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[Riddle v. Hill's Administrator.]

Wilkins, 1 Peters, 686; Caller v. Dade, Minor, 20. The execution of a promissory note, or other written instrument, payable to an administrator, is an admission of the representative capacity, dispensing with the necessity of profert, and, in the absence of fraud, or misrepresentation, estopping the party making it from putting in issue the existence of that capacity. Harbin v. Levi, 6 Ala. 399; Talmage v. Chapel, 16 Mass. 69; Trotter v. White, 10 Sm. & Marsh. 607; Savage v. Meriam, 1 Black. 176; Falls v. Wilson, 24 Miss. 168. The court, therefore, committed no error in sustaining the demurrer to the pleas denying the plaintiff's representative capacity. That question is not involved in this suit.

2. It is the settled law of this State, that a sale of personalty, made by an administrator without an order of court, or under an order void on its face for want of jurisdiction in the court rendering it, passes no title to the purchaser. The authorities on this point are collected, and the discussion of the question exhausted, in Ikelheimer v. Chapman, 32 Ala. 676. It is also settled, that there can be no recovery on the purchaser's promise to pay the purchase-money on such sale. Beene v. Collenberger, 38 Ala. 647, and authorities there cited.

3. From some of the pleas it appears that the appellee, under regular orders of the proper court, rendered during the war, made sale of the personalty of her intestate. At this sale, the purchase was made which forms the consideration of the promissory note, the subject of the suit. The pleas aver the invalidity of these orders, and the consequent invalidity of the sale. The invalidity of the orders is predicated on their rendition by a court of a government in hostile relations to the government of the United States. The pleas cannot be sustained. The recent case of Horn v. Lockhart (17 Wall. 570) announces the principle by which we propose to be guided in solving this vexed question. Tarver v. Tankersley, Powell v. Young, at the present term. That principle is, that judicial proceedings in this State, during the war, so far as they did not impair, or tend to impair, the supremacy of the national authority, or the just rights of citizens under the constitution, are to be treated as valid and binding. On this, and kindred distressing questions, the inevitable result of the war, and which are of especial interest to the people of ten States, and on which uniformity of decision is of vital importance, this court has often announced its purpose to follow the adjudications of the supreme court of the United States, when made. The settlement of these questions, so far as dependent on judicial decision, probably lies within the province of that tribunal. If it does not, yet to avoid diversity of decision on these questions, and a conflict of authority, there is, it seems to us, an eminent

[Riddle v. Hill's Administrator.]

propriety in state tribunals yielding obedience to its adjudications. Nor can invalidity be properly imputed to them, from any former decision of this court. All our former decisions are reconcilable on the hypothesis, that they were to be esteemed as quasi foreign judicial proceedings, subject to be opened because of fraud, want of jurisdiction, accident, or other cause, which would authorize the opening of judgments of a foreign tribunal, not protected by the provisions of the constitution of the United States, declaring the effect which shall be accorded in one state to the records of a sister state. The orders and the sale were valid, conferring on the administratrix the power she exercised, and passing to the purchaser the title of the intestate, all for which he contracted. The court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to the pleas affirming the invalidity of the sale, and the orders under which it was made.

4. The third and sixth pleas aver, that on the sale there was an understanding and agreement, between the administratrix. and the purchaser, that the purchase-money should be discharged in Confederate treasury-notes; and they aver the value of the property purchased, and seek to limit a recovery to such value. The complaint avers the note to have been made on the 13th February, 1863, for the payment, without contingency or qualification, on the first day of March, 1864, of thirteen hundred and fifty dollars. Construing the pleas, as they must be construed, most strongly against the pleader, it must be intended that this collateral agreement, to accept in payment Confederate treasury-notes, was by parol, and not in writing. The averments of the plea would be as fully satisfied by evidence of a parol, as of a written agreement. This being true, the maxim of pleading applies, that if the meaning of words be equivocal, and two meanings present themselves, that construction shall be adopted which is most unfavorable to the party pleading. 1 Chit. Pl. 237. As most unfavorable to the pleader, we must intend that the agreement on which he relies was by parol.

5. If this contract could be regarded as having been made by these parties when the constitution and laws of the United States were dominant, its legal effect and operation would be unmistakable. It would be a promise to pay dollars of the gold and silver coin of the United States. No evidence of a parol contemporaneous or collateral agreement to accept anything else in payment could be received. But the contract was made in this State, when the authority of the constitution and laws of the United States were suspended, and another authority was prevailing. It matters not what character shall be imputed to this authority - whether it shall be esteemed as "a government de facto," or a government of "paramount

[Riddle v. Hill's Administrator.]

force," or as the "mere offspring of treason and rebellion; it in fact had power and authority, which it exercised. It proclaimed laws. It gave life and circulation to a currency as money, which superseded every other currency, and every other representative of value. It was foreign to the government of the United States, more foreign to that government than was France or Great Britain; because peaceful and friendly relations, and unobstructed intercourse between their respective citizens, existed; while this government bore no such relations, but lived in armed defiance of the United States, and its authority.

Laying out of view the special agreement attending this particular contract, and not incorporated in it, it would be manifest injustice to subject it, and the ascertainment of its legal effect, to laws which were not actually prevailing, and which, it is fair to presume, the parties did not contemplate, when it was made. The lex loci contractus prevails in all tribunals, in determining the interpretation and validity of contracts, on the plainest principles of justice. How far the principle could be applied to contracts made here during the war, without offence to the constitution and laws of the United States, now of undisputed and paramount obligation, and how far it could be departed from, without injustice to individuals, and, in fact, the wrong of subjecting them to laws, if not technically ex post facto, yet in effect inflicting the injuries which render such laws so odious that they find no place in the jurisprudence of any civilized people, was one of the difficult questions presented immediately on the reëstablishment of constitutional relations between the State and the United States. Legislation, at an early day, in this State, sought a partial solution of the question, when the particular facts existed which are averred in this plea. Ordinance No. 26 of the convention of 1865 provides, that in all suits on contracts made between the first day of September, 1861, and the first day of May, 1865, parol evidence shall be admissible, to prove what was the consideration thereof, and whether or not the parties thereto understood or agreed that the same should be discharged by a payment in Confederate currency or treasury-notes; and if so, or if it appears from the contract, then to show what was the real or true value of the consideration of said contract, and what amount the plaintiff is justly and legally entitled to recover according to the contract, by the judgment of the court. The ordinance proceeds on the theory, that in its absence such evidence would not be admissible, and the legal effect of the contract would compel a recovery for the sum expressed on its face, in the gold and silver coin of the United States, or that which the laws of the United States render a legal tender in

[Riddle v. Hill's Administrator.]

satisfaction of debts. If that theory can be maintained, the ordinance, to say the least of it, is of doubtful constitutionality. We are aware that its constitutionality has been, and is vindicated, on the ground that it changed only a rule of evidence. Assuming this to be true, all must feel that, in its passage, legislative power was strained to its utmost verge; that the line of distinction, between the ordinance and an enactment directly impairing the obligation of contracts, was very narrow. The ordinance did not, however, meet the necessities which the war had produced, nor subserve the purposes of justice to individuals. There was a large class of contracts, reduced to writing, expressing promises to pay "dollars," in which there was not an attendant agreement that Confederate currency should be accepted in payment. To this class of cases, the ordinance was construed not to extend. This resulted from the theory on which the ordinance was based that the law compelled the discharge of such contracts in coin, or the currency of the United States made a legal tender; that it was an attendant agreement, varying the mode of payment, which only could relieve the contract from this legal operation. It is not mere legal presumption, resting on considerations of public policy, that the law silently incorporates itself into the contract of parties. The incorporation comports with their actual intention, most often, or they would have expressed all that the law implies.

We know, as matter of public history, that from the day of secession, gold and silver coin, or any currency convertible into it, ceased to be a circulating medium in this State. It was superseded by another currency, computed and denominated as "dollars." In all business transactions in all buying and selling of property, it ceased to be a representative of value, and became an article of merchandise, constantly increasing in value, as compared with the prevailing currency, or any species of property. There was a law, dominant it may have been by mere force, under which the prevailing currency issued. The national currency, now the circulating medium of the country, had not been introduced here, and its introduction and use was prohibited by law, to which force would have compelled obedience, if it had not been yielded. Shall this contract be read in the light of these circumstances, as contracts are always read in the light of circumstances surrounding the parties when made; or shall it be read as it would have been when such circumstances did not exist, and as it would be read if made now when no conflict of authority divides and distracts the country? The law, concurring with justice, requires that a judicial tribunal should look to these circumstances, in determining the legal effect of this contract, and the signification of the language the parties have employed. It is common learning,

[Riddle v. Hill's Administrator.]

that if a contract is made, where the words used in it have in general acceptation a significance variant from that elsewhere imputed to them, that significance must be adopted by a judicial tribunal called to construe the contract. In England, in all other than mercantile contracts, the term "month ordinarily means a lunar month. Here, it invariably means, if not otherwise expressed, a calendar month. The term usance is frequently found in negotiable instruments. Its meaning is almost as variant as the different countries in which it is employed. It would scarcely be asked of an English court to impute to the word month, or the word usance, employed in a contract made here, the meaning the law of England, or the customs of its merchants, impute to these terms, and not the meaning they bear according to the law and custom prevailing here; and yet it would be injustice of the same kind, and greater in degree, if we conclusively imputed to the term "dollars," as found in this and similar contracts, made here during the war, the significance of "dollars," employed in contracts made when the constitution and laws of the United States were prevailing without obstruction, and the only authority demanding paramount obedience. Story's Conflict of Laws, §§ 270-71.

Independent of, and without regard to a verbal agreement, contemporaneous with a written contract promising to pay "doliars," made in this State, during the war, we are of the opinion, a court called to pronounce judgment on such contract must consider the historical facts to which we have adverted, and must further inquire into other facts, which may enable it to arrive at the intention of the parties, in ascertaining what shall be the legal effect of the contract. If it is one of bargain and sale, or for services rendered, then it is a legitimate inquiry, what was the value of the thing sold, or of the services rendered, not measured by the fictitious value which an evanescent currency may have produced, but as measured with the value of the currency in which a recovery is claimed. If there is a great disparity in the two standards of value, it is a strong, if not a conclusive circumstance, that payment was to be made in the prevailing currency. We mention these contracts, only as illustrations, not as embracing every contract to which the rule is applicable. The evidence of the verbal agreement, if there was one, by which Confederate currency should be accepted in satisfaction, is only evidence of a fact, in connection with the particular circumstances surrounding the parties, aiding the court in ascertaining their intention, and the legal effect of the contract. In this point of view, no rule of evidence would be infringed. The ordinance of the convention would be merely affirmatory of the existing law; and we

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