict, and the judgment of the court is upon that verdict, and in
this light it shall be examined.
The purport of the finding is that the vote declared upon was
given "for a loan of loan office certificates, loaned by the state
under certain state acts, the caption of which is given."
Some doubts were thrown out in the argument, whether we could
take notice of the state laws thus found without being set out at
length, but in this there can be no question; whatever laws that
court would take notice of, we must of necessity receive and
consider as if fully set out.
By the acts of the state designated by the court in its finding,
the officers of the treasury department of the state were
authorized to create certificates of small denominations, from ten
dollars down to fifty cents, bearing interest at two percentum per
annum, and to loan these certificates to individuals, taking in
lieu thereof promissory notes, payable not exceeding one year from
the date, with not more than six percent interest, and redeemable
by installments not exceeding ten percent every six months, giving
mortgages of landed property for security.
Page 29 U. S. 440
These certificates were in this form:
"This certificate shall be receivable at the Treasury, or any of
the loan offices of the State of Missouri, in the discharge of
taxes or debts due the state, for the sum of $_____, with interest
for the same, at the rate of two percentum per annum from this
date, the _______ day of _____ 182_; which form is set out in, and
prescribed by the act designated in the finding of the court."
This writ of error is sued out under the twenty-fifth section of
the Judiciary Act upon the supposition that the state act is in
violation of that provision in the Constitution which prohibits the
states from emitting bills of credit, and that the note declared on
is void, as having been taken for an illegal consideration or
without consideration.
As a preliminary question, it has been argued that the case is
not within the provisions of the twenty-fifth section, because it
does not appear from anything on the record that this ground of
defense was specially set up in the courts of the state. But this
we consider no longer an open question; it has repeatedly been
decided by this Court that if a special verdict or the instruction
of a court involve such facts as that the judgment must necessarily
affirm the validity of the state law, or invalidity of a right set
up under the laws or Constitution of the United States; the case is
sufficiently brought within the provisions of the twenty-fifth
section.
The judgment of the court in this case affirms the validity of
the contract on which the suit is instituted. And this could not
have been affirmed, unless on the assumption that the act in which
it had its origin was constitutional.
In the argument of counsel the objections to this contract were
presented in the form of objections to the consideration. But this
was unnecessary to his argument, since even a valuable
consideration will not make good a contract in itself illegal.
These notes originate directly under the law of Missouri; they are
taken in pursuance of its provisions; have their origin in it, and
rest for their validity upon it, and if that law be void, must fall
with it. Whether, therefore,
Page 29 U. S. 441
the bills for which they were given be void or valid, if the law
be void, the notes would be so.
There are some difficulties on the subject of consideration, for
which I would reserve myself until they become unavoidable. But it
is not one of those difficulties that, as a guide for the state,
the power of the states over the law of contracts will legalize a
contract made, under whatever law, or for whatever consideration.
That argument makes the act to justify itself, and is a direct
recurrence to that exercise of sovereign power which it was the
leading principle of the Constitution that each should renounce, so
far as it was incompatible with the provisions of the Constitution,
the objects of which were the security of individual right, and the
perpetuation of the union.
The instrument is a dead letter, unless its effect be to
invalidate every act done by the states in violation of the
Constitution of the United States. And as the universal
modus
operandi by free states must be through their legislature, it
follows that the laws under which any act is done, importing a
violation of the Constitution, must be a dead letter. The language
of the Constitution is "no state shall emit bills of credit," and
this, if it means anything, must mean that no state shall pass a
law which has for its object an emission of bills of credit.
It follows that when the officers of a state undertake to act
upon such a law, they act without authority, and that the contracts
entered into, direct or incidental to such their illegal
proceedings, are mere nullities.
This leads us to the main question: "Was this an emission of
bills of credit in the sense of the Constitution?" And here the
difficulty which presents itself is to determine whether it was a
loan or an emission of paper money, or perhaps whether it was not
an emission of paper money, under the disguise of a loan. There
cannot be a doubt that this latter view of the subject must always
be examined; for that which it is not permitted to do directly,
cannot be legalized by any change of names or forms. Acts done
"in fraudem legis" are acts in violation of law.
The great difficulty, as it is here, must ever be to
determine,
Page 29 U. S. 442
in each case, whether it be a loan, or an emission of bills of
credit. That the states have an unlimited power to effect the one,
and are divested of power to do the other, are propositions equally
unquestionable; but where to draw the discriminating line is the
great difficulty. I fear it is an insuperable difficulty.
The terms, "bills of credit" are in themselves vague and
general, and, at the present day, almost dismissed from our
language. It is then only by resorting to the nomenclature of the
day of the Constitution, that we can hope to get at the idea which
the framers of the Constitution attached to it. The quotation from
Hutchinson's History of Massachusetts therefore was a proper one
for this purpose, inasmuch as the sense in which a word is used by
a distinguished historian and a man in public life in our own
country, not long before the revolution, furnishes a satisfactory
criterion for a definition. It is there used as synonymous with
paper money, and we will find it distinctly used in the same sense
by the first Congress which met under the present Constitution.
The whole history and legislation of the time prove that, by
bills of credit, the framers of the Constitution meant paper money,
with reference to that which had been used in the states from the
commencement of the century, down to the time when it ceased to
pass, before reduced to its innate worthlessness.
It was contended in argument for the defendant in error that it
was essential to the description of bills of credit in the sense of
the Constitution, that they should be made a lawful tender. But his
own quotations negative that idea, and the Constitution does the
same in the general prohibition in the states to make anything but
gold or silver a legal tender. If, however, it were otherwise, it
would hardly avail him here, since these certificates were, as to
their officers' salaries, declared a legal tender.
The great end and object of this restriction on the power of the
states will furnish the best definition of the terms under
consideration. The whole was intended to exclude everything from
use as a circulating medium except gold and silver, and to give to
the United States the exclusive
Page 29 U. S. 443
control over the coining and valuing of the metallic medium.
That the real dollar may represent property, and not the shadow of
it.
Now if a state were to pass a law declaring that this
representative of money shall be issued by its officers, this would
be a palpable and tangible case, and we could not hesitate to
declare such a law, and every contract entered into on the issue of
such paper, purporting a promise to return the sum borrowed, to be
a mere nullity. But suppose a state enacts a law authorizing her
officers to borrow $100,000 and to give in lieu thereof
certificates of $100 each, expressing an acknowledgment of the
debt; it is presumed there could be no objection to this. Then
suppose that the next year she authorizes these certificates to be
broken up into ten, five, and even one dollar bills. Where can be
the objection to this? And if, at the institution of the loan, the
individual had given for the script his note at twelve months,
instead of paying the cash, it would be but doing in another form
what was here done in Missouri, and what is often done, in
principle, where the loan is not required to be paid immediately in
cash.
Pursuing the scrutiny further and with a view to bringing it as
close home to the present case as possible, a state, having
exhausted its treasury, proposes to anticipate its taxes for one,
two, or three years, its citizens or others, being willing to aid
it, give their notes payable at sixty days, and receive the script
of the state at a premium for the advance of their credit, which
enables the state, by discounting these notes, to realize the cash.
There could be no objection to this negotiation, and their script
being by contract to be receivable in taxes, nothing would be more
natural than to break it up into small parcels in order to adapt it
to the payment of taxes. And if in this state it should be thrown
into circulation, by passing into the hands of those who would want
it to meet their taxes, I see nothing in this that could amount to
a violation of the Constitution. Thus far, the transaction partakes
of the distinctive features of a loan, and yet it cannot be denied
that its adaptation to the payment of taxes does give it one
characteristic of a circulating
Page 29 U. S. 444
medium. And another point of similitude, if not of identity, is
the provision for forcing the receipt of it upon those to whom the
state had incurred the obligation to pay money.
The result is that these certificates are of a truly amphibious
character, but what then should be the course of this Court? My
conclusion is that, as it is a doubtful case, for that reason we
are bound to pronounce it innocent. It does indeed approach as near
to a violation of the Constitution as it can well go, without
violating its prohibition; but it is in the exercise of an
unquestionable right, although in rather a questionable form; and I
am bound to believe that it was done in good faith, until the
contrary shall more clearly appear.
Believing it then a candid exercise of the power of borrowing, I
feel myself at liberty to go further and briefly to suggest two
points on which these bills vary from the distinctive features of
the paper money of the revolution.
1. On the face of them, they bear an interest, and for that
reason vary in value every moment of their existence; this
disqualifies them for the uses and purposes of a circulating
medium; which the universal consent of mankind declares should be
of an uniform and unchanging value, otherwise it must be the
subject of exchange, and not the medium.
2. All the paper medium of the revolution consisted of promises
to pay. This is a promise to receive, and to receive in payment of
debts and taxes due the state. This is not an immaterial
distinction, for the objection to a mere paper medium is that its
value depends upon mere national faith. But this certainly has a
better dependence; the public debtor who purchases it may tender it
in payment, and upon a suit brought to recover against him, the
Constitution contains another provision to which he may have
recourse. As far as the feeble powers of this Court extend, he
would be secured (if he could ever need security) from a violation
of his contracts. This approximates them to bills on a fund, and a
fund not to be withdrawn by a law of the state.
Upon the whole, I am of opinion that the judgment of the state
court should be affirmed.
Page 29 U. S. 445
MR. JUSTICE THOMPSON.
This case comes up by writ of error from the state court of
Missouri on a judgment recovered against the plaintiffs in error,
in the highest court in that state, and the first question that has
been made here is whether this Court has jurisdiction of the case
under the twenty-fifth section of the Judiciary Act of 1789.
If the construction of this twenty-fifth section was now for the
first time brought before this Court, I should entertain very
serious doubts whether this case came within it. The fair and as I
think the clear import of that section is that some one of the
cases therein stated did, in point of fact, arise and was drawn
into question, and did receive the judgment and decision of the
state court. It is not enough that such question might have been
made. A party may waive the right secured to him under this
section. This would not in any manner affect the jurisdiction of
the state court, and might of course be waived. In the present
case, there is no doubt but the facts which appeared before the
state court presented a case which might properly fall within this
section. The defendants might have insisted that the state law was
unconstitutional, and that the certificates issued in pursuance of
its provisions were void. And if the court had sustained the act,
it would have been one of the cases within the twenty-fifth
section. But the court was not bound to call upon the party to
raise the objection, for the purpose of putting the cause in a
situation to be brought here by writ of error. It cannot be doubted
but that there might have been an express waiver of this right, and
I should think an implied waiver would equally preclude a review of
the case by this Court, and that such waiver ought to be implied in
all cases where it does not appear, that in point of fact the
question was made, and received the judgment of the state court.
But to entertain jurisdiction in this case, is perhaps not going
further than this Court has already gone, and I do not mean to call
in question these decisions; but have barely noticed the question,
for the purpose of stating the rule by which I think all cases
under this section should be tested.
Page 29 U. S. 446
The more important question upon the merits of the case is
whether the Constitution of the United States interposes any
impediment to the plaintiff's right of recovery in this case. And
this question has been presented at the bar under the following
points:
1. Whether the certificates issued under the provisions of the
law of the State of Missouri, are bills of credit within the sense
and meaning of the Constitution.
2. If so, whether, as they formed the consideration of the note
on which the judgment below was recovered, the note was rendered
thereby void and irrecoverable.
The first is a very important question, and not free from
difficulty, and one upon which I have entertained serious doubts;
but looking at it in all its bearings, and considering the
consequences to which the rule established by a majority of the
court will lead, when carried out to its full extent, I am
compelled to dissent from the opinion pronounced in this case.
The limitation upon the powers of the State of Missouri, which
is supposed to have been transcended, is contained in the tenth
section of the first article of the Constitution of the United
States. "No state shall emit bills of credit." Are the certificates
issued under the authority of the Missouri law, bills of credit,
within this prohibition?
The form of the certificate is prescribed in the third section
of the act (Act 27 June, 1821) as follows:
"This certificate shall be receivable at the treasury or any of
the loan offices of the State of Missouri, in the discharge of
taxes or debts due to the state, for the sum of $_____, with
interest for the same at two percentum per annum, from this
date,"
&c. And the thirteenth section declares
"That the certificates of the said loan office shall be
receivable at the treasury of the state, and by all tax gatherers
and other public officers, in payment of taxes or other moneys now
due, or to become due to the state, or any county or town therein,
and the said certificates shall also be received by all officers,
civil and military, in the state, in the discharge of salaries and
fees of office."
It is proper here to notice, that if the latter branch of this
section should be considered as
Page 29 U. S. 447
conflicting with that prohibition in the Constitution, which
declares that no state shall make anything but gold and silver coin
a tender in payment of debts; no such question is involved in the
case now before the court, and the law may be good in part,
although bad in part.
The precise meaning and interpretation of the terms "bills of
credit" has nowhere been settled, or if it has, it has not fallen
within my knowledge. As used in the Constitution, it certainly
cannot be applied to all obligations, or vouchers, given by, or
under the authority of a state for the payment of money. The right
of a state to borrow money cannot be questioned, and this
necessarily implies the right of giving some voucher for the
repayment, and it would seem to me difficult to maintain the
proposition that such voucher cannot legally and constitutionally
assume a negotiable character, and as such to a certain extent pass
as or become a substitute for money. The act does not profess to
make these certificates a circulating medium or substitute for
money. They are (except as relates to public officers) made
receivable only for taxes and debts due to the state, and for salt
sold by the lessees of salt springs belonging to the state. These
are special and limited objects, and these certificates cannot
answer the purpose of a circulating medium to any considerable
extent. A simple promise to pay a sum of money, a bond or other
security given for the payment of the same, cannot be considered a
bill of credit within the sense of the Constitution. Such a
construction would take from the states all power to borrow money
or execute any obligation for the repayment. The natural and
literal meaning of the terms import a bill drawn on credit merely,
and not bottomed upon any real or substantial fund for its
redemption. There is a material and well known distinction between
a bill drawn upon a fund, and one drawn upon credit only. A bill of
credit may therefore be considered a bill drawn and resting merely
upon the credit of the drawer, as contradistinguished from a fund
constituted or pledged for the payment of the bill. Thus, the
Constitution vests in Congress the power to borrow money on the
credit of the United States. A bill drawn
Page 29 U. S. 448
under such authority would be a bill of credit. And this idea is
more fully expressed in the old confederation, (Art. 9) "Congress
shall have power to borrow money or emit bills on the credit of the
United States." Can the certificates issued under the Missouri law,
according to the fair and reasonable construction of the act, he
said to rest on the credit of the state? Although the securities
taken for the certificates loaned are not in terms pledged for
their redemption, yet these securities constitute a fund amply
sufficient for that purpose, and may well be considered a fund
provided for that purpose. The certificates are a mere loan upon
security in double the amount loaned. And in addition thereto
(section 29), provision is made expressly for constituting a fund
for the redemption of these certificates. These are guards and
checks against their depreciation, by insuring their ultimate
redemption.
The emissions of paper money by the states, previous to the
adoption of the Constitution, were, properly speaking, bills of
credit, not being bottomed upon any fund constituted for their
redemption, but resting solely for that purpose upon the credit of
the state issuing the same. There was no check, therefore, upon
excessive issues, and a great depreciation and loss to holders of
such bills followed as matter of course. But when a fund is pledged
or ample provision made for the redemption of a bill or voucher,
whatever it may be called, there is but little danger of a
depreciation or loss.
But should these certificates be considered bills of credit
under an enlarged sense of such an instrument, it does not
necessarily follow that they are "bills of credit" within the sense
and meaning of the Constitution. As no precise and technical
meaning or interpretation of a bill of credit has been shown, we
may with propriety look to the state of things at the adoption of
the Constitution, to ascertain what was probably the understanding
of the convention by this limitation on the power of the states.
The state emissions of paper money had been excessive, and
productive of great mischief. In some states, and at some times,
such emissions were, by law, made a tender in payment of private
debts, in others not so. But the great evil that existed was
that
Page 29 U. S. 449
creditors were compelled to take such a depreciated currency,
and articles of property in payment of their debts. This being the
mischief, is it an unfair construction of the Constitution of
restrict the intended remedy to the acknowledged and real mischief.
The language of the Constitution may perhaps be too broad to admit
of this restricted application. But to consider the certificates in
question bills of credit, within the Constitution, is in my
judgment a construction of that instrument which will lead to
serious embarrassment with state legislation, as existing in almost
every member of the union.
If these certificates are bills of credit, inhibited by the
Constitution; it appears to me difficult to escape the conclusion
that all bank notes issued either by the states or under their
authority and permission are bills of credit falling within the
prohibition. They are certainly, in point of form, as much bills of
credit, and if being used as a circulating medium, or substitute
for money makes these certificates bills of credit, bank notes are
more emphatically such. And not only the notes of banks directly
under the management and control of a state, of which description
of banks there are several in the United States, but all notes of
banks established under the authority of a state must fall within
the prohibition. For the states cannot certainly do that indirectly
which they cannot do directly. And if they cannot issue bank notes
because they are bills of credit, they cannot authorize others to
do it. If this circuitous mode of doing the business would take the
case out of the prohibition, it would equally apply to the Missouri
certificates, for they were issued by persons acting under the
authority of the state, and indeed could be issued in no other
way.
This prohibition in the Constitution could not have been
intended to take from the states all power whatever over a local
circulating medium, and to suppress all paper currency of every
description. The power is given to Congress to coin money, and the
states are prohibited from coining money. But to construe this as
embracing a paper circulating medium of every description, and
thereby render illegal the
Page 29 U. S. 450
issuing of all bank notes by or under the authority of the
states, will not, I presume, be contended for by anyone. And I am
unable to discover any sound and substantial reason why the
prohibition does not reach all such bank notes, if it extends to
the certificates in question.
The conclusion to which I have come on this point renders it
unnecessary for me to examine the second question made at the
argument. I am of opinion that the judgment of the state court
ought to be affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN.
Several cases depending upon the same principles were brought
into this Court from the Supreme Court of the State of Missouri, by
writs of error.
In the case of Hiram Craig and others, the declaration sets
forth the cause of action in the following terms,
viz.,
"For that whereas heretofore, on 1 August, 1822, at the county,
&c., the said Craig, John Moore, and Ephraim Moore made their
certain promissory note in writing bearing date, . . . and then and
there, for value received, jointly and severally, promised to pay
to the State of Missouri, on 1 November, 1822, at the loan office
in Chariton, the sum of $199.99, and the two percentum per annum,
the interest accruing on the certificates borrowed from 1 October,
1821, nevertheless. . . ."
The general issue of
nonassumpsit having been pleaded
in each case, the Circuit Court of Chariton, in which the suits
were commenced, rendered judgments in favor of the plaintiff. The
following entry in the case of Craig and others was made on the
record.
"And afterwards, at a court begun and held at Chariton on
Monday, 1 November, 1824, and on the second day of said court, the
parties by their attorneys appeared, and neither party requiring a
jury, the cause is submitted to the court; therefore all and
singular the matters and things and evidences being seen and heard
by the court, it is found by them that the said defendants did
assume upon themselves in manner and form as the plaintiff's
counsel
Page 29 U. S. 451
allege, and the court also finds that the consideration for
which the writing declared upon and the assumpsit was made was for
the loan of loan office certificates, loaned by the state, at her
loan office at Chariton, which certificates were issued, and the
loan made in the manner pointed out by an act of the Legislature of
the State of Missouri approved 27 June, 1821, entitled 'an act for
the establishment of loan officers, and the acts amendatory and
supplementary thereto.' And the court does further find that the
plaintiff hath sustained damages, by reason of the nonperformance
of the assumptions and undertakings of the said defendants, to the
sum of $237.79. Therefore, it is considered,"
&c.
An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court of Missouri, in which
this judgment and the others were affirmed.
The first question which this case presents for consideration,
arises under the twenty-fifth section of the Judiciary Act of 1789,
which provides
"That a final judgment or decree in any suit in the highest
court of law or equity of a state in which a decision in the suit
could be had where is drawn in question the validity of a statute
of or an authority exercised under any state on the ground of their
being repugnant to the Constitution, treaties, or laws of the
United States and the decision is in favor of such their
validity,"
may be reexamined and reversed or affirmed in the Supreme Court
of the United States upon a writ of error.
Had not the point been settled by several adjudications in
similar cases, I should entertain strong doubts whether it
sufficiently appeared on the record, that the validity of the
statute of Missouri was drawn in question on account of its
repugnance to the Constitution. In the finding of the Chariton
Circuit Court, the act is referred to, and the consideration of the
note is stated; but it nowhere appears in the record, that the
validity of the statute was contested. And as this is the only
ground on which this Court can take jurisdiction of the case, it
would seem to me that it should not be left to inference, but be
clearly stated in the proceeding.
In the Supreme Court of Missouri, the judgment of the circuit
court was affirmed, but it does not appear what
Page 29 U. S. 452
objections to the affirmance were urged before the court. This
question, however, seems not to be open, and I yield to the force
of prior adjudications. Two points must necessarily be considered
in the investigation of the merits of this case.
1. Are the certificates authorized to be issued by the law of
Missouri, "bills of credit" within the meaning of the
Constitution?
2. If they are bills of credit, is the note on which this suit
was brought void?
It is contended by the counsel for the plaintiffs in error that
any paper issued by a state that contains a promise to pay a
certain sum, and is intended to be used as a medium of circulation,
is a bill of credit, and comes within the mischief against which
the Constitution intended to guard. In illustration of this
position, a reference is made to the depreciated currency of the
revolution.
During that most eventful period of our history, bills of credit
formed the currency of the county, and everything of greater value
was excluded from circulation. These bills were so multiplied by
the different states and by Congress that their value was greatly
impaired. This loss was attempted to be covered, and the growing
wants of the government supplied, by increased emissions. These
caused a still more rapid depreciation, until the credit of the
bills sunk so low as not to be current at any price. Various
statutes were passed to force their circulation, and sustain their
value, but they proved ineffectual. For a time, creditors were
compelled to receive these bills under the penalty of forfeiting
their debt, losing the interest, being denounced as enemies to the
country, or some other penalty. These laws destroyed all just
relations between creditor and debtor, and so debased a currency
produced the most serious evils in almost all the relations of
society. Nothing but the ardor of the most elevated patriotism
could overcome the difficulties and embarrassments growing out of
this state of things.
It will be found somewhat difficult to give a satisfactory
definition of a bill of credit. In what sense it was used in the
Constitution is the object of inquiry.
Page 29 U. S. 453
Different nations of Europe have emitted, on various
emergencies, three descriptions of paper money. 1. Notes, stamped
with a certain value, which contained no promise of payment, but
were to pass as money. 2. Notes, receivable in payment of public
dues, with or without interest. 3. Notes, which the government
promised to pay at a future period specified, with or without
interest, and which were made receivable in payment of taxes and
all debts to the public.
Bills of the last class were issued during the Revolution, and
in some of the colonies they had been emitted long before that
time. In 1690, bills of credit were for the first time issued, as a
substitute for money, in the colony of Massachusetts Bay, as stated
in Hutchinson's history. In 1716, a large emission was made and
lent to the inhabitants, to be paid at a certain period, and in the
meantime to pass as money. For forty years, the historian says, the
currency was in much the same state as if �100,000 had been stamped
on pieces of leather or paper of various denominations and declared
to be the money of the government, without any other sanction than
this, that when there should be taxes to pay, the Treasury would
receive this sort of money, and that every creditor should be
obliged to receive it from his debtor.
The bills issued during the Revolution were denominated bills of
credit. In 1780, the United States guaranteed the payment of bills
emitted by the states. They all contained a promise of payment at a
future day, and where they were not made a legal tender, creditors
were often compelled to receive them in payment of debts, or
subject themselves to great inconvenience and peril.
The character of these bills, and the evils which resulted from
their circulation, give the true definition of a bill of credit,
within the meaning of the Constitution, and of the mischiefs
against which the Constitution provides.
The following is the form of the bills emitted in 1780, under
the guarantee of Congress.
"The possessor of this bill shall be paid _____ Spanish milled
dollars by 31 December, 1786, with interest in like money at
the
Page 29 U. S. 454
rate of five percent per annum by the State of _____, according
to an act,"
&c.
Bills of credit were denominated current money, and were often
referred to in the proceedings of Congress by that title, in
contradistinction to loan office certificates. It is reasonable to
suppose that in using the term "bills of credit" in the
Constitution, such bills were meant as were known at the time by
that denomination. If the term be susceptible of a broader
signification, it would not be safe so to construe it, as it would
extend the provision beyond the evil intended to be prevented, and
instead of operating as a salutary restraint, might be productive
of serious mischief. The words of the Constitution must always be
construed according to their plain import looking at their
connection and the object in view. Under this rule of construction,
I have come to the conclusion that to constitute a bill of credit
within the meaning of the Constitution, it must be issued by a
state and its circulation as money enforced by statutory
provisions. It must contain a promise of payment by the state
generally when no fund has been appropriated to enable the holder
to convert it into money. It must be circulated on the credit of
the state, not that it will be paid on presentation, but that the
state, at some future period, on a time fixed, or resting in its
own discretion, will provide for the payment.
If a more extended definition than this were given to the term,
it would produce the most serious embarrassments to the fiscal
operations of a state. Every state, in the transactions of its
moneyed concerns, has one department to investigate and pass
accounts and another to pay them. Where a warrant is issued for the
amount due to a claimant which is to be paid on presentation to the
treasurer, can it be denominated a bill of credit? And may not this
warrant be negotiated, and pass in ordinary transactions as money?
This is very common in some of the states, and yet it has not been
supposed to be an infraction of the Constitution.
Audited bills are often found in circulation in which the state
promises to pay a certain sum at some future day specified. If
these are inhibited by the Constitution, can a state make loans of
money? Can there be any difference between
Page 29 U. S. 455
borrowing money from a creditor and any other person who does
not stand in that relation? The amount cannot alter the principle.
If a state may borrow $100,000, she may borrow a less sum, and if
an obligation to pay with or without interest may be given in the
one case, it may in the other.
Where money is borrowed by a state, it issues script which
contains a promise to pay, according to the terms of the contract.
If the lender, for his own convenience, proffers this script in
small denominations, may not the state accommodate him? This may be
made a condition of the loan. If a state shall think proper to
borrow money of its own citizens in sums of five, ten, or twenty
dollars, may it not do so? If it be unable to meet the claims of
its creditors, shall it be prohibited from acknowledging the claims
and promising payment with interest at a future day? The principles
of justice and sound policy alike require this, and unless the
right of the state to do so be clearly inhibited, it must be
admitted.
In the adjustment of claims against a county, orders are issued
on the county treasury, and it is common for these to circulate, by
delivery or assignment, as banknotes or bills of exchange.
May a state do indirectly that which the Constitution prohibits
it from doing directly? If it cannot issue a bill or note which may
be put into circulation as a substitute for money, can it, by an
act of incorporation, authorize a company to issue bank bills on
the capital of the state? It will thus be seen that if an extended
construction be given to the term "bills of credit" as used in the
Constitution it may be made to embrace almost every description of
paper issued by a state.
The words of the Constitution are that
"No state shall enter into any treaty, alliance, or
confederation; grant letters of marque and reprisal; coin money;
emit bills of credit; make anything but gold and silver coin a
tender in payment of debts; pass any bill of attainder,
ex post
facto law, or law impairing the obligations of contracts; or
grant any title of nobility. "
Page 29 U. S. 456
Under the statute of Missouri, certificates in the following
form were issued:
"This certificate shall be receivable at the treasury or any of
the loan offices of the State of Missouri in the discharge of taxes
or debts due to the state for the sum of _____ dollars, with
interest for the same, at the rate of two percentum per annum from
this date, the ___ day of _____ 182_."
It appears by the third section of the act, that $200,000 was
authorized to be issued of the above certificates, each not
exceeding ten dollars, nor less than fifty cents. By the thirteenth
section, these certificates were made receivable at the state
treasury by tax gatherers and other public officers in payment of
taxes or moneys due to the state or any county or town therein, and
they were made receivable by all officers in payment of salaries
and fees of office.
Under the fifteenth section, commissioners were authorized to
loan these certificates to the citizens in the state, apportioning
the amount among the several counties according to the population
on mortgages or personal security. The act provides the means by
which these certificates shall be paid, and the fact is admitted
that at this time they are all redeemed by the state.
The design in issuing these certificates seems to have been to
furnish the citizens of Missouri with the means of paying to the
state the taxes which it imposed, and other debts due to it. It was
in effect giving a credit to the debtors of the state, provided
they would give good real or personal security. Had the arrangement
been confined to those who owed the stat; and had certificates been
required of them, promising to pay the amount, with interest; no
objection could have been urged to the legality of the transaction.
And even if the state, in the discharge of its debts, had paid such
certificates, the act would not have been illegal.
The State of Missouri adopted no measures to force the
circulation of the above certificates. No creditor was under any
obligation to receive them. By refusing them, his debt was not
postponed, nor the interest upon it suspended. The
Page 29 U. S. 457
object was a benign one, to relieve the citizens from an
extraordinary pressure, produced by the failure of local banks, and
the utter worthlessness of the currency. Without aid from the
government, the citizens of Missouri could not have paid the taxes
or debts which they owed to the state, in a medium of any value. At
such a crisis, the law was enacted, and, as contemplated in its
passage, so soon as the necessary relief was afforded, the paper
was withdrawn from circulation. The measure was only felt in the
benefits it conferred. No loss was sustained by the public or by
individuals, unless indeed the state shall lose by the
unconscionable defense set up to these actions.
It is admitted that the expediency or inexpediency of a measure
cannot be considered, in giving a construction to the Constitution.
But when, in giving a construction to that instrument, it becomes
necessary, as it does in some instances, to look into the mischiefs
provided against, and the application becomes, to some extent, a
matter of inference, the question of expediency must be
considered.
If the act of Missouri conferred benefits upon the people of the
state, and was so guarded in its provisions as to protect them from
all possible evil, no court would feel inclined to declare it to be
unconstitutional and void unless it was directly opposed to the
letter and spirit of the Constitution. As the spirit of that
provision was to protect the citizens of the states against the
evils of a debased currency, and as the act under consideration, so
far as it operated upon the people of Missouri, had no tendency to
produce this evil, but to relieve against it, the spirit of the
Constitution was not violated. Was the act of Missouri against its
letter? Were the certificates issued by the state "bills of
credit?" They were not if the definition of a bill of credit, as
now given, be correct. Their circulation was not forced by
statutory provision in any form; there was no promise on their face
to pay at any future day; in their form and substance, they bore
little or no resemblance to the continental bills. They were
calculated, from the manner in which they were created and
circulated, to introduce none of the evils so deeply felt from the
currency of the Revolution.
Page 29 U. S. 458
Suppose the State of Missouri had stamped certificates with a
certain value and provided that they should be received as money
according to the denominations given them, could they have been
called bills of credit? Certainly not, for they contained no
promise of payment to which the holder could give credit. Such an
act by a state, would most clearly be void, but not under the
provision of the Constitution which prohibits a state from issuing
"bills of credit."
Can any certificate or bill be considered a bill of credit
within the meaning of the Constitution to which the receiver must
not give credit to the promise of the state? Must it not literally
be a "bill of credit?" Not a bill which will be received in payment
of public dues when presented, but which the state promises to
redeem at a future day.
A substitution of the credit of the state for money may be
considered as an essential ingredient to constitute a "bill of
credit." When this is wanting, whatever other designation may be
given to the thing -- whether it be called paper money, or a state
bill, it cannot be called a "bill of credit." The credit refers to
a future time of payment, and not to the confidence we feel in the
punctuality of the state in paying the bill when presented. A bill,
therefore, which is payable on presentation is not a bill of credit
within the meaning of the Constitution, nor is a bill which
contains no promise to pay at a future day, but a simple
declaration that it will be received in payment of public dues.
If this course of argument appears somewhat technical, it must
be recollected that the question under consideration involves the
validity of an act of a state, which is sovereign in all matters
except where restrictions are imposed and an express delegation of
power is made to the federal government. The solemn act of a state
which has been sanctioned by all the branches of its power cannot
under any circumstances be lightly regarded. The act of Missouri
having received the sanction of the legislative, executive, and
judicial departments of the government cannot be set aside and
disregarded under a doubtful construction of the Constitution.
Doubts should lead to an
Page 29 U. S. 459
acquiescence in the act. The power which declares it null and
void should be exercised only where the right to do so is perfectly
clear.
That such a power is vested in this tribunal by the
Constitution, which received the sanction of all the states, can
only be doubted by those who are incapable of comprehending the
plainest principle in constitutional law. It is a question arising
under the Constitution, and all such questions of power, whether in
the general or state governments, belong to this tribunal. The
policy of this investiture of power may be questioned, but the fact
of its existence cannot be. Believing that in every point of view
in which the paper issued by the State of Missouri may be
considered, it is at least doubtful whether it comes within the
meaning of a "bill of credit" prohibited by the Constitution; I am
inclined to affirm the judgment of the state court. But if this
ground of the defense be admitted, does it follow that the judgment
must be reversed? This presents for consideration the second
proposition stated.
If the certificates under consideration were "bills of credit,"
within the meaning of the Constitution, is the note on which this
suit is brought void?
The position assumed in the argument, that no contract can be
valid that is founded upon a consideration which is contrary to
good morals, against the policy of the law, or a positive statute,
cannot be sustained to the extent as urged. The ground is admitted
to be correct generally, but there are exceptions which it becomes
important to notice.
In the State of Pennsylvania, usury is prohibited under the
sanction of certain penalties, but usury does not render the
contract void; a recovery may be had upon it, with the legal rate
of interest. It is competent for a state to prohibit gambling by a
severe penalty and yet to provide that an obligation given for
money lost at gambling shall be valid. It may declare by law that
all instruments for the payment of money signed by the party shall
be held valid without reference to the consideration. The
legislative power of a state over contracts is without restriction
by the Constitution of the United States except that their
obligation
Page 29 U. S. 460
cannot be impaired. With this single exception, a state
legislature may regulate contracts both as to their form and
substance, as may be thought advisable.
Suppose the Constitution of Missouri had prohibited the emission
of bills of credit without going further; might not the legislature
provide by law that obligations given on a loan of such bills
should be valid? There would be no more inconsistency in this that
in the law of Pennsylvania which forbids usury, and yet holds the
instrument valid. If the Constitution of the United States had
provided that all obligations given for bills of credit, or where
they formed a part of the consideration, should be void, there
could have existed no doubt on the subject. But there is no such
provision, and if the obligation be held void, its invalidity is a
matter of inference arising from the supposed illegality of the
consideration. The Constitution prohibits a state from "emitting
bills of credit." The law of Missouri declares substantially that
obligations given where these bills form the consideration shall be
held valid. Is there an incompatibility in these provisions? Does
the latter destroy the former, or render it ineffectual?
Suppose a state should coin money, would such money not
constitute a valuable consideration for a promissory note? Would
not the intrinsic value of the silver, as bullion, be a sufficient
consideration? Would such a construction conflict with the
Constitution?
A state is prohibited from coining money; consequently the money
which it may coin cannot be circulated as such. A creditor will be
under no obligation to receive it in discharge of his debt. If any
statutory provision of the state should be formed with a view of
forcing the circulation of such coin by suspending the interest or
postponing the debt of a creditor where it was refused, such
statute would be void because it would act on the thing prohibited,
and come directly in conflict with the Constitution. Such would not
be the case in reference to the obligation given for this coin.
In the first place, the act would be voluntary on the part of
the purchaser, and in the second, the consideration would be a
valuable one. The statute sanctions not the coin, but
Page 29 U. S. 461
the obligation which was given for it. The act of creating the
consideration may be denounced and punished, as in the case of
usury in Pennsylvania, and yet the obligation held good. Would this
construction render ineffectual the prohibition of the
Constitution? This may be answered by considering how ineffectual
this provision must be if its efficacy depend on making void the
contract.
The loaning of this coin is only one of many modes which a state
might adopt to circulate it. In the payment of its creditors and in
works of improvement, the state could always find the most ample
means of circulation.
Effect is given to this provision of the Constitution by
limiting it to the thing prohibited. If a state emit bills of
credit or coin money, neither can pass as money, whatever may be
the regulation on the subject. No penalties have been provided to
prevent such a circulation; no sanctions to enforce it would be
valid.
But it is contended that the offense consists in circulating the
bills, that being the meaning of the word "emit." Congress may
issue bills of credit, and perhaps has done so in the emissions of
Treasury notes; is a state prohibited from circulating them? If
not, it must be admitted, the violation of the Constitution
consists not in the circulation of such bills, but in their
creation.
The prohibition of the Constitution was intended to act on the
sovereignty of a state, in its legislative capacity. But there is
no power in the federal government which can act upon this
sovereignty. It is only when its inhibited acts affect the rights
of individuals that the judicial power of the union can be
interposed.
If a state legislature pass an
ex post facto law, or a
law impairing the obligation of contracts; it remains a harmless
enactment on the statute book until it is brought to bear
injuriously on individual rights. So if a state coins money or
admits bills of credit, the question of right must be raised before
this tribunal in the same manner.
The law of Missouri expressly sanctions the obligations given on
a loan of these certificates. Had not this been done, and if the
certificates were bills of credit within the
Page 29 U. S. 462
meaning of the Constitution, the obligations might have been
considered void as against the policy of the supreme law of the
land.
There is no pretense that there has been a failure of
consideration for which the notes in controversy were given. The
certificates have long since been received by the state as money,
and the promisors have realized their full value. If they can avoid
the payment of their notes, as they wish to do by the defense set
up, it must be alone on the ground of the illegality of the
consideration. Suppose the notes had been given under the same
circumstances, payable to an individual, from whom the
consideration had been received, could the defense be
sustained?
In such a case, there could be no allegation of a failure of
consideration. The Constitution prohibits the state from issuing
the certificates, but the law of Missouri declares that obligations
given for these certificates shall be valid. These notes, being
given for a valuable consideration, may be enforced unless the
Constitution makes them void. This it does not do by express
provision, and can they be avoided by inference? An inference,
which does not necessarily follow, as has been shown, from the
prohibition, because such a consequence is prevented by the act of
Missouri. This act may be void as to the emission of the bills, but
it does not follow that the part which relates to the notes must
also be void. It would seem, therefore, that effect may be given to
the provision of the Constitution, so as to prevent the mischief,
by operating upon the circulation of the bills without extending
the consequence so as to make void the contract expressly
sanctioned by the law of Missouri. And if such a construction may
be given, will not the court incline to give it in order that both
laws may be carried into full effect where their provisions do not
come directly in conflict?
The passing of counterfeit money is prohibited under severe
penalties by the laws of every state, and is it not in the power of
a state to provide by law that every obligation given for
counterfeit paper, known to be such by both parties, shall be
valid. This will scarcely be denied. And if
Page 29 U. S. 463
a state may do this under its sovereign power to regulate
contracts, may it not give validity to the notes under
consideration? Had not the State of Missouri a right to provide
that every citizen who should voluntarily execute an obligation for
the payment of money to the state should be held bound to pay it,
although given without consideration? If this does not come within
the province of legislation in a sovereign state, I known not where
its powers may not be restricted. And if this may be done, can the
notes under consideration be held void? If the certificates were
illegally created, they were of value, and under the law of
Missouri constituted a valuable consideration for the notes given.
In any view, the notes which were executed being sanctioned by law,
and consequently valid even without consideration, cannot be less
so when given for the certificates. I am therefore inclined to say,
not without great hesitation, as I differ with the majority of the
Court, that the judgment should be affirmed on this ground.
In the first place, then, from the consideration which I have
been able to give this case, I am not convinced that the
certificates issued by the State of Missouri were bills of credit
within the meaning of the Constitution. And unless my conviction
was clear on this point, my duty and inclination unite to sustain
the judgment of the Supreme Court of Missouri. And secondly, as has
been shown, it appears to me that the contract on which this action
is founded is not void, even admitting that the certificates were
bills of credit.
All questions of power arising under the Constitution of the
United States, whether they relate to the federal or a state
government, must be considered of great importance. The federal
government, being formed for certain purposes, is limited in its
powers and can in no case exercise authority where the power has
not been delegated. The states are sovereign, with the exception of
certain powers which have been invested in the general government,
and inhibited to the states. No state can coin money, emit bills of
credit, pass
ex post facto laws or laws impairing the
obligation of contracts, &c. If any state violate a provision
of the Constitution or be charged with such violation to the injury
of
Page 29 U. S. 464
private rights, the question is made before this tribunal, to
whom all such questions, under the Constitution, of right belong.
In such a case, this Court is to the state what its own supreme
court would be where the constitutionality of a law was questioned
under the constitution of the state. And within the delegation of
power, the decision of this Court is as final and conclusive on the
state as would be the decision of its own court in the case
stated.
That distinct sovereignties could exist under one government,
emanating from the same people, was a phenomenon in the political
world which the wisest statesmen in Europe could not comprehend,
and of its practicability many in our own country entertained the
most serious doubts. Thus far, the friends of liberty have had
great cause of triumph in the success of the principles upon which
our government rests. But all must admit that the purity and
permanency of this system depend on its faithful administration.
The states and the federal government have their respective orbits
within which each must revolve. If either cross the sphere of the
other, the harmony of the system is destroyed and its strength is
impaired. It would be as gross usurpation on the part of the
federal government to interfere with state rights by an exercise of
powers not delegated, as it would be for a state to interpose its
authority against a law of the union.
The judiciary of a state, in all cases brought before it, has a
right to decide whether or not an act of the federal government be
constitutional, the same as they have a right to determine on the
constitutionality of an act under the state Constitution; but in
all such cases, this tribunal may supervise the decisions. It is
often a difficult matter to define the limitations of the
legislative, the executive, and the judicial powers of a state, and
this difficulty is greater in defining the limitations of the
federal government. In both cases, the respective constitutions
must be looked to as the source of power; but in the latter it is
often necessary to determine not only whether the power be vested,
but whether it is inhibited to the state. Some powers in the
general government are exclusive; others concurrent with the
states. The experience of many years may be necessary to
Page 29 U. S. 465
establish by practical illustrations the exact boundaries of
these powers, if indeed they can ever be clearly and satisfactorily
defined. Like the colors of the rainbow, they seem to intermix so
as to render a separation extremely difficult, if not
impracticable. By the exercise of a spirit of mutual forbearance,
the line may be ascertained with sufficient precision for all
practical purposes. In a state where doubts exist as to the
investiture of power, it should not be exercised, but referred to
the people; in the general government, should similar doubts arise,
the powers should be referred to the states and the people.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Supreme Court of the State of Missouri for the First
Judicial District and was argued by counsel, on consideration
whereof this Court is of opinion that there is error in the
rendition of the judgment of the said court in this, that in
affirming the judgment rendered by the Circuit Court for the County
of Chariton, that court has given an opinion in favor of the
validity of the Act of the Legislature of Missouri passed on 27
June, 1821, entitled "An act for the establishment of loan
offices," which act is, in opinion of this Court, repugnant to the
Constitution of the United States, whereupon it is considered by
the Court that the said judgment of the said Supreme Court of the
State of Missouri for the First Judicial District ought to be
reversed and annulled, and the same is hereby reversed and annulled
and the cause remanded to that court with directions to enter
judgment in favor of the defendant to the original action.