
    Ware, Administrator of Jones, Plaintiff in Error, versus Hylton et al.
    
    ERROR from the Circuit Court for the Diftrifi of Virginia. The aflion was brought by William fanes, (but as he died, pendente lite, his Adminiftrator was duly fubftitut-ed as Plaintiff in the caufe) furviving partner of Parrel and fanes, fubjedls. of the king of Great Britain, againft Daniel Hylton & Co. and Francis Eppes, citizens of Virginia, on a bond, for the penal fum of ¡£.2976 11J fad. fterling, dated the 7th July, 1774.
    The Defendants pleaded, ift, Payment; and, alfo, by leaveof the court, the following additional pleas in bar of the atftion.
    2d. That the Plaintiff ought not to have and maintain his action, aforefaid, againft them, for three thoufand one hundred and eleven and one. ninth dollars, equal to nine hundred and thirty three pounds fourteen ihillings,'part of the debt in the declaration mentioned, becaufe they fay, that, on the fourth day of July, in the year one thoufand feven hundred and feventy fix, they, the faid Defendants, became citizens of the ftate of Virginia, and have ever fince remained citizens thereof, and refidents therein; and, that the Plaintiff, on the faid fourth day of July, ,in the year 1776, and the faid Jofeph Farrel . were, and from the time'cf their nativity ever had been, and always fince have been, and the Plaintiff ftill is a Britijh fubjedf, owing, yielding and paying allegiance to the King of Great Britain-, which faid King of Great Britain, and all his fubjefts, as well the Plaintiff” as others, were, on the faid fourth dav of July, in the year 1776, and fo continued until thé third of September, in1 the year 1783, enemies of, and at open war with, the ftate of Virginia, and the United States of America-, and, that being fo enemies, and at open war as aforefaid, the legiflaturg of the ftate of Virginia did, at their feflton begun and held in the city of Williamfburgh,. orí Monday the twentieth day of October, in the year 1777, país an afl,' entitled “ ana£t forfequeftering Eritijb property, enabling thofe indebted to Britijh fubjedts to pay oiF fuch debts, and directing the proceedings in fuits where fuch fubjects are parties,” whereby it was enacted, that it may and ihall be lawful for anv citizen.of this Commonwealth, owing money to a fubjedt of Great Britain to pay the fame, or any part thereof, from time to time, as he ihall think fir, into the laid loan office, taking thereout a certificate for the fame, in the name of the creditor, with an endorfement under the hand of the commiilioner of the faid office, expreiling the name of the payer, and ihall deliver fuch certificate to the Governor and council, whofe receipt ihall difcharge him from fo much of the faid debt. And the Defendants fay, that the faid Daniel L, Hylton and Co. did, on the 26th day of April, in the year 1780, in the county oF Henrico, and in the ftate of. Virginia, while the faid recited adt continued in full force, in purfuance thereof,' pay into the loan office of this Commonwealth, on. account of. the debt in the declaration mentioned,-the fum of 3'ix 1-1-9 dollars, equal to £. 933 : 14, and did take out a certificate for the fame, in the name of Far ell and yones, in the declaration mentioned, as creditors, with an endoifement under the hand of the com-miifioner of the faid office, exprefling the name of the payer, which certificate they, the Defendants,' then delivered to the Governor and Council, who gave a receipt therefor, in conformity to the diredtions of the faid ait, - in the words and figures following, to wit: “ Received into the Councils’ office, “ a certificate bearing date the twenty fixth day of April, 1780, “ under the hand of the treafurer, that Daniel L. Hylton and Co. have paid to hita thirty one hundred eleven and one ninth “ dollars, to be appli&d to the credit of their accounts with “ Farrell and Jones, Britijh fubjedls; Given under my hand, “ at Richmond, this 30th May, 1780.”
    . T. JEFFERSON.
    Whereby the Defendants, by virtue of the faid a£t of Af-fembly, are difcharged from fo much of the debt in the declaration mentioned, as the faid receipt Cpecifies and amounts to, and this they are ready to verify. -Wherefore, they pray the judgment of th'e court, whether the faid Plaintiff ought to have or maintain his action, aforefaid, againft them for the £•933 '• I4> part of the debt in the declaration mentioned.
    3⅜ That the Plaintiff ought not to have or maintain his adlion, aforefaid, againft them, becaufe they fay that, on the 4th day of July, in the year 1776, the faid Defendants became citizens of the "ftate of Virginia^- and have ever fince retrained citizens thereof, and refidents therein, and that the laid Plaintiff, and the faid JoJcphFarrell, on the faid fourth day .of July, in the year 17765 and f.'ora the time of their nativity, had ‘ ever been, and always lince have been, Britijh Íu'ojedts, and the Plaintiff ftill is a Britijb fubjeft, yielding, aiid paying allegiance to the King of Great Britain, which faid King of Great Britain, and all his fubjefts, as well the Plaintiff and the faid Jofeph Farcll, as others, were on the faid 4th day of July, 1776, and fo continued till the 3d day of September, in the year 1783, enemies of, and at open war with, the ftate of Virginia, and the United States of America-, and that, being fo enemies and at.open war, as aforefaid, the legiilature of the ftate of Virginia did, at th'eir.feilion commenced and held in the city of Williamfbisrg, on the third day of May, in the year 1779, pafs an aft entitled “ An aft concerning efeheats and “ forfeitures from Britiflo fubjefts,” whereby it was, among other things enafted, “ That all the property, real and perfon*- “ a!, within this Commonwealth, belonging' at this time, to “ any Britijb fubjeft, or whicli did belong to any Britijb fub- “ jeft at the time when fuch efeheat or forfeiture may have taken “ place, fhall be deemed to be veiled in the Commonwealth ; “ the lands, Haves, and other real eftate, by way of efch’eat, and “ the perfonal eftate by forfeiture.” And the legiilature of the ftate'of Virginia did, in the r feflion begun and held in the town of Richmond, on-Monday the fixth aay of May, in the. year 1782, pafs an aft, entitled “ An aft to repeal fo much of “ a former aft, as fufpends the iffuing of executions upon certain judgments until December, .1783,” whereby it is enafted, that no demand whatfoever, originally due to a fubjeft of Great' ■Britain, fliall be recoverable in any court in this commonwealth, although the fame may be transferred to a citizen of of this ftate, or to any other perfon capable of maintaining fuch an- aftion, unlefs the alignment hath been, or may be, made for a valuable confideration, bona fide, paid before the firff day May 1777, which faid afts are unrepealed, and ftill in’ force. And the Defendants, in faft, fay, that the debt in the declaration mentioned, wastperfonal property, within this commonwealth, belonging to a Britif» fubjeft, at the time of the palling of the fiid aft, entitled “ An aft concerning efeheats u and forfeitures from Britijb fubjefts and the Defendants, in faft, alfo fay, that the debt in the declaration mentioned, is a demand originally due to a fubjeft of the King of Great Britain, not transferred to any nerfon whatfoever. And thefe things they are rcadyto verify: Wherefore they pray the judgment of the court, whether the faid Plaintiff ought to have, or maintain his aftion aforefaid, againft them.
    4th. That'the Plaintiff, his aftion. aforefaid, againft them, ought not to have or maintain, becaufe they fay that a definitive treaty of peace between the United States of America and his Britannic ’M'-'jelly, was done at Paris, on the third day of September, in the year 1783} and that, by a part of the" .feventh article oF the faid treaty, it was exprefsly agreed, on the part of his Britannic Majefty, with the United States, among other things, “ That his faid Britannic Majefty ihould, with all convenient fpeed, and without cauftng any deftru&ion, or canying away any negroes or other property of the Jlmerican inhabitants, withdraw all his armies, garrifons and fleets, from the faid United States., and from every port, place and harbour within the fame,” which may more fully appear, reference being had to the faid treaty: And the faid Defendants aver, that on the faid 3d day of September, 1783, and' fr.om their birth to this day, they have been citizens of thefe United States, and of the" State of Virginia,, and that the Plaintiff has ever been a Britijh fubjecr, and that the Plaintiff ought not to maintain an aition, becaufe his Britannic Majefty hath wilfully broken and violated the faid treaty in this, that his Britannic Majefty hath, from the day of the faid treaty and ever fince,, continued to carry off the negroes in his pofleflion, the property of the jlmerican inhabitants of the United States, and hath, and ftill doth refufe to deliver them, or permit the owners of the laid"' negroes to take them. And the Defendants aver, that his Britannic Majefty hath refufed, and ftiil doth refufe to withdraw his armies and garrifons from every port and harbour within the United States, v.'hich his faid Britannic Majefty was bound to do by the faid treaty:' and the Defendants aver, that from the day of the treaty .hij Britannic Majefty, by force and violence, an’d with his.army, retains pofleflion of the forts Detroit and Niagara, and a large territory adjoining the faid forts, and witbiri the bounds and limits cf the United States of Jmerica, and the Defendants fay, that in further violation of the faid .treaty .of peace, concluded as aforefaid, certain nations,or tribes of Indians, known by the names of Shaivanefe, Tatúas, Twigh-tces, Powtawatemies, Quiapcees, T'Viandots, Mingoes, Piankas-kanus and Naiadonepes, and others, being at open, public and known wars with the inhabitants of the United States, and living within the limits thereof, and for the purpofeef aiding the faid Indians infuch wárand hoftility, at certain pofts, forts and garrifons, held ank kept by the troops and garrifons of his Britannic Majefty, to wit, at Detroit, Michelimacbinac and Nia-' gara, within the limits of the faid Unifca States, on the 4th day of September, 1783, and at divers times after the faid 4th day of September, 1783, up to the iriilitution of this fuit, by orders and direfiions ofhis Britannic Majefty, and his officers commanding his faid troops and armies, at the faid garrifons of Detroit, Michelimacbinac-.and'Niagara, and at other forts and places held by the faid troops and armies within the limits of the United States, are Applied and furnifhed with arms, ammunition and weapons of war, to wit, with guns and gunpowder, lead and leaden bullets, tomahawks and' fcaiping-knives,. for the purpofe of enabling them to profecute the war againft the citi-' zens of thefe United States^ and alfo giving and paying to the faid Indians money, goods, wares arid merchandize, for booty and plunder taken in fuchwa'r, and for perfons, citizens of thefe United States, madeprifoners by the faid Indians, infuch their warfare againft thev United States, and fo the King of Great Britain is an enemy to thefe United States-. And this they aré ready to verify. Wherefore they pray judgment of the court, whether the Plaintiff, his adtiori aforefaid, againft them, ought to have or maintain.
    5th. That the debt in the declaration mentioned, was con-tradted before the 4th day of July, in the year 1776, to wit, on the feventh day of July, in the year 1774, and that when the faid debt was contradted, and- from thence to the faid fourth day of July, 1776, and on that day, and until this day the faid Plaintiff was, and is a fubjedt to the King of Great Britain, refiding in Virginia, until the faid fourth day of July, in th? year 1776, on which day the people of North America, among whom were thefe defendants, who had theretofore been the fubjecls of the King of Great Britain, diffolved the till then fubfiiling government, whereby the right of the Plaintiff to the debt in the declaration mentioned, was totally annulled. And this they are ready to verify W-hcrefore they pray the judgment of the court, whether the Plaintiff ought to have, or maintain.his adtion aforefaid, againft them.
    The Plaintiff replied, lit. Non Soiverunt to the plea of payment ; on which ilTue was joined; and to the 2d. plea in bar . he replied,
    2d. That he, by reafon of' any thing in the laid plea alleged, ought not to be barred from having or maintaining his faid action againft the faid Defendants,-becaufe protefting, that that 'pica, and the matters therein contained, are not fuiiicient in law to bar the faid Plaintiff from having or maintaining his faid adtion in this behalf, againft the laid Defendants, to which the faid Plaintiff hath-no reafon, nor is he bound by the law of the dand to anfwer; yet, for replication in this behalf, he, the. faid Plaintiff, faith, that after the debt in the faid declaration mentioned was contradted, and after the faid 4th day of July, 1776, in the faid plea of the faid Defendants mentioned, and alfo after the faid twentieth day of October, 1777, and the paf- . fing the act of General' Affembly, in the faid plea alfo mentioned, and alfo after the day in which the faid receipt in the plea ftated, is faid to have been granted, to wit, on the third day of September, in’thc year of our Lord 1783, it was ■by the definitive Treat v of Peace between'the United States «f America and his Britannic Majcfty, made and done in the' City of Parts, that is to fay, in the commonwealth, now Diftrift of Virginia, and now within the jurifdidH'on of this ho- ■ nourable court, ftipulated and agreed, among other things, “ that the creditors of either fide ihouW meet with no lawful impediment to the recovery of the full value in fterling moneys of-all bona fide dtbts, theretofore contraéfed;” and the faid Plaintiff in fait faith, that he, on the-faid third day of September, in the year 1783, and for a long time before (as well as the faid Jofeph Farrell, in his lifetime were) then was, and ever fincc hath been and ftill is, a Í11'eject of his Britannic Majefty, and a creditor within the intent and meaning of the 4th article of the Definitive Treaty; and that the debt in the declaration • mentioned, was contracted before the faid third day of September■, 1783, that is to fay, in the county and commonwealth aforefaid,' now the Diftridl of Virginia, and now within the jurifdiiftion of this honourable courtand there was and ftill is owing and unpaid. And the faid Plaintiff, for'further replication, faith, that after contraóting the debt iii the declaration mentioned by the faid Defendants, and alfo after the fourth day of July, in the year of our Lord 1776, and after the faid twentieth day of OSlober, in the year of our Lord 1777, and alfo after the faid third'day of September, in the year of our Lord 1783, that is to fáy, on the day of 1787, ln the then commonwealth, now the diftridt of Virginia, and now within the jurifdidfion of this honourable court,'it was by the Conftitution of the United States of America, among other things, exprefsly declared, that treaties which were then made, or ihouid thereafter be made, under the authority of the Uni-. '■ ted States, ihouid be the fupreme law of the land, ar.y thing in the faid conftitution, or of tlie laws of any ftate to the contrary notwitbftanding; and the faid Plaintiff doth, in fa£f, aver, that the laid Conftitution of the United States, was made and accepted, fubfequent to and afier the ratification of the faid definitive treaty of peace between the faid United States of America and his Britannic Majefty, wbofe fubjeit the faid,"Plain-tiff then was, and ftill is, and after the faid fourth day of July, in the.year 1776, and alfo after the faid twentieth day of October, in the year 1777: Wherefore without that the debt in the declaration mentioned, was’ bon a fide, contracted before the making of the faid Definitive Treaty of Peace, and before the making'of the faid Conftitution of the United States, that he, the faid Plaintiff, is entitled to demand, have, and recover of the finid Defendants, the aforefaid debt in the declaration mentioned without that the Governor and Council did give a •receipt for a certificate of the payment into the loan office of the fum of 1311 1-9 dollars, in thc-name of Farrellancl Jones, 
      and in conformity to the direction of the add of General Affem-bly, entitled “ An-aft-for fequeftring. Britijh property, “ bling thofe indebted to Britijh fubje<fts,to pay qfiuch debts, “ and directing the proceedings.in' iuits where fuch fubje& are- “ parties ;” whilft the faid act was in force, as in the faid plea of the faid Defendants ís all.edged, and this he is ready T-o verify. Wherefore the faid Plaintiff, as before, prays judgment of the court, and his debt áforefaid, and damages for detention of the debt to be adjudged to him.
    To the 3d, 4th and 5th pleas in bar, the Plaintiff demurred . generally.
    The Defendants to the Plaintiff’s fecond replication, rejoined, that the faid Plaintiffjffor any thing in the faid replication contained, ought .not to havp or maintain his faid afticn againft them, becaufe they, by wayof rejoinder, in this .behalf, fay, that in the fame Definitive Treaty of Peace between the United States of Jlrnerica. and his Britannic Majefty, by the faid • plaintiff in his replication mentioned, and which is now-to the court ihewn, it was among other things ftipulated and con-trailed as follows: “ There íhall be a firm and perpetual peace “ between his Britannic Majefty and the faid United States, “ and between the fubjects of the one and the citizens of the “ other; wherefore, all hoftilities both by fea-'and land, íhall “ from henceforth eeafe, all prifoners on both fides íhall be fet “ at liberty, and his Britannic Majefty íhall, with all convenient fpeed, and without caufing any deftruction, or car- “ rying away any negroes, or other property of the Ame-ricah inhabitants, withdraw all his armies, garrifons, and “ fleets, from the faid United States., and from every port, place, “ and harbour within the fameAnd the Defendants, in fact, ■ fay, that his faid Britannic Majefty hath not performed thofe things, which, by the faid Treaty of Peace, he was bound to pferform, but hath altogether failed to do fo, and hath broken .the faid Treaty in this: that.on the fourth day of September, in the year 1783, and'on the third day 'o{. fjune, 1790, and at divers-times between the faid fourth day of September 1783, and the faid third day of 'June., in the year 1790,'his Britannic Majefty at Detroit, and other partS;'within the boundaries of the United States, to wit, within' the-commonwealth of Virginia, and the jurifdiction of this honorable court, in open violation of the ibid treaty, and the articles thereof, excited, per-fuaded, and ftirred up the Shawanefe, and divers other tribes of Indians, to make war upon the^ faid United States of A--merica, and the commonwealth of Virginia; and" gave them, the faid Indians, aid in the profecution, of the faid. war, arjd furniihed them with arms'and ammunition, for the purpofe of enabling them to profecute the fame, -And his faid Britannic 
      Majefty hath not, with all convenient, fpeed, and without cauw fing any deftruftion or carrying away any negroes, or other, •propel ty of the American inhabitants, withdrawn all his armies, garrifons and fleets, from the faid United States, and from every port and place within the fame;—but hath .carried away five thoufand negroes,-the property of American inhabitants, on the fourth day of September, in the year 1783, from Neva Vork, to wit, in the commonwealth of Virginia, and within the jurifdiftion of the court; and. hath- refufed to withdraw with all convenient fpeed, his. armies and garrifons from the United States, and from every poft and place within the fame;— but hath, with force and violence, and in open violation of the faid Treaty of Peace, on the faid third day of September, in the year 1783,. and fince,1 maintained his arteiies and garri-fdns in the forts of Niagara and Detroit, which are polls and places within the United States, and ftill doth maintain his armies and garrifons within the faid forts; and the Defendants further fay, that the debt in the declaration mentioned, or fo much thereof, as is equal to the fum of fi. 933 14. was not a bona fide debt due and owing to the Plaintiff,, on the faid third day of September, 1783, becaufe the Defendant had,' on the day of • 1780, in Virginia as aforefaid, paid in part thereof, the fum of 3111 1-9 dollars, and afterwards obtained a certificate therefor, according, to the aft of the General •Affembly, entitled tc An aft for fequeftring Britijh property, enabling thofe indebted to Britijh fubjefts, to pay off fuch debts, and direfting the proceedings in fuits, where fuch fub-jefts are parties,” which payment was made while the faid aft continued in full force, without that the faid Treaty of Peace, and the Conftitution of the United States, entitle the faid Plaintiff to maintain his faid aftion, agaimft the faid Defendants, for fo much of the faid debt in the declaration mentioned, as is equal to £. 933 14. and this they are ready to verify: Wherefore they, pray the judgment of the court, whether the Plaintiff ought to have-or tilaintain his aftion aforefaid, againft them, for fo much of the debt in the declaration mentioned, is equal to the faid fum of^. 933 14.
    The Defendants joined iffue on the demurrer to the 3d, 4th, and 5th plías- in bar: And the Plaintiff having demurred-to the Defendants rejoinder to the. fecond replication, iffue was thereupon likewife joined.
    On the'demurrer to the Defendant’s rejoinder to the Plaintiff’s replication to the fec.ond plea, judgment ,was given by the Circuit Court, for the Defendants, and that as to fo much of the debt in the declaration mentioned, as is in the faid fe-cor.d plea fet forth, the Plaintiff take nothing by -his bill: On which judgment, the prefent writ of error was brought; but on demurrer to the 3d,- 4th, and 5th pleas,-judgment was 'given for the Plaintiff’; a Venire was awarded to try the iffue in fail on the firft plea of payment;-and on the trial a verditft and judgment-were given for the Plaintiff for 596 dollars,' with intereft at .5 per cent, from the 7th July, 1782, and cofts.
    On the return of the record,, the error affigned was, that judgment had been given for the. Defendants, inftead of being given for the Plaintiff, upon his demurrer to their rejoinder to the replication to the fecond plea. In millo ejl erratum was pleaded, and thereupon iffue was joined.
    The general queftion was—whether by paying a debt-due-before the war, from an American citizen-to Britijh fubjedts, into the loan office of Virginia, in púrfuance of.-the law of that ftate, the debtor was difcharged from his' creditor ? And the argument took .the following general courfe.
    
    
      E. Tilghman, for the Plaintiff in error.
    It is conceded that a debt was due from the Defendants to the Plaintiff, at the commencement of the revolutionary war; and it has been decided, in the cafe of Georgia ver Jus Brailsford, ant. p. x. that although the ftate had a power to fufpend the payment of fuch a debt, during the continuance of hoftilities, yet that the creditor’s right to recover it, revived as an incident and confe-quence of the peace. There is, indeed, no controverting the general right of a belligerent power to confifcate the property of its enemy, in ordinary cafes ; though tire modern policy of nations abftains from the exercife of that right, in rcfpedt to debts. Vatt.-B. .3. f. 77. ^.484. Rut the relative fituation of Great Britain and her colonies was of .a peculiar nature, widely different from the fituation of the Grecian, or Roman ■ colonies ; and, therefore, requiring a new and appropriate rule of atftion. At the time of the revolution, the creditor and debtor were members of the fame fociety; fubjedts of the fame empire. Had they belonged, originally, tjo.diftintft, indepen- ' dent ftates, both would have anticipated, in the'cafe of a war., an-exercife of the power of confifcation; ,but fije event bf a civil conteft could not be reafonably contemplated, nor provided for. We find, therefore, upon the law .of pofi.fi Ve authori,* t ty, as well as upon a principle of-natural juftice, that ev'enthe declaration of independence w as deemed to hqye'no obligatoty operation upon' any, inhabitant of, the. United. States, who did not chufe, voluntarily to remain in the country, or to take an oath of ahegiance, to fomé member of the confederation, X Dali. Rfp. 53. On the declaration of independence, th cA?,-iericaH debtor might chufe his political party, but he could not diffolve his obligation to his Britip) creditor; and if he had nopowerto difl’olve it bimfelf, ir follows that he could not communicate fiich a power, to the fociety of which he becartie a member. Vati. Pr. Dif. f 5. ir. Beiides, there are, certainly, a variety of cafes, to which the rigorous power of confifcation cannot, and ought not to extend. Suppofe a contradi is formed in a neutral country, between fubjeits of two belligerent powers, the debt'thus incurred could hardly be the object of con-fifcation. ' Anadbion, it has been adjudged, may be maintained on a ranfom bill, even during the continuance of the war. Doug. 19. And. in general, it may be Rated, that capitulations, made.in time of war, though they embrace the fecurity of debts, as well as other property, rauft be held facred. Vatt. B. 7,. f 263. 364. p. 612- 613.
    But fuppofing Virginia had the right of confifcation in the prefent inftance, two grounds for judicial enOjUiry will ftill re-, main tobe explored :—lift, Whether an ait of. the Legiflature of that State has been pafled, andfo adted upon, as ever to have created an impediment to the Plaintiff’s recovering the debt in' controverfy ? And 2d. Whether fuch impediment, if it ever exifted, has been lawfully removed ?
    xft. It does not appear, from the enadting claufes of the law of- Virginia, which has been pleaded, that the- St-ate bad any; intention to confifcate the Britip) debts paid into her treafury ; and the preamble (which, though it cannot controul, may be advantageoufly employed to expound, the enadting claufes) is manifeftly inconfiftent with fuch an intention. The money, when paid by the debtor into the treafury, was, Amply, to, remain there, fubjedfcto the diredtións of the Legiflature-; and as the debtor was not bound fo to pay it, the provifions of the adt could not amount toa confifcation ; but were merely an invitation to pay, with an implied promife, that whoever accepted the terms of the invitation, fliould be. indemnified by the . -State. Nor was'the invitation indifcriminately given to all debto¡ s, but only to thofe who were filed ; from which the inference is irrefiftible, that whatever refponfibility the ftate meant herfelf to affume, there was no intention to extinguiih the refponfibility of the Virginia debtor to the Britip creditor, The adf of the Virginia Legiflature, pafled the 3d of May 1779, is in pari materia, and throws light on the conftru'dtion of the former adt; for, there, when the Legiflature meánt to interpole a bar to the recovery, they have in exprefs terms declared it. Several other acts have pafled on the fubjedt, to which it is merely neceflary to refer": The adt, of the- ift o'f 
      May^ 1780, repeals the aft of the 20th of October X777, fo far as regards the. authority to pay debts into the treafury. The afts of-the 6⅛ of May 1782, and 20th of October. 1783, revive the'authority of making fuch payments in relation to Bri-tijh debts; and prevents the recovery by Britijh creditors; The aft of the 3d of January 1788, fixes the amount for' v/hich the State will be liable on account of payments into the treafury; to wit, for the value of the money at the time it was fopaid, with i-ntereft.
    ad. But if any. impediment ever exifted to the recovery of the debt, it is removed by the operation of the treaty between tbe United States and Great Britain, Congrefs having a power to - repeal'all the afts of the feveral States, in order to obtain peace ; and the treaty made for that purpofe being the Supreme law of the land. The fourth article declares that creditors on either fide ihall meet with no lawful impediment to the recovery of debts heretofore contrafted ; and unlefs this pro-vifion applies to cafes like the prefent, it will be ufelefs and . nugatory. An interpretation, which would ¡render a claufe in the treaty of no effeft, ought not to be admitted. Fait. B. a. f. 283. The fifth article exprefsly ftipulates, that Congrefs ihall recommend, the reiteration of fome parts of coftfifcated property, and a compofition as to other parts ; but that “ all perfons who have any intereft in confifcated lands, either by debts, marriage Settlements, or otherwife, ihall meet with no lawful impediment in the profecutipn of their juft rights.’7 Both parties to the treaty feemed to think that there fiad been no confifcation of debts; and debts were the great objeft' which the Britijh commiflioaers wiihed to fecure. Whatever tends to produce equality in national compafts ought to be fa-voured ; Vatt. B. a. J- 301. and as the. Britijh government had-thrcfwn no impediment in the way-of recovering debts, the American ihould be prefumed to havé afted on the fame liberal principle, if any doubt arifes upon the coriftruftion of, the public afts, When aftatute is repealed, mefne afts are valid j but it is not fo, -when a fubfequent achdeclares-a former one to - be void. Jenk. 233. pi. 6. ■ Had the treaty meant to obviate' oniy'a part of the impediments, .the meaning would have been exprefled in qualified terms.' But as it could not be fuppofed, that, after the peace, laws would be palled creating impediments to the .recovery of Britijh debtsthe treaty cannot becon-conftrued merely to intend to prevent the palling future laws,' but to annihilate the operation of fúch as .were previoufly enaft-ed. There.is no fuch. claufe in the treaties, which England 
      made at the fame period with France, Spain, and Holland, and .for this obvious reafon, that tbofe countries had paffed no law to impede the recovery of Britijh debts. • A change of circum-Ranees, a recognition, ex poji faflo, will often impofe an obligation, which may not, originally, be binding on the'party: The debt fcontrafted by an infant, is obligatory on him, if he promifes to pay it when of age. The afiumption of a certificated bankrupt, to fatisfy a debt, which the certificate would, otherwife,’ have difcrnrged, affords a new caufe of aftion. And the bare acknowledgment of a debt, barred by theftatute of limitations, is fufficient to maintain ah aftion againft the debtor. .-So,-in the’prefent cafe, the treat)', operating as.a national comp aft, is a protnife to remove every pre-exifting bar to the recovery of Britijh debts; -and, whatever may have been the previous ftttte of things, this is a paramount engage- . ment, entered into-by a competent authority, upon an adequate confideration. .’
    Marjkall, (of Virginia') for the Defendant in error.”
    The cafe refolves itfelf into .two general propofitions : ift, That-the aft-of Aflemblyof Virginia, is a bar to the recovery of the , debt, independent of the treaty. 2d, That the treaty does not remove the bar.
    ' I. That the-aft of A {Terribly of Virginia is a bar to the recovery of the debt, introduces two fubjefts for confideration :■ ift. Whether the Legiflature • had power to extinguifh the debt? 2d. Whether the Legiflature-had exercifed that power ?
    ift. It has been conceded; that independent nations have, in general, the right of confifcation ; and that Virginia,- at the time of paffing her lav/, was an independent nation. But, it is contended, that from the peculiar circumftances of the war, the citizens of each of the coptending' nations,' having been members of the fame government, the general right of confif-cation did not apply, and ought not to be exercifed. It is not, however, -necefTary for the Defendant in error to ihew a parallel cafe in hiftory ; fince, it is incumbent on tbofe, whowiih to impair the fovereignty of Virginia,- to eftablifti on principle, or precedent, the jufticeof their exception. That State being engaged in a war, neceffarily poflefled ’ the powers of war; and confifcation is one of thofe powers, weakening'the party againft whom it is employed, and {Lengthening the party that employs it. . War, indeed, is a fíate of ■ force ; and no tribunal can decide between the belligerent powers. But did hot Virginia hazard as much'-by the war, as if ihe had never been a member of the Britijh empire ? Did ihe not hazard more, from the very circumftance of its being a- civil war ? It will be allowed, that nations have equal powers; and that America^ in her own tribunals atleaft,.'muft from the qth of July 1776; confide red as independent a- nation as Great Britain: then, what would have been the filualion of American property, had Great Britain been'triumphant in.theconflidt ? Sequeftratior, confifcation and prbfcription would have followed in .the train of that event; and'whvfhould the confifcation of Britijh property be deemed lefs juft in the event of the American triumph ? The rights of wai clearly exift between members of the fame Empire, engaged in a civil war. Fatt. B. 3. f. 292. 295. But,, fuppcfea fuit had been brought during the war by a Britifn fubjedt againft an American citizen, it could not have been fupported ; and if there was a power to fufpsnd the recovery, there muft have been ’ a power to extinguiih the debt: they aré, indeed,,.portions of •the fame power, emanating from the fame.fource. The le-gif-lative authority of any country, can only be reftrained by its own municipal conftitution: This is a principle that fprings from the very nature of fociety; and the judicial authority can have no right to queftion the validity of a law, unlefs fuch a jurifdicftion is exprefsly given by the conftitution. • It is not neceffary to enquire, how the( judicial authority ihould .aft, if the Legiflature were evidently to- violate any of the laws of God ; but.property is the creature of civil fociety, and-fubjedt-, in all refpedts, to the' difpofition and controul-.of civil inftitu-tions. There is no weight.in the argument, founded on what is fuppofed to be the underftanding o f the parties at the place and time of contracting debts ;‘ for, the right of confifcation does not arife from the underftanding of individuals, in private tranfadtions,.but from the nature and operation of government. Nor does it follow, thatbecaufe an individual has not the power of extinguifhing his debts, the community, to which he belongs, may not, upon principles of public policy, prevent his creditors from recovering them. It muft-be'repeated, that the ' law of property, in its origin and operation, is the offspring of the focial ftate; not the incident of a'.ftate of nature. But the 'revolution did not'reduce the inhabitants of 'America to a ftate ' of nature; and) if it did, the Plaintiff’s claim would be at an end. Otherobjedlions to the do.dtrine are ftarted : It is faid, that a debt, which arifes from a contradi, formed between the fubjedls of two belligerent powers, in a neutral country* cannot be confifcátéd; but the fociety has a right .to apply-to its own ufe, the property of its enemy, wherever the right of property accrued, and-wherever thfi property,-itfélf can be found. Suppcfe a debt had been contracted between two Americans, and one of them had joined England, would not the right of confifcation extend to fuch a debt-? ' As to the cafe of theranfom bill, if the right of confifcation does not extend tó.it, (which is, by no means,-admitted) it muft be on account of the peculiar nature of the contradi, implying a waver of the-rjghts. of war. And the validity of capitulations depends on ‘the fame" principle. But, let it be fuppofed, that a government ihould infringe the provifions of a capitulation, by imprifonirig fol- . diers, who had ftipulated for a free return to their home, could an action of trefpáfs be maintained againft the gaoler ? No: the aft of the government, though difgraceful, would beobliga-■ttory on the judiciary department.
    2d, But it is novy to be confide'red, whether, if the Legifla-ture of Virginia had the power of confifcation, they have exer-cifed it? The third feftion of the aft of Afiembly difcharges. the debtor; and, on the plain import of the term, it may be alked, if he is difchargcd, how can he remain charged ? The exprefiion is, he üiall be difcharged from the debt; and yet, it is contended, he ihall remain liable to the debt/ Suppofe the law had faid, that the debtor ihould be difcharged from the commonwealth, but not from his creditor,, would not .the'Le-giilature have betrayed the extremeil folly in fuch a propofition ? and what man'in his fenfes would haye paid a farthing into the treafury, under fuch a l.aw?" Yet, in violation of the expreffions of the aft, this is the conilruftion which' is now attempted. It is, lilcewife, contended,, that the aft of AfTembly does not amount to a confifcation of the debts paid into the treafury; and that 'he Legiilature had no power, as between .creditors and debto s, to malee a fubilitutjon, or commutation, in the mode of payment. But what is a confifcation ? The fubilance, and not ■'the form, is to be regarded. The Hate.had a right either to make the confifcation abfolute, or to,modify, it' as ihe pleafed. If ihe had ordered the debtor to pay the money into the treafury, to be applied to public ufes; would it not have been, in the eye of reafon, a perfeft confifcation ?'She has thought proper, however, only to authorife the payment, to exonerate.the debtor from his creditor, and to retain thé . money in the trpafury, fubjeft to her own difcretion, as to its future appropriation, As far as thearrangement has been made, jt is confifcatory in its nature, and-muftbe binding on the parties ; though in the exei;cife of her diferefion, the fíate might chufe to reflore the whole, or any part, of the money to the origina} creditor, Nor is it fufficient to fay, that the payment was voluntary, in'order to defeat the confifcation, A law is an exprefiion of the public will; which, when expreffed, is not jthe lefs .obligatory, becaufe it jmpofesno penalty. Banks, Ca- ■ nal Companies, and numerous auociations of a fimilar defeription, are formed on the principle of voluntary fubfeription. The nation i$ defirous that fuch inilitutions ihould exiit; individuals 'are'invited to fubferibepn the terms of the law; and, yvhen they have fubferibed, they are entitled to all the benefits., and are fubjeft to all the inconveniences of the afiociation’, afo though no penalties are impofed. So, when .the government of Virginia wiihed to poflefs itfelf of the debts previoufly owing to Britijh fubjedts, the. debtors were invited to make the payment into the treafury; and, having done fo, there is-no reafon, of juft ice, in contending that the law is not obligatory on all the world, in relation to the benefit, which it promifed as an inducement to the payment. If, fubfequent' to the a£t of 1777, a law had been' palled confifcating Britijh debts, for the ufé of the ftate, with', orders that the' Attorney General ihould fae all ' Britijh debtors, could he have fued the Defendants in error, .as Britijh debtors, after this payment of the debt into the tre'a-fury ? Common fen fe and common honefty revolt at the idea ; and, yet, if the Britijh creditor retained any right or intereft in the, debt, the -ftate would be entitled, on principles of law, to recover the amount.
    II. Having thus, then, eftablifhed, that at the time of entering into the" Treaty of 1783, the Defendant owed nothing to the Plaintiff 5 it is next to be- enquired, whether that treaty' revived the debt in favour of the Plaintiff, and removed the bar to a recovery, which the law of Virginia had interpofed ? The words; Of the fourth article of .the T reaty are, “ that creditors on either fide, lhaft meet with no lawful impediment to the recovery of the full value, in fterling money, of all bona Jide ■ debts heretofore contracted.” Now, it may be alked, who are creditors ? Ther.q cannot be a creditor where' there is not a debt; and Britijh debts were extinguiflied by the a£t of con-fifcation. The articles, therefore^ muft be conftrued with reference to thofe creditors, who had bona Jide debts, fubfifting, in legal force, at the time of making the Treaty ; and the word recovery can have no effecft to create a debt, where none pre-vioufiy exifted. Without difcufling the power of Congreis to take away á veiled right by treaty, the fair and rational con-ftrudlion of the inftrument itfelf, is fufficient for the Defend'ant’s caufe. The words ought, furely, to be very plain, that - ihall work fo evident a hardlhip, as to compel a man--to pyty a debt, which he had before extinguiflied. .. The treaty, itfelf, does not point out any particular defcription of perfons,. who were to be deemed debtors ; and it muft be expounded in relation to the exifting ftate of things. It is not true, that the 'fourth article can have no meaning, unlefs it applies,to cafes like the prefehf. For inftance ;—there was a law of Virginia, which prohibited the recovery of Britijh debts, that had not . been paid into the treafury: thefe vetes bona-fide fubfifting debts; and the. prohibition was a legal impediment' to the reco. • very, which the treaty was intended to remove. So, likewife, in feveral other Hates, lav/s had been paffed' authririfing a dif-charge of Brit'Jh debts in paper money, or by a tender of pro-'. perty'at a valuation, and the treaty was calculated to guard againft fuch impediments tc the4 recovery.of the' fterling value of thofe debts. It appears; therefore, that at the time of making the treaty, the ftate.of things was fuch, that Virginia had exercifed her foveVeign right of confifcation, and had actually received the money from the Britijh debtors. If debts thus paid were within the fcope of the fourth article, thofe who framed the article knew of the payment; and upon every principle of equity and lav/, it ought to be prefumed, that the recovery, which they contemplated, was intended againft the receiving ftate, riot againft the paying debtor. Virginia poffef-ring the right of compelling a payment for her own ufe, the payment to her, upon her req'uifition, ought to be cónfidered as a payment to the attorney, or agent, of the Britijh credit- or. ' Nor is' fuch a fubftitution a novelty in.legal proceedings : a foreign'attachment is founded on the fame principle..' Sup-pofe judgment had been obtained againft. the Defendants in error, as Garniihee in a foreign.attachmerit brought againft the Plaintiff in error, and the moneyhad -been paid, accordingly, to the Plaintiff in the attachment; but it afterwards appeared that' the Plaintiff in the attachment'had,- in fait, no caufe.of action, having been paid his debt before he commenced the fuit: If the treaty had been made in fuch a ftate of things,, which would be the debtor contemplated by the fourth article*—■' the Defendants in error, who had complied with a legal judgment againft them, or the Plaintiff in the attachment, .who had received the money ? This .a£t of Virginia' muft. have been known to. the American and Britijh commi/lioners ; and,.therefore, cannot be repealed v/.ithout plain and explicit'expreflions diredted to that cbjedt. Betides, the public faith ought to be preferved. .The public faith was plighted by the a£t of Virginia; and, as a revival of the debt in queftion, would be a fhameful violation of the faith of the ftate to her own citizens, the treaty ílioúld receive any poflible interpretation fo avoid ib difhonorable and fo pernicious a eonfequence. It is evident, that the power'of the government, to take away a veiled right, was queftionable in the minds of the American commifiioners, ftuce they would not exercife that power in reftoring confifcated real-eftate ; and confifcated debts, or other perfonaí eftate rn«ft come within the fame rule. If (Jongrefs had the power óf diverting a veiled right, it muft have arifen from the neceflity of the cafe ; and if the necefllty-had exifted, the. American com - mifixoners, .explicitly avowing it, would have juftified their acquiefcence to the nation. But the commiflioners could have no motive to forrii a treaty fuch as the oppofite conftruclion fuppofes ; for^ if the ilipulation wás indifpenfable to the attain-menrof peace, the object was national, and fo fnould. be the payment of the equivalent: the commiflioners, in fuch cafe, would have agreed, at once, that the public iliould pay the Britijh debts; fince the public, mull:, oa every principle of equity, be anfwerable to the Virginia debtor, who is rjow faid to be the viéiim. The cafe cited from- Jenkins, docs not apply ; as there is no article of the treaty, that declares the o† Virginia void. See Old Law of Evidence 196.
    Campbell, of Virginia, on the fame fide. The queflions to be difeuffed are' thefe:—ift. Did the a£l of Aflembly of Virginia difebarge the debtor ? 2d. Did any fubfequent ail, or law, of the government, re-charge him ?
    I. The right of confifeation, in a time of war, is incontrovertibly eflablríhed; Vatt. b. 3. c. yf. 77. and nothing but the conventional, or cuftomary, law of nations, can reftrain the exercife of that general right. Rut the conventional, or cuf-tomary, law of nations is. only obligatory on-thofe nation's by whom it is adopted. Vatt. Bret, bife f. 24. 25. 17. Vatt. b. ' 3. c. 28./. 287. 292. Even in the Englijh courts, indeed, the confifeation law of Georgia has been adjudged to be valid. If, therefore, the right of confifeation might be exercifed by an individual ftáte, nothing can more emphatically prove its ex-ercife, .tban.the language of the act of Virginia. ° The a¿t is a difebarge in expreis terms, faying, that “ the receipt of the poper officer fhdll Difebarge the pay’Shj&cm fo much of his debt, as is p-aid into the treafury;”—ty/fiereas a confifeation of the debt, would only work a diicharge'by legal inference. To reitri<£h the meaning of the . difebarge to a difebarge from the Rate, is abfurd; for, the fíate never had a charge againft the debtor; or, if the ftate had a right to charge him, another confcquence, equally fatal to the Plaintiff’s caufe, would en-fue, that the right of the Britijh creditor to charge him was extinguifned ; lince the debtor clearly could not be refponfible to both:
    II. .In cor.fidering,whether any thing- has been done by the Government, to revive the charge, in favor of the Britijh creditor, it is to be premifed, that the ftate of things, at the time of making the treaty, is to be held legitimate; and whatever tends to change that ftate, is odious in the eye of the law. Vatt. E.' 4,.c. 2.J. ar. Ibid. B. 2. c. ly.f 305 As, therefore, by the law of nations, a payment under a confifeation difeharges a debt- or, though if there had been no payment, the debt would have revived at the peace; Byr.k. c. 8. p. 177. de reb. bell: nothing fhort of an exprefs and explicit declaration of the treaty jfhould be allowed fo to alter the ftate of things,, as- to-revive a debt, that, had been lawfully extinguiihed. If then the treaty had been intended to alter the ftate of things, reafon, equity, arm law, concur in fuppofing, that it would .have been by a provifion,. calling on Virginia, whio ,had received the money, to refund it in fatiffacfion of the claim of the Britijh creditor. Adverting to the words of the 4th. ‘article of the treaty, and thence deducing a fair, legal, and coniiftent meaning, the claim of the Plaintiff cannot be fupported. • It may not be improper to apply the word Creditors to Britijh fubjcfts ; but, it is contended,- ' that the Virginia ait interpofes a lawful impediment,(not an impediment in fadt, fuch as payment to the creditor himfelf)to the recovery of the debt, which impediment the treaty intended to remove. The anfwer, however, is conclufive, that this was not a debt at the time of making the treaty; and, therefore, the exprcffion, whatever may be,its general' import, cannot be applied to the cafe. It is urged, likewife, that the words debts heretofore contrasted, are peculiarly. defcriptive of debts of the p.refent clafs: but the words heretofore contrasted, cannot alter the nature and import of the word debt; and thofe words were neceffary tobe inferred; becaufe they afcerfained the debts, which were, at all events, to be.paid in fterling money;—debts contrasted aftervoards being left to'the lex loci, and liable to the tender laws, which the different ftates had made, or might think proper to make. If, indeed the oppoiite conftrudtion prevails, then all debts, pneviouily contracted, in whatever manner they may have been extinguiihed, are revived by the treaty. But, furely, obfeure words ought not to be oonftrued fo as to alter the exifting ftate of things between the two nations, and involve thoufands of individual citizens in ruin. - It is not now contended, that debts do not- revive by the peace; though the Commiffioners, who formed the treaty, might entertain doubts on the fubjedt; and, therefore, provided fpecially for the cafe. Gretius B. 3. c. 9, f 9. fays,(though his commentator diffents) that debts are not, of courfe, revived by a peace; and there are many inftances of Conventions between nations, ftipulating for the revival. Byhk. de reb. bell. c. 8. p. 177. The treaty extends to Britijh, as well as to American, debtors; and as Britain had paffed no adt of confifcation, the article was meant folely as a convention, that debts not paid to the public, ihould be recoverable of the original creditor. To illucidate the fubjedf, it is neceffary to inquire into the power of the Commiffioners ; for, it‘is not to be prefumed, that they were ignorant of their power, or that they meant to exceed it; and if one conftrudtion will produce an effedl, to which they were competent, while the other conftrudfiqn will amount to a mere ■ ufurpatioh, the former ought certainly to be adopted. Thus, Congrefs never was conlidered as.a legiflatjve body, except in relation to thofe lubjedls, exprefsly affigned to the Federal jurifdiction ; and could at no time, iior in any manner, repeal the laws of the feveral Rates, or iacfifice the rights of individuals. The power of abrogating, is as eminent as the power of making laws ; Vatt. B. 1, c. g.f. 3¿j.. 47. and even the powers of war and peace may be limited by the fundamental law of the Society. Vatt. B, 4. c. 2./ 10. .The fundamental law of the Union, was declared in the articles of confederation; and thofe articles, as well as the written conftitutions of the feveral Rates, múít have been known to the'cornmiflloners on both fides, as the boundaries of the authority of the American government itfelf, and of courfe of all authority derived from that government. But the right of facrificing individuals, even on the ground of public ■necefiitji, belongs only to that power in a ft ate, which is veiled with' the eminent domain, a domain infeparahle from empire. Vatt. B. 4. f. ia. Ibid. B. 1. c. 20. f 244. 245. On the revolution, the eminent domain was veiled in the people of America., in their relpeRiVe State Legiflatures ; and it could not be diverted and transferred, without án exprefs grant by the fame authority. The debates that arofe in the Britijb Parliament on the fubjeft of the treaty,-iliew, likewife, that the Bri-tijb Cornruiffioners were fenfible, that the power of the American Commillioners did not extend.to the repeal of any State law. On the faith of the. Virginia law, many citizens colledt-ed their eitates from other hands, and paid them into the treafu-ry; ,and, therefore, even if the treaty requires a payment of thofe debts, the relponfibiiity ought only to attach upon the State. If the Virginia law had made a direct and unqualified .confifcation, there would be'no doubt of its validity-; but it difeharges the debtor as much as if it.had. been a confifcation, and béing difeharged, it can be no reafon to revive the debt, that the dilcharge was procured by a voluntary payment. Upon the whole, the a£t of Aflembly amounts, fubftantialiy, to a-con-r fifeation ; which means nothing more, than a‘bringing into the public Treafury the confifeated property; and the State may, if file pleafes, reftore it in that cafe, as well as in the cafe of a diferetion exprclVly referved, or in the cafe of a forfeiture for treafon, or felony.
    Wilcocks, for the Plaintiff- in error.
    If is neceflarv, iff, to afeertain the meaning of the a£ts of the Legiilature of Virginia.;■ and 2d, the operation of the treaty of peace, in relation tp thofe a¿ls.
    I. That the Legifiatureof Virginia did not mean to confiscate debts, is evident from the declaration contained in the preamble, that fuch a confifcation is not agreeable to the cuicom of nations ; and where’"the enacting claúfe is doubtful, the preamble will furniíh a key to the conftruRion. After providing, therefore, for the íequeílration of real eftate, the law' proceeds' merely to permit the payment of Britijb debts into the public Treafurv. There is nothing compulfory on the debtor ; all 
      
      debtors are not enjoined to pay; and no debtor is reft'rained from ,remitting to his Britijh creditor. Even, indeed, if a bare fe~ queftration had-been'intended, there .never could be terms more defective. The Legiilature only fays, if a debtor chufes to pay hts debt into ,th¿ Treafury, he ihall be indemnified'; and, in a fubfequent act, when the State declares the arhount fot which ihe will be refponfible, (the value of the money paid with in-tereft) ihe does not*'-determine, whether the payment by the American debtors, was a difcharge from the Britijh creditors. To pay the Britifn creditor^ in that way, v/ould be manifeftly unjuft; but if the 'American debtor is reimbuned the value of -what he paid, with intereft, he has no right to'complain.
    II. In examining the efteCt of the treaty,-if it is conceded, that the Virginia a£fc extinguiihed the debt, it- may be aflumed,. that the commiflioners had power to enter into the treaty. That inftriimient, therefore, is the fupreme law of the land: and, upon the whole,!it is highly favourable to Atnerica. Treaties ought to be conftrued liberally; but it would be illiberal to .confírme this treaty, fo as to prevent the recovery of bona fide debts. The Britijh Commiilioners gave Up a great deal; but' they were particularly anxipus on two points, the property of the loyalifts, and the fecurity of the Britifn debts. It is objected, that the treaty does not make any cxprefs mention of the repeal of State laws : but the laws interfering with the object of the,, fourth article were fo numerous, that, probably, the com-miffiohers did not know them all; and it was fafeft to refort to general, expreffions. The words “ heretofore contracted,” mean debts- con traded before the revolution; and include not. only exifting debts, at the time of forming the treaty, but ail debts contracted before that memorable epoch,, though extin-guiihed by the acts óf State Legiilatures, without the confent, or co-opcralifin, of the Britijh creditors. The words- that “ creditors Ihall meet with no lawful impediment in the recovery of-all fuch debts,” mean, that when the creditors apply to a court.of juftice, no law ihall be pleaded in bar to a judgment for their debts. What elfe, indeed, could reafonably be the obje'Ct of the Britijh Minifter, who was bound to proteCt the commercial inter-efts of his nation, and who infilled on the in-iertion of the fourth article ? Could he mean to relmqdiih all debts paid into the public treafury of the different States ? Then, if all had been fo . paid, the article was nugatory. But the impediments referred tp, muft have been the exifting impe-dimwits,-and not impediments to be afterwards created'; and flie enforcement of the former would be,, on general principles, as unjuft to the Britijh creditor, as the introduction of the .latter.- Bebde?, if the former ciefcription of impediments was not contemplated, Britijh crediters were in a worfe predica-■merit, than loya-lifts, owners of coriflfcated real eftate, in ivhofe favor, it was Stipulated,-that a Congrelfional recommendation ihould he made.
    
      Lewis, for the Plaintiff- in error.
    The individuals of differ- . ent. nations enter into contrails with each other, upon a pre-fumption, that, in cafe of a war, debts will not be conftfcated. ,The prefumption is founded upon the uniform practice of the monarchies of Murope; and the national charafler of the American Republic is interefted that a.-mcre rigorous policy fhould not be introduced: Congrefs, indeed, never attempted the fei-zure of debts ; and very few of the States have palled confif-cating laws.- It is now, then, to be enquired, ift, Had the Le-giflature of Virginia a competent authprity to extinguiih the debt ?■ 2d, If tbeLegiilaturehad fuchan authority, has it been exercifed ? And gdly, if the authority was lawfully exereifed, what is the effeit of the treaty of peace. -
    ift. If the power to confifcate debts exifted, it exifted in the United States, and .'not in the individual ftates. It has been admitted,, that Congrefs poftefied tthe power of war and peace; and that the right of confifcation emanates from .that (buree. All America was concerned in the war, arid it feems naturally to follow, that all America (not the conftituent parts, rcfpec-tively)/was entitled to the emoluments of confifcation. It is true,/ that when a civil war breaks out, each party is entitled to the rights of war, as between independent nations; .and,, it is riot denied, that Virginia was veiled, at the revolution, with-all the eminent domain attached to empiie, which was not delegated to Congrefs, as the head of the confederation. "Such. / was the peculiar ftate of things, that although Virginia m\g\% f in any future war, have added as (lie pica fed,in the war trien . fubfifting fhc had no election all the powers of'-war and peace were veiled in Congrefs, not in the lerifiafures of the fevcral ftates. When it is (aid, that even the B'ritifb courts recognize ' the validity of a ftate confifcation ; it íhocid be remembered, that the cafe alluded to, ar'ofe from a law of treafon, and'the forfeiture (or treafon, properly belonged, to the date of Georgia. ■ 1 H. Bl. 148. 9. So, when it is faid,. that the aift of Virginia was.pafled, prior to the completion of th? articles of'confederation,. it is fufficient to ariftver, 'that the fame altj-eiHon has already been over-ruled in Doans ⅛" 'Penbalisiv.
      
       It is.,cbfurd to fuppofe, -that Congrefs and Virginia couid, at the; fame time, pofleis the powers of war and peace. - The war was waged againft all America, as-one nation, or.' community i/iind the peace was concluded on the fame principle?.' Before the revb- ' lotion, the power .of confifcation. W.as veiled in the King, not ' . in the'- Parliament. When the. revolution commenced, conventions, committees of fafety, and ether popular,ailbciatibns, were formed, even while the legiilatures of the feveral Rates werein feflion. The people affuined'themfelves, in the firR in-flarme, the powers of war and peace, but quickly and wifely veiled them in Congrefs. -At what period, then,_ could the Rate legiilatures afiért that they poffeffed thofe powers ? All the property of the enemy, likewife, of whatever kind, was booty of war,'and belonged to the Union. The authorities fay, that one beliigent power (nay confifcate debts due from its fubje£ls, to the fubjeíts of the"other belligerent power j but it is no where faid, that a member of any belligerent power, a c'onRituent part of the ration, poffelfes fuch authority. The eminent domain of Virginia muR, therefore, be confined to internal affairs; and it is not'firfficient to objedl, that-the property of-the debt in quefiion, wa„s within the .limits of her territory, ar.J, therefore, was fubject toiler daws. The inference would be falfe, even if the premilhs were true: but the premi-fes are unfound d; for. a debt is always due where the creditor refides, except in the cafe of afl obligation, which is due, where -the inflruir.ent is kept. I Ro?L Abr. 908. pi. 'I. 4. Ibid. 909. pi. 1. 7. Salk. 37. 4 Burn. Ecc. L. 157. \
    2d. & 3d. On the fecond and third points, there'can be but little added to the arguments already advanced, if laws change according to the manners of times, as reafon and autbdfity inculcate'^. L. Raym. 882.) the act of Virginia ihould \be fo expounded as to conform to the modern law of nations, v^hich is adverfe to the confifcátion of debts'.. The’right of feque&ration may exiR (and that is all the cafe in (the Old Lav.: of M-vuler.ee, />. can prove) but Eynkerjhook lays exprefsly, that, a debt not exacted, revives upon the peace; and, in the prefent inRance, the payment was furely voluntary,- without force of /any kind:
    
      
       As I was not prefent during the. argument, I was in hopes to have obtained .the briefs of. the counfel 'themfeives, for a more”full difplay 'of their learning and ingenuityfin'this caufe ; but being difappointed in that refp'eft, I have been aided, by the notes of Mr. W. Tilghman, to ■whofe kindnefs, it is juft on .the prefent occailon to acknowledge, I have been frequently indebted for fimilar communicationsj in the courfe of me compilation for thefe Reports.
    
    
      
      
         - Irí-delc,| The State of-ATojv/ji Carolina did' aéíually pafs a confiscation law.
    
    
      
       See ant. (■.
      
    
   The Cou-rt,

after great confideration, delivered their opinions, feriatim, as follow :

Chace, Jujtice.

The Defendants in error, on th ' day of July, 1774, palled their penal bond to Farrell and Jones, for the payment of f. 2,976 II 6, of good Britijh money; but the condition of the bond, or the time of payment, does not appear on the record.

On the 20th of-October, 1777, the legislature of the commonwealth of Virginia, palled a law to fequefier Britijh property, In the 3d fedliou of the law, it was enabled, “that it ihould be lawful for any citizen of Virginia, owing money to a fub-je£l of Great Britain, to pry the lame, or any part' thereof, from time to time, as he-ihould think fit, into the loan office, taking thereout a certificate for the fame, in die name of the creditor, with an indoifemcnt, under the hand of the commit-fioner of the-faid office, expreiiing the name of the payer ; arid ihall deliver fuch certificate to the governor and the council’ whofe receipt- ihall • difcbarge- him from fo much of the debt. And the governor and the council 'ihall, in like mannsf, lay before the General Affembly, once in every year, an account of thefe certificates, fpecifying the names of the perfons by, and for whom they were paid; and ihall fee to the fafe keeping of the fame-, fubjeSl to the future direSlions of the legiflature : provided, that the governor and the council may make fuch allowance, as they ihall think reafonable, out of the interest of the-money fo paid, into the loan office, to the wives and children, refiding in the ftate, offuch creditor.

On the 26th of April, 1780, the Defendants in error, paid in,to the loan office of Virginia, part of their debt, to. wit, 3,111 1-9 dollars, equal to £. 933 14 0 Virginia currency; and obtained a certificate from the commiffioners of the loan office, and a receipt from the governor and the council of Virginia, agreeably to the above, in part recited law.

' The Defendants in error being fued, on the above<uond, in the Circuit Court of Virginia, pleaded the above law, and the payment above ftated, in b.ar of fo much of the Plaintiff’s debt. The plaintiff,. to avoid this bar, replied the fourth article of the Definitive Treaty of Peace, between Great Britain and the United States, of the 3d of September, 1783. ■ To this replication there was a general demurrer and joinder. The Circuit Court allowed the demurrer,. and the plaintiff brought the prefent writ of error.

The cafe is of. very great importance, not oniy from the property that depends on the decifion, but -becaufe the effedt and operation of the treaty are neceffarily involved. I wifiied to decline fitting in the caufe, as I had been council, fome . years-ago, in a fuit in Maryland, in favour of American debtors ; and I confulted with my brethren, who unanimoufy advi-fed me not to withdraw from the bench. I have endeavored to cliveft myfelf of-all former prejudices, and to form' an opinion with impartiality. I have' diligently attended to the arguments of the learned council, who„debatcd the feveral queffions, that were made in the caufe, with great legal abilities, ingenuity and.{kill. I have given the •fu'bje'ff, fince the argument, my deliberate inveftigation, and fliall, (as briefly ns the cafe will permit,) deliver the refult of it .with great diffidence, and the higheft refpedfc for thofe, who entertain a different .opinion. I folícit, and 1 hope I.ihall meet with, a candid allowance for the many imperfedtions, which may be difeovered in obfervations haftily drawn up, in the.intervals of attendance in court, and the co.nfideration of other very important cafes.

The firfl point raffed by the council for the Plaintiff in error was, “ that the legiflature of Virginia had no right to make the law» of the 20th October, 1777, above'in part recited. If this objection, is -eifebliilied, the judgment of the Circuit Court muft be reverfed; becaufe it deftroys the Defendants plea- in bar, and leaves him without defence to the Plaintiff’s a ¿lion.

Thia-objedlion was maintained on different grounds by the Plaintiff's council. One of them {Mr. Tilghman) contended, that the legiflature of Virginia had no right to confifcate any Britiji} property, becaufe Virginia was part. of .the difmem - bered empire■ of Great Britain, and the Plaintiff and Defendants were, all of them, members of the Britijh nation, when the . debt was contracted, and therefore, that the laws of independ-ant nations do not apply to the cafe; and, if applicable, that the legiflature of Virginia was not juftified by the modern law and practice of European nations,' in confifcating private debts. In fupport of this opinion, he cited Vattel Lib. c: 5. f. 77, who expreffes himfelf thus tc The fovereign has naturally the fame light over what his fubjefils may be indebted to enemies. Therefore,' he may confifcate debts of this nature, -if the term of payment happen in the time of war. But at prefent, in regard to the advantage and fafety of Commerce, all the /overeigns óf Europe have departed from this rigour-, and, as this cuflom has been generally received, he, who Ihould ail contrary -to it, would injure the public faith-, for Arrangers trufted his fub-jeifts, only from a firm perfuafton, that the general cuflom would be obferved.” ’ .

The other council for the Plaintiff in error (Mr. Lewis)' denied any power in the Virginia legiflature, to confifcate any Britijh property, becaufe all fuch power belonged exclujively to Congrefs ; and he contended, that if Virginia had a power of confifeation, yet, it did not extend fo the confifcation of debts by the modern law and prailice of nations.'

T-would premife that this objection againft the right -of the Virginia legiflature to confifcate Britijh property,, (and efpe-cially debts) is made on the part of Britiji) fubjeiis, and after •the treaty cf peace, and not by the government of the United States, L would alfo remark, that the law of Virginia was ' made after the declaration of independence by Virginia, and alfo by Cons refs; and feverat years before the-Confederation of tho-United States, which, although agreed to by Congrefs on the 15th of November, .1777, an-d affented to by ten ftates, in 1-778-, was-only finally completed and ratified on the ift- of-‘■March, 1781.

t I am of opinion thatthe excluftve right of confifcating, du- .- ring the war, all pnd every fpecies of Britijh property, within the territorial limits of Virginia, refided only in- the Legiflature of th i-t commonwealth. I ihall hereafter confider whether the law of the ¾0⅞1\ of October 1777, operated to confifcate or extingitijh Britijh debts, contrafted before the. war. It is worthy of remembrance, that'Delegates and Reprefentatives were elected, by the people of the feveral counties and corporations of Vir-giniá, to meet in general convention, for the purpofe of framing a new government, Ry- the authority of the people only-, and that the faid Convention met on the 6th of May', and continued in felfión until the 5th of July 1776', and, in virtue , of their delegated power, eltabliíhed a conftitution, or form of government, tp regulate and determine by whom, and in -what . manner, the authority of the people of Virginia was thereafter to- be executed. As the. people of that country were the genuine fource and fountain of all power, that could be right.fully exercifed within its limits; they had . therefore an un-'queftionable right to grant it to whom they pleafed, and under what reftriftions or limitations they thought proper. The people of Virginia,- by their Conftitution orfundamental-law, granted and delegated all their Supreme civil power to a-Le'gif ■lature,' an Executive, and a Judiciary, Thz firjl to make; the fecondto execute;! and the laft to declare or expound, the' laws Of the Commonwealth. This abolition of the Old Governmént, and this eftabiiihmer.t of-a new one was the higheft aft of power, that any people can exercife. 1 From the moment the people of Virginia exercifed this power,-all dependence op, and .cori-neftion with Great -Britain abfolutely and forever ceafcd; and no formal declaration of Independence was neceflary, although a decent refpeft for the opinions of mankind required a • declaration of the caufes, which impelled t the fepáration; and was proper to gi ve notice of the event to the nations of Europe. •—I hold it as unqueftionable, that the Legiflature of Virginia eftabliílied as I have ftated by the authority of the people, was for ever thereafter invefted with the fupreme andfovereigh power of the Jlate, and with authority to make any Laws in their diferetion, to afteEt'the lives, liberties,.and property of - all the citizens of that Commonwealth, with this exception only, that . fuch laws ftiould not be repugnant to the Conjiitution, ox fundamental law, which could b.e fubjeft only to the controul oí the body of the nation, in cafes not to be defined, and which will always provide for tbemfelves. The legiflative power of every nation can only be reftrained by its own conjiitution : and it is the duty of its courts of juftice not to q'ueftion the validity ■of any law'made in ptirfuance of the conftitution. There is no queftion but the aft of the Virginia Legiflature (of the 20th of OSiober 1777) was within the authority, granted to them by the people of that country; and this being’admitted, it is a necefla- • fy refult, that the law ’ is obligatory on the courts of Virginia, and, in fny opinion, on the courts. of the United' States.' If Virginia as afovereign State, violated the.ancient or .modera law of nations, in making the law of the 2.olh of October 1777, ihe was anfweriible in her -political capacity to the Britijh nation, whofe ftibjedts have been injured in confequence of that law. Suppofe a general right td confifcate Britijh property, is admitted to be in Congrefs, and Congrefs had confifcated all Britijh property within the--United States, including: private debts : would it be permitted to contend in any court of the United States, that' Congrefs hadt no power to confifcate fuch debts, by the modern law of nations ? If the right is conced-to be in Congrefs, it neceffarily follows, that ihe is. the judge-of the exercife of the right, a? to the extent, mode, and manner. The fame reafoning is ftridtly applicable to Virginia, if confidered a fovereign nation-, provided' ihe had not delegated fuch power to Congrefs, before the making of the of October 1777, which I will hereafter confider.

In June 1776, the Convention of Virginia formally declared, that Virginia was a free, fovereign, and independent ftate; and od the 4th of July, 1776, following, the United States, in Congrefs aflembled, declared the Thirteen United Colonies fres and independent ftates; and that as fuch, they had full power to levy war, conclude peace, &c. I confider this as a declaration, not that the United Colsniesybnzí/y, iñ a collective capacity, were independent ftates, &c. but that each of them was. a fovereign and independent ftate, that is, that each of them had a right -to govern itfelf by its own authority, and its own laws, without any controul from any other power upon earth.

Before thefe folemn a£ts of feparation from the Crown of Great Britain, the war between Great Britain "and the United Colonies, jointly, and feparately, was a civil war; but inflantly, on that great and ever memorable event, the'war changed its nature, and became a public war between independent governments'; and immediately thereupon all the rights of public war (and all the other rights of an independent nation) attached to the government of Virginia; and all the former political connexion, between Great Britain and Virginia, and alfa between their- refpedb've fubjedts, were totally diffslved; and not only the two nations, but all the fub-j eels of each, were-in a ftate of war; precifely as in the pre-fent war between Great Britain and France. Vatt. Lib. 3. ⅞92- to 2,95:Jib. 3. r. 5./ 70; 72 and 73.

From the4th of July, fat.'American States were defaSio, as well as de jure,. in the- poffeftion and adtual exercife of all the.rightsW independent governments. On theóthof February, 1778, the King of France entered intoatreaty of alliance with the United States', and on the 8th of Od. 1782,3 treaty of Amity and Cqrnmerce was'.concluded between the United States and the States'General of the United Provinces. T have ever Gonfidered it as the eftabliihed doftrine of the United States, that their independence originated from, and commenced with, the declaration of Congrefs, on the 4th of 'July, 1776 ; and that no other period can be fixed on for its commencement j and that all laws- made by the legiilatures of the feveral ftates, after the declaration of independence, were the laws of fovereign and independent governments.

That Virginia'was part of the difmembered Britijh empire, can, in my judgment, make no difference' in the cafe. IMo Rich diftindfion is taken by'Vattell (or any other writer) but Battell, when confidering the rights of war between two parties abfolutely independent, and no longer acknowledging a common fuperior (precifely the cafe in queftion) thus expref-fes himfelf, Lib. 3. c. 18 f 295» “’In fuch cafe, the ftate is difiblved,.and the war between the two parties, in every re-fpe¿i, is the fame with that of a public war between two different nations.” And Vattell denies, that fubjeEls can acquire property in things taken during a civil, war. ■

That the creditor and debtor were members of the fame empire, when the debt was contrasted, cannot (in my opinion/ diftinguiih, the cafe, for the fame reafons. A moft arbitrary claim was made by the parliament of Great Britain, to make laws to bind the people of America, in all cafes whatfoever, and the King of Great Britain, with the approbation of parliament, employed, not only the national forces, but hired foreign mercenaries to compel fubmiffion to this abfurd claim of omnipotent power.. The refiftance againft this claim was jujl, and independence became neceftary; and the people of the United States announced to the people of Great Britain, “ that they would hold them, as the reft of mankind, enemies in war, ;in peace, friends.” On the declaration of independence, it was in the option of any fubjedt of Great Britain, to join their brethren ,in America, or to remain fubjedls of Great Britain. Thofe who joined us were entitled to all the benefits of our freedom and independence; but- thofe who eledled tq continue fubjects óf Great Britain, expofed themfelves to any lofs, that might arife therefrom. By their adhering to the enemies of the United States, they voluntarily became parties to the injuf-tice and oppreffion of the Britijh governmentand they alfo contributed to carry on' the war, and to enilave their'former fellow citizens. As members of the Britijh government, from their own choice, they became perfonally anfwerable for the condudt of that government, of which they remained a part; and their property,-wherever found (on land or water) became liable to confifcation. . On this ground, Congrefs on the 24th of July, 177Ó, confifcated any Britijh property taken on the feas. See 2 Ruth. ínjl. UK % c. q.f 13. p. 531. 559. Fait. lib. .2. c. ■j.f. 81. & c. 18./ 344. lib. 3. c; 5. f 74. c. 9. f. 161. is? 193.

■ The Britijh creditor, by the conduct of his fovereign, became 'an -enemy to the common wealth of Virginia; .and thereby his debt was forfeitable to that government, as a compenfation for the damages of an unjufl war.

It appears- to me, that every nation at war with'another is juftifiable,'¿y the general andJlriSt law of nations, to feize and confifcate all moveable property of its enemy,, (of any kind or nature-whatfo<*ver.) wherever found, whether within -its territory,or. not. Byn'kerjhoek JL I.' P. de rebus bellicis. Lib. 1. c. 7.' p. 175. thus delivers his opinion,- “ Cum ea fit belli conditio lit hojfes first, bnini jure, fpoliati profcriptique, rationis ejt, quafcunqug'res hojliuni, apud hoftes inventas, L)ominum.mutare, et Fifco ceder-eP “ Since it is a condition of war, that enemies, by ’every right, may be plundered, and feized' upon, it is rea-fonable that whatever effects..of (the enemy are found with us who-áte his enemy, ihould change their matter, and bé confif-cated, or go into .thetrcaJuryP S. P. Lee on Capt. c. 8 ,p. IX1. •$. P:<X. Burt-, .pi f. 12. p. Q,lt).f. 2 .p’. 221 f. U. Bynkerjhoek the famfe borik, and chapter, page 177. thus exprefles himfelf: Sjuod dixi de actionibus reñe publicandis ita demum obtinet. .Si quod fubditi -nojiri hofiibus noflris debent, princeps a fubdi- ■ til Jilts, reqpenasexegerit: Si exegerit reble fiolutum ejl, si non exegerit, ■pace fadla, revivifcit jus priflinum creditoris; quia bccupatio, qua bello fit, magis.in faño, quam m potejlate juris ’confijtit. N.oimna* igiturnon exaSia, tempore belli quodam-modo intertnorb’-videntur, fed per pacem, genere quodam pojili-•minii, ndpriórem dominum .revertí. Secundum hcec inter gentes fere convenitut nominibus bello publicatis, pace deinde fafia, ex-■aSta cenfeantur-periijfe, et maneant-extmSia-, .non auiem exaSia ‘ revivifcant, et refiituantur veris creditoribusP

What I have faid of things.in aSiion'being rightfully con-“.fifc-ated, holds thus: If the prince truly exaSts from his fub- « j.e&, what they owed to the enemy; if he {hall haveexacted it, it is rightfully paid, if he ihall not have exacted it, peace !<c being made, the former right of the creditor revives-, becaufe “ the feizure, which is made during war, confitts more mfaSt - “than iriiright. Debts, therefore, not exáétfed, feem as it “ wére. to be forgotten in time of war, but upon peace; by a kind of pofiliminyf return.to their former' proprietor. • Accordingly, ’ it is for , the moft part agreed among nations, “ that things in action, being confifcated in war, the peace be-. ■ “ ing made,- thofe which were paid are deemed to-have perijhed., . “ and'-remain cxtinSt; but thofe not-paid revive, and are re-“ftcred to their true creditors. Fait. lib. 4. f. 22. S. P. Lee Capt, cl 8. p 118..".'

That this is the law of nations, as held 'in Great Britain, appears from Sir Thomas Parker’s Rep. p. 267 (n William 3d) in which it vsas determined, that chafes in afilón belonging to an alien enemy are forfeitable to the crown of Great Britain; .but there muft be a commifiion and inquifitiori 'to entitte-the. crown ; and if peace is concluded before inquifition taken, it difcharges the cuufg of forfeiture. .

The right to confifcate the-property of enemies, during war, is derived'from aJlate of war, and is called the rights of war. This right originates from felf-prefe.rvaiion, and is adopted as one of the means to weaken an enemy, and to ftrengthen our-fclves. Juflice, alfo, i$ another pillar on which it may-reft; to wit, a right to reimburfe the expence of an unflift war. Vatt. lib. 3. c. i.f. 138, &’ c. ().f 161.

But it is faid, if Virginia had a right to confifcate Briiijh property, yet by the modern law, and praftice of European nations, ihe was not juftified in confifcating debt's due from her citizens to fubjefis of Great Britain-, that.is, privaré debts. Vaitell is the only author relied on (or that'can be- fourth) to maintain the diftinhtion between confifcating private debts, and other property of an enemy. He admits the right, tocon-fifeate fuch debts, if the term of payment happen in the, time of war; but this -limitation on the' right is no.-where elfe to be found. His opinion alone will not be fufficient ta reftriift the right to.that cafe only. It does not appear in the prefent cafe, whether the time of payment happened before, or during'the war. If this reftriótion is juft, the Plaintiff ought to,have ihewn the fa£t. ■ Vattell adds, “ at prefent, in regard .to the advantages and fafety of commerce, all the fovereig.ns of .Europe •have departed from this rigour; &d this cuflobn has -been generally received; and he' who ftiould ait Contrary td'it (the euf-tom) would injure the public faith.” From-thefe exfireiT-ons it may be fairly inferred, that, by the rigour of the law of nations, private debts to ¡enemies might be confifcated, as well as any .' other of their property; but that a general cuflom had- prevail- • ed. in Europe to tjfi contrary;, fourided on commercialreafons. .. The law of nations may be confidéred of three kinds, 'to wit, general, conventional, or cuflomary. Thefirfl is unlve'rfal, or eftabliihed by the general confent of mankind, and binds- all nations. The fecond'is founded on exprefs confent, and is not univeífál, and only binds thofe nations thatbave ailen’ted to itl The third is founded on ta-cit confent'; .and is only-obligatory on thpfe nations, who have adopted it.' The relaxation or depárture from the Jlrifi rights of war to confifcate private debts, by the commercial nations.fif Europe, Was riot binding . on the fíate of Virginia, 'becaule fi virided on cuflom, only ; and ,'ihe was at liberty to -reject, or adopt the cuflom, as fhe piealed. The,conduifl'of nations at war, is generally governed and li-rnited by 'their exigencies and neceffities. Great Britain could not claim from the United States, or any of them, any relaxation- of the general law of nations, during the late war, be-caufe flie did-not corifider it, as a civil war, and much lefs as a public war, but ihc gave it the odiotis name of rebellion j and ihe refufed to the citizens of the United States the ftriSl rights of ordinary war.

It cannot be forgotten, that the Parliament of Great Britain, .by ftatute (16 Geo. 3. c. 5. in 1776) declared, that the veffels and cargoes belonging to the people of Virginia, and the twelve othpr colonies, found and .taken on the high feas, fhould be liable to feizuré and confiscation, as the property of open enemies ; and, that' the mariners and crews fhould be taken and confidered as havirig voluntarily entered into the fervice of the King of Great Britain ; and that the killing and deftroying the perfons and property of the' J'mcrleans, before the paffing this ?.⅝ was juft and lawful: And it is web known that, in. confequence of this ftatute, very confiderabfe property of the citizens of Virginia was feized on the high feas, and confif-cated ; and that other confiderable property, .found within that' Common wealth, was feized and applied to the ufe of -the Britijh army, or nr vy. ' Vattcllib. 3. c. 12. fee. 191. fays, and reafon confirms -his opinion, “ That whatever is lawful for one nation to do, in time of war, is lawful'for the other.” The lav/ of nations, is part of the .municipal law of Great Britain, and by her laws all moveable property of enemies, found within the kingdom, is confidered as forfeited to the crown, as the head of the nation; but if "no inquifition is taken to afeer-tain the owners to be alien enemies, before peace takes place, the caufe of forfeiture is difeharged, by the peace ipfofaSto. Sir Thomas Parker's Rep. pa. 267. This dodtrine agrees with Bynk. lib; 1. c. 7. pa. 177. and Lee on Capt. ch. 8. p. xi8. that debts . not confiscated and paid, revive on peace. Lee fays, “ Debts, therefore, which are not taken hold of, feem, as it were, fufpended and forgotten in time of war 3 but by a peace return to their former proprietor by a kind of pojlliminy.” Mr. L,ee, who wrote fince Vattel, differs from him in opinion,-that private debts are not cenfifcable, pag. 114. He thus delivers, himfelf: By the law of nations, Rights and Credits aré not lefs in our power than other goods ; why, therefore, fhould we regard the rights of war in regard to one, and not as. to the other? And when' nothing occurs, which gives room for a proper diftindtion, the general law of nations ought'to prevail.” He gives many examples of confifcating debts, and concludes, (p. 119) “ All which prove, that not tínly aSiions, but ail other things whatfoever, are forfeited in time .of war, and are often exafled.”

Great Britain does not confider herfelf bound to depart from the rigor of the general law of nations, becaufe the com-. fnercial powers of Europe wifh to adopt a more liberal practice. It may be recollected, that it is an eitablifhed principle of the law of nations, “ that the goods of a friend are free in an enemy’s veffel ;• and an enemy’s goods lawful prize in the veiTel of a. friend.” This may be called the general law of nations. In 1780 the Emprefs of Ruília propofed a relaxada on of this rigor of the laws of nations, “ That all the effects belonging to the fubjedts of the' belligerent powers ihall be free on board 'neutral veifels, except only contraband articles.” This propofal was acceded to by the neutral,powers of Sweden., ¡Denmark, the States General of the United Provinces, Pruffta and Portaged; France and Spain, two of the powers at, war, did not oppofe the principle, and Great Britain only declined to adopt it, and ihe {till adheres to the rigorous principle of the law of nations. Can this con duff of Great Britain be objected to her as an uncivilized and barbarous practice ? The 'confifcating -private debts by Virginia has been branded with thofe terms of reproach, and very improperly in my ©pinion.

It is admitted, that Virginia could not confifcate private debts without a violation of the modern law of natipns,.yet if in fail, ihe has fo done, the law is obligatory, cm all the citizens of Virginia, and on her Courts of Juftice; and, in my opinion, on all the Courts of the United States. If .Virginia by fuch conduct violated the law of nations, file was anfweraable to Great Britain, and J'uch injury could only be redreffed in the treaty of peace. Before the efiabliihment of the national government, Britijh debts could only be fued for in the Jlate court- This, alone, proves that the ieveral ftates poiTeiT-ed a power over debts. • If the crown of Great Britain had, according to the mode of proceeding in that country, confifcat-ed, or forfeited American debts, would vit have been permitted in any of the courts of Wef minder Hall, to have denied the right of the crowfi, and tiiat its power was reftrained by the modern law of nations? Would it nót have been anfwered, that the Britijh nation was to juftify her own conduit; but that her epurta were to obey her laws.

It appears to me, that there is another and conclufive ground, which effectually precluded any objection, face the peace, on the part of Great Britain, as a nation, or on the part of- any of herfubjetis, againft the right of Virginia to confifcate Bri-tijh debts, or any other Britijh property, during the war; even on the ad mi ilion that fuch confifeation was in violation of the ancient or msderp law of nations.

If the Legiflature of Virginia confiscated or extingvijhedtivs debt in quéftion, by the law of the 20th of OSiober 1777, as the Defendants in error .contend, this confifcation or extinguifhment, took place in 1777, flagrante Bello'-, and the definitive treaty of peace was ratified in 1783. What effects flow from a treaty of .peace, even if the confifcation, ox-extinguijhment of the debt was- contrary to the law of nations, and the ftipu-lationin the 4th article of the treaty does' not provide, for the recovery of the debt in queftion ?

I apprehend that the treaty of peace aboliihes tho.fu.bjcSl of the war, and that after peace is concluded, neither the matter in difpute, nor- the conduit of either party, during the war, can ever’ be revived, or brought into cohteft again. All vio-lences, injuries, or damages fuftained by the government, or people of either, during the war, are buried in oblivion ; and .all thofe things are implied by the very1 treaty of peace; and therefore not neceffary to be expreffed. Hence it follows, that the reftitution of, or compenfation for, Britijh property con-fifeated, or extinguiihed, during the war, by any of the United States, could only be provided for by the treaty of peace ; and if there. had been no provifion, refpecting thefe fubje&s, ,in the treaty, they could not be agitated after, the treaty, by the Britijh government, much lefs by her fubjedts in courts of juftice. If a nation, during a’war, conduits herfelf contrary to the law’of nations, .and no notice is taken of fuch conduit-in the treaty of peace, it is thereby fs far confidered lavufulf ■as never afterwards to be revived, or to be a fubjeit of complaint.

Vattel lib. 4.'feSt. 21. p. 121. fays, “ The ftate of things at the ''infant of the treaty, is held to be legitimate, and any change tobe made in.it requires an exprefs fpecification in'the treaty j coniequently, all things not mentioned in the treaty, are to remain as they were at the conchtfion of it.—All the damages caufed during the war are likewife buried in oblivion-; and-no plea is allowable for thofe, the reparation of .which is not mentioned in the treaty: They are looked, on as if they had never happened.'1- • The fame principle applies to injuries done by 'one nation to another, on occafion of, and during the war. See Grotius 'lib. 3. c. 8. feet. 4.

The Baron T)e lVo fui s, 1222, fays, “ De quibus nihil[dic-'tum ca manent quo Juni loco.” Things of which nothing is faid remain in the ftate in which they are.

It is 'the opinion of the celebrated and judicious Dodior Ru-therforth, that a nation in a juft vjar may feize upon any tnove-ablc goods of in enemy, (and he makes no diftindtion as to private debts) but that whilft the war continues,' the nation has, of right, nodiing-but the cuftody of the goods taken; and If the nation ,has granted to private captors (as privateers) the property of goods taken by them, and on peace, rejiitution is agreed on, that the nation is obliged to make reftitution, and not the private captors; and if on peace no reftitution is fti-pulated, that the full property of moveable goods, taken from the enemy during, the war, palles, hy tacit confent,- to the nation that takes them. This I collecft as the fubjlatlce of his opinion in lib. 2. 'c. 9, from p-. 558 to 573.

I ihall conclude my obfervations on ,the right of Virginia to confifcate. any Britijh property, by remarking, that the validity of fuch a law ..would not be. queftioned in the Court of Chancery of Great Britain; and 1 confefs the do&ine feemed ftrange to me in a n. American Court of. Juftice. In the cafe of. Wright and Nutty Lord Chancellor Thurlow declared,, that he confidered an a£t of the State of Georgia, palled in 1782, for the confifcaticsn of the .real ana perforial eftate of Sir "James Wright, and alfo his debts, as a law of an independent country, and concluded with the following'óbfervatibn, that.the law. of every country, muft be equally regarded in the Courts of J uf-tice of Great Britain, whether the law was a barbarous or vilifecl inftitution, or wife or foolifh. H. Black, Rep. p. 149. In the cafe of ‘ Folliot agsinft Ogden, Lord Loughborough, Chief Juftice of the Cb*^ °f C’ommon Pleas, in delivering .the judgment of the court, declared “ that the a£t of .the State of New York, pailed’iri 1779, for attainting, forfeiting, • and con-. fifcating the real and perfonal eftate of. Folliott, the Plaintiff, was certainly of as full validity, as the a£t of any independent State. H. Black: Rep. p. 135. On a writ of error Lord' Kenyon, Chief-Juftice of the Court of King’s Bench, and Judge Grofe, delivered diretftcontrary fentiments ; but Judges Ajhurfi and Builer'were fllent. 3 Term Rep. p. 726.

F rom thefe obfervations, and the authority of Bynkerjboek, Lee, Burlamaque, andRutherforthf conclude, that Virginia; had a right, as á fovereign and independent nation, to confifcate any Britijh property within its territory,* unlefs ihe had before delegated that power to Congrefs, which Mr. Lewis contended the had done.. The proof of the allegation that Virginia had transferred this authority to Congrefs, lies on thofe who' . make it; becaufe if ihe had parted with fuch power it muft be conceded, that ihe once rightfully poftefled it.

• It has been enquired .what; powers Congrefs.poffefled from tlaefrjl meeting, in- September 1774, until the. ratification of the articles of confederation, on the ift of March, 1781 ? .It appears to me, that the powers of-Cbngrefs, during that tvhole period, were derived from the people they reprefented, exprefsly given, through, the medium of their State Conventions, or State Legiflatures; or that after they were exercifed they were impliedly ratified b'y the acquiefcence and obedience of the people. After the confederacy was compleated, the powers of Congrefs relied on the authority of the State Legiflatures, and the. implied ratifications of the people ; and was a government over governments.' The powers of Congrefs originated from neceffity, and arofe out of, and were only limited by, events or, in other words, they were revolutionary in their very nature. Their extent depended on the exigencies and neceffities of public affairs. It was abfslutely and indifpenfably necefla-ry that Congrefs. ihould polfefs the power of conducing the war againft Great Britain, and therefore if not exprefsly given by all, (as it was by fotne of the States) I do not heiitate to fay, that Congrefs did rightfully poifefs finch power. The authority to make war, of neceffity implies the power to make peace ; or the war mult be perpetua!. I entertain this general idea, that the leveral States retained all internal fovereignty ; and that Congrefs properly poffefied the great rights of external fovereignty: Among others, the right to make treaties of commerce and alliance; as with France on-the 6th of February 1778. In deciding on the powers of Congrefs, and of the feve'ral States’, before the confederation, I fee but one fafe rule, namely, that all the powers actu ally exercifed by Congrefs, before that period were rightfully exercifed, on' the preemption not to be controverted, that they were fa authorized by the people they reprefented, by an exprefs, or implied grant; and that all the powers exercifed by the State Conventions or State Legiflatures were alfo rightfully exercifed, on thefame preemption oí authority from the people. That Con-grefs did not polfefs all the powers of war■ is felf-evident from this confiJeration alone, that ihe never attempted to lay anv kind of tax on the peaple of the United States, but relied altogether on the State Legiflatures to impofetaxes, toraife money to carry on the war, and to fink the emiffions of all the paper money ilfued by Congrefs. It was exprefsly provided, in the . 8th article of the confederation, that “ all charges of war (and all other expences for the common defence and general welfare) and allowed by Congrefs, ihall be defrayed out of a common T reafury, to be fupfiled by the feveral States in proportion to the value of the land in each State; and the taxes for paying the faid proportion, Jhall be levied by the Legiflatures of the fe-veral StatesIn every free country the power of laying taxes is confidered a legiflative power-over the property and per-fons of the citizens ; and this power the people of the United States, granted to their State Legiflatures, and they neither could, nor did transfer it to Congrefs; but on the contrary they exprefsly ftipulated that it ihould remain with them. It Is an incontrovertible fact that Congrefs never attempted to confif-cate any kind of Britijh property within the United- Slates (except what their, army, or veffels of war captured) and thence I conclude that Conerefs did not conceive the power was veftedih them. Some oftheftates did exercife this power, and thence I infer, they poffeffed it.—On the 23d of diarchy 3d of April, and 24th of July, 1776, Congrefs confifcated Britijh ‘property, taken on the high feas.

The fecond point made by the council for the Plaintiff in error was, “if the legiflature of Virginia had a right to confifcate ■Britijh debts, yet ihe did not cxercife that right by the aft of the 20th OStobcr, 1777.”. if this objection is well founded, the Plaintiff in error muff have judgment for the money covered by the plea of that law, and the payment under it; The preamble recites, that the pui;c fidth, and the law and tiie ufage of nations require, that debts incurred, during the connexion, with Great Britain, ihould net be confifcated. No-language can poffibly be ftronger to exprefs the opinion ofjthe legifla-ture of Virginia, that Britijh debts ought not to be confifcated, and if the words or effeft and operation, of the enafting claufe, are ambiguous or doubtful, fuch conftruftion ihould be made as not to extend the. provifions in the enafting claufe, beyond the intention of the legiflature, fo clearly expreffed in tile preamble; but if the words in the enafting claufe, in their nature; import, and common undetHanding., are not ambiguous, but plain and clear, and their opeiation and effeft certain, there is no room for conJiruStion. It is not an uncommon-cafe for. a legiflature, in a preamble, to declare .their intention to provide for certain cafes, or to punifh certain offerees, .s\rÁ in enafting claufes to include other cafes, and other offences.' But I believe very few inftances can be found in which the le-giflafure declared that a thing ought not to be done, and after-wards did the very thinsr they reprobated. There can bé no doubt thatftrong words in the enafting part of a law mav e'x-tend it beyond the preamble. If the preamble is contradicted by the enafting claufe, as to the intention of the legiflature, it muff prevail, on the principle that the legiflature changed their intention.

I am of opinion, that the law of the 20th of October, 1777, and the payment in virtue thereof, amounts cither to a cor.jif-cation, or extinguifoment, of fo much of the debt as was paid into the loan office of Virginia, iff. The law makes it lawful for a citizen of Virginia indebted to a fubjeft of Great Britain to pay tiie 'whole, or any part, of his debt, into the loan office of that commonWealth. 2<J. It diredts the debtor, to take a certificate-of his payment, and to deli ver it to the governor and the-eounci!; and it declares that the receipt of the .govern- or and] the council for the- certificate fhall difcharge him (the . debtor) from fo much of-the debt.as he paid iuto the loan office. 3d. It enadls that the certificate fhall be fubjefi to the future direólíon of tbe-legiflature. ■ And /(.thly, it provides, that the governor and council may. make fuch. allowance, as they fhall think reafonable, out of the iN.TEREsy of the mopey paid, to •the wives and children, refiding within the, ftatey of fuch creditor. The payment by the debtor int.o.ihe loan' office is made a lawful a£t. The .public receive the money,’and they difcharge the debtor, and they make the certificate (which is the evidence-of the payment) fubjeft to their direction; and they benevolently appropriate part, of the. money .paid, to .wit,, the inter ejl of the debt, to’ fuch of" the family' of. the creditor as may live within the fíate. ’ All thefe ¿£ts are plainly a Icgijlative interpojition between the creditor and debtor; annihilates the right of the creditor'; and is an exercifeof the righto {.owner- . 'Jhip over the money; for the giving part to the family of-the creditor, under the reffn&ton of being refidents of the Rate, or to a ftranger, cad make no difference. -' The government of Virginia- had .precifely, the famc.vnfnt todifpofe of the zv hole, as of part, of the debt.. Whether all thefe aSls amount to a con-fjcation of the debt, -or. not, may.be difputed according to the ■different ideas entertained of the proper meaning of the word’ conffcatioh.. I am inclined to think that all thefe a&, collectively. cbnfidered,. are fubibm.tially ⅛ corififcation of the debt. The verb confifcáte is derived from, the latin, con with, and Fifcus á báíkef, or hamper, In which’, the E'mperor’s treafure was formerly hept-- The’ meaning of. the word to conjjfcate. is to transfer property from' r.RiVAT.E to public ufe;' or to forfeit property to. the prince, or ftatcv in the language of Mr. Lee,, (page riS) the debt veas .taken hold, of’; and this he confiders as'corififcation. But if firjitly fpeaking, the debt was not conffcated, yet-fit certainly wras exiingulfbed as between the creditor and debtor; the debt was legally paid, and of con-fequence extinguijhecl: The {late intcifered and received the debt, and difcharged the debtor from, his creditor; and not from th-ifldte, as fuggeiled., The debtor owed nothing to the fhaterf-Virglnicc,- butfhehnd a right to take the debtor not at her- .plea.fute. To fay that the difcharge was' from the fate, and not. from the debtor, implies that the debtor yvas under fomt* obligation or duty to pay. the'{Lite, what he owed his Britijh 'creditor. If the. debtor’was to remain charged to his creditor, mitwitblfending his payment,;, not wife farthing would have been paid into the loan office. Such aconftnnSion,.iter’éfóre^ is too vi-lentand not to be admitted. If Virginia had confifcafed Britijb debt?., and'received the debt in Cjueftion, and faid nothing more, the debtor would have beeri di (charged by the eperatiqn.ofthc law. In the prefe-nt cafe, there is an exprefs. difeharge on'payment, certificate, and receipt. ' ■ ' ■ •

It appears to me that the plea, by the Defendant, of the a¿l of Affembly, and the payment agreeably to its pro-vifions, which is admitted, is a bar to the plaintiff’s atfion, -fov fo much of his debt as he paid into the loan office; unlefs the plea is avoided, or deftroyed, by the Plaintiff’s replication of the fourth article of the Definitive Treat'y of Peace, between Great Britain and the United States, on' the 3d of September, 1783..

The queftion then may be ftated thus: Whether the 4th article of the faid treaty nullifies the lav/ of Virginia, palled on the ¡joth of October, 1777; deftroys the payment made under it; and .revives the debt, and gives a tight of recovery thereof, again ft. the original debtor ? ^

It was doubted by one Of the counfel for the Defendants in error (Mr. Marjhall) whether Congrefs bad a power,to make a treaty, that could operate to annul a legijlathe'a£l of any of theftátes, and to deftroy rights acquired by, or veiled in indi-» vidnals, in virtue of fuch a£ls. Another of the Defendant’s council (Mr. Campbell) exprefsl-y, and with great zeal,-denied that Congrefs poffelTed fuch power.

But a few remarks will be necefiary to ihdw the inadmiffibi-lity of this objection to the power of Congrefs.

• ift. The legillaturcs of all the ftates, have often-exercifed the power of taking the property of its citizens for-the ufe of the .pubfic, but they uniformly compenfated the proprietors. The principle to maintain this right'is for the public good, and to. that the intereft of individuals muft yield. ■ Thé inftances are ’many; and among them are lands taken for .forts, magazines, o’r arfenals; or for public roads, or canals; or to ere£i towns.

2-d. Thelegiflaturps of all tha ftates have often exercifed the power of divefting rights veiled; and even of impairing, and, in fome inftances, of alnloft annihilating the obligation of contracts^ as by tender laws, which made an offer to pay, and a refufal to receive, paper money,-for a fpc'cie debt, an extinguí foment^ to the' amount tendered.

3d. If the Legifiature of Virginia could, by a law, annul any former law; I apprehend that the effect would be to deftroy all rights acquired-under the law fo nullified.

4th.' If the Legifiature of Virginia could not by ordinary ails of ieglfiatlcn, do thefe things, yet poífeíling the fupreme lovereign power of the ftate, file certainly could do them, bv g treaty of peace; if file had not part«d with the power or making fuc'n treaty. If Virginia had Inch power before fire dele- , gated it to Congrefs, it follows, that afterwards that body pof-fefled it. Whether Virginia parted with thupower of making treaties of peace, will be'feen by a perufal of the 9th article of the Confederation (ratified b.y all theftates, on the 'rft of March, 1781,j in which it was declared," “ that the United States in-Congrefs afiembled, ihall have the foie and exclufnie right and power of determining on peace, or war, except in the two cafes mentioned in the 6th article and of entering into treaties arid alliances, with a provife., when made, refpefting commerce.” This grant has no reftriftion, nor is there any limitation on the power .in any part of the confederation. A right to make peace, neceflarilv includes the power of determining on what terms peace fall be made. A power .to make treaties muft of neceiiiry imply á power, .to decide .the terms on which they ihall be made : A war between two nations can only be concluded by treaty.

Surely, the facrifi.cing public, or private, property, to obtain peace cannot be the cafes in which a treaty would be void. Vatt. lib. 2 e. 12. f. 160. 161. †. 173. lib. 6. c. 2. f 2. It feenis to me that treaties made by Congrefs, according to the Confederation, werefuperior to the laws of the ftates ; becaufe the Confederation made them obligatory on all the ftates. They were fo declared by Congrefs on the 13th of April, 1787; were fo admitted by the legislatures and executives of moft of the ftates; and were fo decided by the judiciary of the general government, and by the judiciaries of fome of the ftate governments.

If doubts could cxift before the eftabliílnnépt of the prefent national government, they njuft be entirely removed by the 6th article of the Conftitution, which provides “ That all treaties made, or which ihall . be made, under the authority of the Urated States, ihall be the fvpreme law of the land; and the Judges in every State ihall be bound thereby, any thing in the Conjiitntion, or laws, of any State to the contrary notwithstanding.” There can be no limitation on the power of the people os che United States. By their authority the State Conftitutions were made, and .by their authority the Conftitution of the United States was eftabliíhed ; and they had the power to change or abolifh the State Conftitutions, or to make them yield to the general government, and to treaties made by their authority; A treaty cannot be the fupreme lazv of the land, that is of all'ihe United States, if any aft of a State Legifature can ftand in its way. If the Conftitution of a State (which is the fwidaniental law of the State, and paramount to its Legiilaiur.c) muft give way to a treaty, and fall before it; can it be tptaíHoncd, whether thelefs power, an aft of the.State Legiflature, muft not be proftrate ? It is the de-dared will of the people of the United States that every treaty made, by the authority of the United States, íhall be fuperior to the Conjlitution and laws of any individual State ; and their will alone is to decide.—If a law of .a State, contrary to a treaty, is not void, but voidable only by a repeal,' or nullification by a State Legiflature, this certain confequence follows, that the will of zfmall part of the United States- may controul or defeat the will of the whole. The people of America have been pleafed to declare, that all treaties made before the efta-blhhment of the National Conjlitution, or laws of any of the States, contrary to a treaty, íhall be difregarded.

Four things are apparent on a view of this 6th article of the National Conftitution. ift. That it is RetroJpeStive, and is .to be confidered in the fame■ light a? if the Conftitution had been eftabliihed before the making of the treaty of Í783. ad. That the Conftitution, or laws, of any of the States fo far as either of them íhall J>e found contrary to that treaty are by force of the faid article, proftrated before’ the treaty. 3d. That confequently the tt'eaty of 1783 has fupe-rior power to the Legiflature of any State, becaufe no Legif-lature of any State has any kind of power over the Conftitu- . tion, which was- its creator. 4thly. That it is the declared duty of the State Judges to determine any Conftitution, or laws of any State, Contrary to that treaty (or any other) made under the authority of the United States, null and void. National or' Federal Judges are bound by duty and oath to the fame conduit.

The argument, that Congrefs had not power to make the 4th article of the treaty of peace, if its intent and operation was to annul the laws of any of the States, and to deftroy vejled rights (which the Plaintiff’s Council contended to be the object and effect of the 4th article) was qnneceffary, but on the fuppofition that this court poffefs a' power to decide, whether, this article of the treaty is within the authority delegated to that bod-/, by the articles of confederation. Whether this court conftitutionaliy poffefs fuch a power is not neceffary now to determine, becaufe I am fully fatisfied that Congrefs were invefted with the authority to make the ftjpulation in the 4th article. If the court poffefs a powey to declare treaties void, I íhall never exercife it, but in a very clear cafe indeed. One further remark will fhew how very circumfpjft the court ought to be before they would decide againft the right of Cqn-grefs to make the ftipulation objefired to. If Congrefs Rad ho 'power (under the confederation) to make the 4th article of the treaty, .and for want of power that article, is void, would if not be in the option of the crown of Great Britain to fay, whether the other articles, in-the fame treaty, fliall be obligatory on the Britijh nation ?

I will now proceed to the conilderation of the treaty of 1783. It is evident on a perufal of it what were the great and principal ebje&s in view by both parties. There were four on the part of the United. States, to wit. , lit. An acknowledgment of their independence, by the crown of Great Britain. 2d. A fettlementof their weflerft bounds. 3d. The right of fishery: and 4thly. The. free navigation of the Mijffippi- I here were three on the part of Great Britain, to wit„ lit. A recovery by Britijh Merchants,’ of the value infterling money, of debts contrafted, by the citizens- of America, before the treaty;2d. Reftitution of the confifcated ..property" of real Britijh- • fubjedts,- and of -perfons residents in diftridts in- pofieffion of the Britijh forces, and( who had not borne arms againil the United States; and a' conditional reftoration of the confifcated property of all other perfons: and 3dly. A prohibition of all future confifcations, and profecutions. ■ The following fadts . were of.the moil public notoiiety, at the time when the treaty was made, and therefore muft have been very-well known to the gentlemen who aflented to it. lit. That Britijh debts, to a great amount, had been paid into fome of the State Treasuries, or loan offices, in paper money of very.little value, either under laws confifcating debts, or under laws autborifing payment of fuch debts in paper money, and difeharging the ■debtors, ad. That tender laws had exifted -in all the ftates; ■ and that by fomd of thofe laws, a tender and a refufal to acceptj by principal or factor, was declared 'an extinguishment of the debt. ■ P'rom the knowledge that fuch laws had exifted there was good reafon to fear- that Jimilar laws, with Únjame or lefs confequences, might be again made, (and the fa£t really happened) and prudence required to guard the Britiih creditor againil them. 3d. That in fome of the States property, of any kind, might be paid, at an appraifement-¡ jn di ¡charge of any. execution. 4th. That laws were' in force in fome of the States, at the time of the treaty, which prevented fuits by Britijh ere-' Editors. 5th. That laws were in force in other of the States, at the time of the treaty,- to prevent fuits by any perfm for a limited time. Ail thefe laws created legal impediments, of one kind or another, to the recovery of many Britiflj debts, contracted before the -war; and in many cafes compelled the receipt of property inftead of gold and filver.

To fecure the recovery of Briti/h debts, it was by the latter part of the ¾⅛ article, agreed as follows, “ That all perfons who have any intereft in confifcated lands, by debts, fhould meet with no lawful impediment in the profecurion of their juft-rights.” This provision clearly relates -to delts fecuredby mortgages on lands in fee ftmpie, which were afterwards con-fiicatcd'; or to debts oh judgments,, which were a lien on lands, Tjdiich alfo were afterwards confifcated, and where fuch debts on mortgages, or judgments, had been paid into the State Treafuries, and the debtors difeharged. This ftipujation was abfolutelvneceflary if fucb debts were intended to be paid. The pledge, or fecurity by lien, had been confifcated and fold. Britijh fubjedts being aliens, could neither recover the poilef-fion of.lands by ejediment, nor foreclofe the equity of redemption ; nor could they claim the money fecured by a.mortgage, or have the benefit of a lien from a judgment, if the debtor had paid his'debt into the Treafury, and been difeharged. If a Britijh fubjedt, ■ in either of thofe cafes, profecuted his-juft right, it could only be in a court of juftice, and if any of the above caufes were fet up as a lawful impediment, the courts were bound to decide, whether this article of the treaty nullified the laws confifcating the lands, and alfo the purchases made under them, or the laws authorizing payment-of fuch debts to the State; or whether aliens were enabled, by this article, to hold lands mortgaged to them before the war. In all thefe cafes, it feems to me,. that the courts, in winch the cafes arofe, were the only proper authority to decide, whether the -cafe was within this.article of the treaty, and the operation and efte<3 of it. One inftance among many will illuftrate my meaning. Suppofe a mortgagor paid the mortgage money into the public Treafury, and afterwards fold the land, would not the Britifi: creditor, under this article, be entitled to a remedy againft the mortgaged lands ?

The qth' article of the treaty is in thefe words : “ It is agreed that creditorj, on either fide, fhall meet with -no lawfid impediment to the recovery of the full value, in fterling money;, of all bona fide debts, heretofore contradtedU'

Before I confidar this article of the treaty, I will adopt the following remarks, which I think applicable, and which may he . found in Dr. Ruthsrforth and Fattel. (2 Ruth. 307 to 315. Fattel lib. 2, c. 17. fs£i, 263 and 2¿X.) The intention of the framers of the treaty, muft be collected from a view of the whole inftrument, and.fiom the words made ufe of by them-to exprefs their intention, or from probable or rational conjetures. If the words exprefs the .meaning of the parties plainly, diftirMly, and perfectly, there ought to be no other means of -interpretation 5 -but if the words are obfeure, ox ambiguous-, or imperfect, íecourfe muft be had to other means.of interpretation, and in thefe three cafes-, we muft coiled! the meaning from the words^ or from -probable or rational conjectures, or from both. When we colled: the intention from the tvords only, as they lie in/the writing before us, it is a literal interpretation ; and indeed if the tvords, and; the conftrudion of a writing, are clear and pre-cife, we can fcarce call it interpretation to colled: the intention of the writer from thence. The principal rule, to be obferved in literal interpretation, is to follow that fenfe, in refped both of the tvords, and the construction, which is agreeable to common ufe.

If the recovery of the prefent debt is not within the cleár and tnanifeft intention and letter of the 4th article of .the treaty, and if it was not intended by it to annul the law o^Virginia, mentioned in the plea, 'and to deftroy the payment 'under it, and to revive the right of the creditor againft his origi. al debtor \ and if the treaty cannot effed all thek things, I think the court ought to determine in favour of the Defendants in error. Under this impreftion, it is altogether unneceffary to notice the feveral rules laid down by the Council for the Defendants in error, for tbe conjlruction of the treaty*

I will examine the 4th article of the treaty in its federal parts i and endeavour to affix the plain and natural meaning of each part.

To. take the 4th article in order as it ftands.

iff. “ It is agreed,” that is, it is exprefsly contraded ; and it appears from what follows, that certain things ihall not take place. This ftipulation is direct. The diftindion is. felf-evi-dent, between a thing thatfhall not happen, and an agreement that a third power fhall prevent a certain thing being done! The firjl is obligatory .on the parties contracting. The latter will depend on the will of ■another ; and although the parties . contrr.ding, had power to lay him under a moral obligation for compliance, yet there is a very great difference in the two cafes. This diverfity appears in'the treaty.

2d. That creditors on either fide,” without doubt meaning Britijb and American creditors.

3d. “ Shall meet with no lawful impediment,” that is, with no obftacle (or bar) arifing from the common law, or ads of Parliament, or ads of Congrefs, or ads of any of the States, then in exiftence, or thereafter to be made, that, would, in any manner,operate to prevent the recovery offucb debts, as the treaty contemplated. A lawful impediment to prevent a recovery or a dei>t can only be matter of law pleaded in bar to the adlion. If the. word lawful had been omitted, tjie impediment would not be confined to matter of law. The prohibition that no lawful impediment fhall be inUrpofed, is the fame as that all lawful impediments {ball be removed. The meaning cannot be fatisfied by the removal of one impediment, and leaving another; and a fortiori by taking away the lefs and leaving tint greater. Thefe words have both a retrofpective and future afpect.

4th. “To the recoyery,” that is,, to the right of action, judgment, and execution, and receipt:.of the money, without impediments in courts of juilice, which could only be by plea, (as in the prefent cafe) or by proceedings, afler judgment, to compel receipt of paper money, or property, inftead of Herding money. The word recovery is very comprehenlive, and operates, in the prefent cafe, to give remedy from the commencement of fuit, to the receipt of the money.

5th. “ In the full value in Jlerling money,”' that is, Britijh-creditors ihall not be obliged to receive paper money, jor property at á valuation, or any thing elfe but the full value of their debts, according to the exchange with Great Britain. This provifion is.clearly rejlrilled to Britijh debts, controlled before the treaty, and cannot relate to debts contracted afterzvards, which would.be difcliargeable according to contrail, and the ■laws of the State where entered into. This provifion has al-io a future afpeit in this particular, namely, that no lawful. impediment, no law of any of the States made after the treaty, ■ihall oblige Britifio creditors to receive their debts, controlled before the treaty, iri pape /-.money, or property at afpraifement, or in any thing but the value in iterling money. . The obvious intent of thefe words was to prevent the operation of past and future tender laws; or- past and future laws, authorizing the difeharge of executions for fuch debts by property át a valuation.

6th.- “ Of all pona fide debts,” that is, debts of every fpe-cics, kind, or nature, whether by mortgage, if a covenant-therein for payment; or by judgments, fpecialties, or fimple contrails. But the debts contemplated w'ere to be bona fide debts, that is, bona fide controlled befipre the peace, and con - trailed with good faith, or honeilly, and without covin, and not kept on'foot fraudulently. Bona .fide isa legal-technical expreílion ; and the law of Great Britain and this country has annexed a certain idea,to it. It is a term ufed in flatútes in England, and in ails of Afiembly of all the States, and fig-nifies a thing done really, with a good faith, without/h?W, or deceit, or collufton, or trust. The words bona fide are restric-five, for a debt may be for a valuable confideraiion, and yet not bona fide. A debt mu ft be bona fide at the time of its commencement, or it never can become fo afterwards. The words bona fide, were not prefixed to deferibe the nature.oí the debt át the date of the treaty, . but the nature of the debt at the tbne it ivas contracted. Debts created before the war, were almoft the only debts in the- contemplation of the treaty; although debts’contracted during the zvar were covered by the general provifion, taking in debts from the moil diftant period of time, to the date of the treat". The recovery, where no ¡awful impediments, were to be interpofed, waste have two qualifications : -lit. The debts were to be bona fide contracted-, and, 2d, they were to be contracted before the -peace. 1

7th. “ Heretofore contracted,” that is, entered into at any period óf time before the date of the-treaty y without regard to the length or diftance óf time. Thefe words are deferiptive of the particular debts that might be recovered; and relate back to the time fiuch debts were contracted. The time of the contract was plainly to deftgnate the particular debts ■ that might be recovered. A debt entered into 'during the war, would not have been recoverable, unlcfs under this defeription of a debt contracted at -any thne before, the treaty.

If the words of the 4th article taken fepqrately, truly bear the meaning 1 have, given them, -their fenfe collectively, cannot . be miftaken, and rn.uft be the fame.

The next enquiry is, whether the debt in queftion, is one of •thofe, defended in this article. It is-vary clear that the article contemplated no debts but thofe contraded before the treaty ; and no debts but only thofe to the recovery whereof fome lavs - ful impediment might be interpofed. The prefent debt was-contrafted before the war, and. to the recovery of it a lawful impediment, to wit,' a law of- Virginia and payment under it, is pleaded in bar, There can be' no doubt that the debt fued for, is within the defeription, if 1, have given a proper interpretation of the words. If the treaty had been filent as to debts, and the law of Virginia had not been made, I' have already. proved that debts would, on peace, have revived by the law of nations. This alone {hews -that the ohly impediment to the recovery of. the debt in queftion, is the law of Virginia, and the payment under.it; and the treaty relates to. every 'kind of legal impediment. ■ -

But it is aiked, did the 4th article intend to annul a law of the ftates ? and deftroy rights acquired under it ?

I anfwer, that the 4th árticie'did intend to deftroy áll lawful' impediments, pafi and future ; and that the law of Virginia,. and the paj'ment under it, is a lawful impediment; and would bar a recovery, if not deftroyéd by this -article .of the treaty, This 'itipuiation could n.ot intend only to repeal .laws that ere-' .ated legal impediments* to the recovery of the debt ( without •refpect to the mode of payment) beoáufe the mere- repeal of ⅛ few would not deftroy acts done, and rights acquired, under' tire law* during it 's exijlence and before the repeal. This right to repeal was only admitted by the council for the Defendants in error, becaufe a repeal would not affeCt their cafe; but on the-fume ground that a treaty .can repeal a law of the ftate, it can • nullify ¡tí I have already proved,, that a treaty can totally cm- nth Hate any part of the Confutation of any of the individual flates, that is contrary to a treaty. It is admitted' that the treaty intended and did annul fome laws of the ftate?, to wit, any laws, paji or future, that authorifed a tender of paper, money lo extinguiih or difcharge the debt, and any laws, paji or future, that authorifed' the dilcharge of executions hy paper money, or delivery of property at appraifement; becaufe if the words sterling money have not this effect, it cannot be ihewn that they have any other. If the treaty could nullify fome .laws, it will be difficult k> maintain.that it- could not equally annul others. .

It was argued, that the 4th article was neccifary to revive debts which had not been paid, as it was doubtful, whether debts not paid would revive on peace by the law of nations. I answer, that the 4th article was notneceffary on that account, be-* caufe there Was no doubt that debts not paid do. revive.by-the law of nations; as appears from Bynkerjhock, Lee,' and Sir Thomas Parker. And if neceffary, this article would not have this effedt, becaufe it revives no debts, but only thofe' to which fome legal impediment might be interpofed, and there could be no legal impediment, or bar, to the recovery, after. -- peace, of debts not paid, during the war to the ftate.

. It was contended, that the pro.vifi.on is, that creditors, ihall recover, &c. and there was no creditor at the time of the treaty, becaufe there was then no debtor, he having been legally difeharged. The creditors' defcribed'in the treaty, were • not creditors generally, but only thofe with whom debts had been contra&d,.,at fome time before .the treaty; and is a de-feription of perfons, and not of their rights-. This adhering to the letter, is to deftroy the plain meaning of the proviiion; becaufe, if the treaty' does not extend to debts paid into the ftate treafuries, or loan offices, it is yery clear that nothing was done, by the treaty as to thofe debts, not .even fo much as was ftipulated for Royalists', and Refugees, to wit, a recommendation of restitution. Further, by this cor.ftruftion, nothing was done for Britijh creditors, becaufe the law of nations fecured a recovery of their debts, which had not been confif-cated and paid to the ftates; and if the debts paid in paper money, of little value, into the ftate treafuries, or loan offices, were not to' be paid to them, -the article was of ho .kind of value to them, and they were deceived, The article relates either to debts not paid, or, to debts paid into the treafuries, or loan offices. It has no relation to the first, for the reafons above affigned; and if it does not include the latter jt relates tq nothing^

It was faid that the treaty fecured Britijh creditors from payment in paper money. This is admitted,, but it is by force and operation of the wordsin sterling money f but then the words, “ heretofore ' contractedf are to have no effect zvhatfo- ■ ever ; and it'is thofe very words,- and thofe only, that fecure the recovery of the debts; paid to the ,ftates ; becaufe no lawful-impediment is to-be allowed to ‘prevent the recovery of debts contracted 'at any time before the treaty.

But it was alledged, that the 4th article only ftipulates, that there íhall be no lawful impediment, &c. bur that a law of the ftate was firft neceiTary.tO i?««zz/ thqjaw creating fuch impediment;'and that the ftate is under a moral obligation' to país fuch ■ a law; but until it is doné, the impediment remains,

I confider the 4th article in this light, that it-is not a ftipu-Jation that certain a¿ls íhall be done, and that it was necefiary for the legiilatures of individual ftá.tes, to do thofe a£ts ; .but that it is .an exprefs agreement, that certain things íhall hot be permitted the American courts of juftice; and that- it is a .contradi-, on behalf of thofe courts,, that- they will not allow fuch afis to' be pleaded in bar, to prevent árecovery of' certain Britijh debts. Creditors are-to meet with no lawful impediment, See.” As creditors can only fue for the recovery of their debts, in courts of j.uilice; and it is only in courts of juftice that a legal 'impediment can be fet up by way .of plea, .in bar of their a iions; it appears to me," that the■ 'courts are bound'to overule every fuch plea, if contrary to the treaty. A recovery of a debt can only be prevented by a plea in bar to the action. A recovery of a debt in fterling' money, can only be prevented by a like plea in-bar to the adiion, as tender and . ■ refufa), to operate as an extinguiíhment. After■ judgment, páyment thereof in sterling money can only be prevented by ibrne proceedings under fome law/that authorifes the debtor to difeharge an execution in paper money, or in property, at .a valuation, in al! thefe, and • fimilar cafes, it appears to me, that the courts of the United States are bound, by the treaty, to interfere. .' No one can doubt that a treaty may ftipulate, that certain a£ts íhall be done by the Legiflature ; that other a£ts íhall be done by the Executive; and others by the Judiciary. In the ^th article it is provided, that no future, profe-cutions íhall be commenced agai nit any perfon, for or byrea-foh of the part he took in . the war. ' Under , this arficle the American courts of juftice difeharged the. profecutions, and the perfons, on receipt of the treaty, and the proclamation of Con-grefs. j Dali. Rep, 233.

If a law of the State to annul a former law was firjl necefr fary, it muft be either on the ground that-/¿¿ treaty could not annul any lava of a State; or that the words ufed in the treaty Were not explicit or effectual for that purpofe. Our Federal Coiiftitution eftabliihes the power of a treaty over the con-flitution and laws of any of the States; and I have ihewn that the words of the 4th article were intended, and are fuffi-cient to nullify the .lava of Virginia-, and the payment under it. It was contended-that Virguláis interefted in this queftion,' and ought to compenfate the Defendants in error, if obliged to pay the Plaintiff under the treaty. If Virginia had a right to receive the money, which I hope 1 have clearly eftabliihed, by what law is ihe obliged to return it ? The treaty only fbeaks of the original debtor, and, fays nothing about a recovery from any of the States.

It was faid that the defendant ought to be fully indemnified, if the treaty compels him to pay his debt over again ;' as his rights have been facrificed for the benefit of the public.

That Congrefs had the power to facrifice the rights and in-ierejls of private citizens to fecure the fáfeiy or profperity of the public, I have no doubt; but the immutable principles of juftice; the-public faith of the States,-that confifcated and received Britijh debts, pledged to the debtors ; and the rights of the' debtors violated by the treaty;.all combine to prove, that ample compenfation ought tobe made to all the debtors who have been'injured’by the treaty for the benefit of the public. This principle is recognized by the Conftitution, which declares, “ that private property ihall not be taken for public life, without juji compenfation,,. See Vattél. lib. 1. c. 20. f 2441'

Although Virginia is not bound-to make compenfation to ■ the debtors, yet it evident that they ought to be indemnified, and it is not to be fuppofed, that thofe whofe duty it may be to make the compenfition, will permit the rights of our citizens to bo-iácrificed to a public objeEl, without the fulleft indemnity. .

On the beft inveíligation I have been able to give the 4th article of the treaty, i cannot conceive, that the wifdom of tnen could exprefs their meaning in more accurate and intelligible words, or -in wprds more proper and effeitual to carry their intention into execution. ' I am fatisfied, that the words, - in their natural import, and common ufe, give a recovery to the Britijh creditor from his original debtor of the debt con-trailed before ..'the treaty, notwithstanding the payment thereof into the public treafuries, or loan offices, under the authority .of any State law; and, therefore, I am of opinion, that the judgment of the Circuit-Court ought to begeverfed, find that .judgment ought to be given, on the demurrer, for the Plaintiff in error; with the coils in the Circuit'Court, and.the coils of the: ap'peá!.

' / Paterson, Juftke.t

The prefect fuit is inftituted on a /bond bearing date the 7 th of July-ii']^, and executed by Daniel-Lawrence Hylton &■ Co. arid Francis Eppes, citizens of the?, State of Virgipia, to Jefiph Barrel and IVillism Jones, fub-jedts of the King of Great Britain, for the payment of £2,976 1 if 6d. Britijh, or ftetling, money.

The. Defendants, among-other pleas, .pleaded, ift. Payment; on which iffue is joined;

2d. That 31 n 1-9 dollars, equal to, £ 933 14/ p'd. part of the debt mentioned in the declaration, were, on the 26th of-April 1780, paid b'y them into the loan office of Virginia pur-fuant to an adt of that State, paffed the 20th of October 1777, entitled, “ An adt for fequeftering Britijh property, enabling “ thole indebted to Britijh fubjedts to pay off fuch debts, and “ diredtirrg the proceedings in fuits where fuch fubjedts are “ parties”. The'material fedtion of ‘the adt is recited in the plea.' .

• ■ To this plea- the Plaintiffs reply, and.,fet up the 4th article of the treaty, made the 3d. of September 1783, between the United States and his Britannic .Majefty, and-the Conftitution of the United States making treaties' the fupreme law of the land.

The rejoinder fets forth, that the -debt in the declaration ■ mentioned, or fo much thereof as is equal to the fum of £ 933 lip od. was not a bona Jide debt'due a:_d owing to the Plain- ' tiffs on the 3d of September 1783, becaufe the Defendants had, on the 26th of -April 1780, paid, in part thereof, the, fum of 3111- 1-9 dollars into the loag office of Virginia;• and obtained a certificate and receipt therefor purfuant to-the diredtions of the faid adt; without that, that the faid treaty of ?eace, and the Conftitution- of the United States entitle the . laintiffs to maintain their adtióri .againft the'Deferidants for fo much of the faid debt in the declaration mentioned as.is equal to £ 933 14/ - _ ,

_ , To this rejoinder the Plaintiffs demur.

The defendants join in demurrer.

On this ¡flue in law judgment was.entered for the Defendants in the Circuit Court for the Diftridt of 'Virginia. A Writ .of Error has been brought, and the general errors are affigned. •

The queftion is, whether the judgm nt rendered in the Circuit Qourt be erroneous? I mall not purfue the range of diicuffion, which was taken by the Counfel on the part of the Plaintiffs'in error. | do.not deem it neceflary to enter on the queftion, whether the Legiflature of Virginia had authority to make an adt, confifcating the debts due from its citizens to- the fubjedts óf the king of Great Britain, <?r whether'the authority in fuch cafe tvas exclufively in Congrefs. I ihall read and make a few obfervations on the adt, which has been pleaded in bar, and tlien pafs to the confideration of the 4th article of the treaty. The firft .and third fedtions are the. only parts of the. adt nec efiary to be corifidered. "

lit. “ Whereas clivers perfons, .fubjefts of Great Britain, “ had, during oúr connexion with that kingdom, acquired eL “ tates, real and perfonal, -within this commonwealth, and had “ alfo become entitled.to debts to a ccnfiderable amount, and “• fome.of them had commenced fuits for the recovery of.fuch “ debt's before the prefent troubles had interrupted the admi- “ n.iftration of juftice, which fuits were at that time depending “ and undetermined, and luch eftates being acquired and debts “ incurred, und.er the fandiion of the laws and of.the connexion- “ then fubfifting, and it . not being known that their fove- “ reign hath ■ as yet fet the example of confifcating.debts and “ eftates-; under the like circumftances, the public.faith; and- “ the law and ufages of- nations require, that they .ihould not “ be confifcáted on our part, but the fafety of the. United K States demands, and the fame law and ufages .of nations will “ juftify, that we ihould not ftrengthen the'hands of our ene- “ mies during.the continuance of the prefent war, by recnit- “ ting to them the profits or proceeds of fuch eftates, or. the . “ intereft or principal.of fuch debts.”

3d. “ And be -it further enadied, that it ihall and may be . “ lawful for any citizen of this commonwealth, owing money “ to a fabj edt of Great Britain, to pay the fame, or any part “ thereof, from time to time, as he fhalj 'think fit, into the “ faid -loan office, taking thereout a certificate for the fame.in “ the name of the creditor, with an endorfement under the “ hand of the comrriiffioner of the faid office. ex,preffing the cc ’name of the payer, and ibaft deliver fuch'certificate to the “ Governor and Council, whofe receipt ihall difehar-ge him “ from fo much' of the debt. And the Governor and Coun^ “ cil .ihall in,like manner lay before the General Aflembly, u once in .every year, an account of thefe certificates, fpeci- “ fying the names of the perfons by and for whom .they were ■. u paid, and ihall fee to the fafe-keeping of the fame, fubjedt “ to the future diredtion of the Legiflature.”

The ■ adt doesmot confifcate debts due to BritiJ).> fubjedh*

The preamble reprobates the dodtine as being inconiiftervt. wi.th public faith, a.iid the law and ufages of nations. TJife •payments made into the loan office were voluntary snd • not cornpulfive; for it was in the option of the debtor to pay or not. The enadting claufe will admit of a conftrudtion in-full . confiftency with, the preamble ; for, although the certificates ■ were to be fubjedt to the future diredtion of the Legiflature, yet -it was under the exprefs declaration, that there ihould bé ' no confifeation, unlefs the King of Great Britain ihould fet the example; if he ihould confifcate debts due to the citizens . of Virginia,- then the Legiilat'ute of Virginia would cor.meats debts due. to Britijh fubjefts. But the King of Great Britain did not confifcgte debts on his part, and the Legidature of Virginia have not confifc'ated debts on their part. It is, however, faid, that the payment' being made Under the act, the faith 0 f Virginia is plighted. True—butte whom is it plighted —to the creditor, or debtor—to the alien enemy, or to its own citizen, who made-the voluntary payment ? Or-will it be'fha-ped and varied according to the .event—if one way,- then to the'creditor}'if another, then to the debtor. Be thefe points as they may, the Legiflature thought it expedient to declare to what amount Virginia -fhould be bound-for payments-fo made. The aft for this purpofe was palled onthe^d of 'January, IjSo ; and'is-entitled 44 An' áft concerning monies, paid jnto u the public loan office, in payment of Britijh debts.”

“ Seftion 1. Whereas;by an aft of the General Affembly, 44 entitled 4 An aft for fequeftering Britijiy property, enabling 44 thofe-indebted to Britifi.’} fubjefts, to pay off-fuch debts, and 44 direfting the proceedings in fuits .where fuch fubjefts are ■“ parties}” i't is among other things provided, that it'ihall and “ maybe lawful for any- citizen of this commonwealth, owing 44 money to afubjeft of Great Britain, to pay the fame,'or any 44 part thereof, from time to time, as he ihall think fit, into the 44 faid loan office, taking thereout a certificate for the fame,- in. 44 the name of the creditor; with an indorfement under the hand 44 of the commiffioner of the faid office,- expreffing the namebf “.the payer; and íhail-deliver fuch certificate to the governor 44 and council, whofe receipt ihall'difcharge him from fo much 44 of thfa d.ebt; and the Governor and Council ihall, in like man-44 ner, lay before the General Affembly, once in every -.year, an “ account of thefe certificates, fpecifying the names of the per- “ ions, by and for. whom, they were paid, and ihall fee tothefafe “ keeping of the Tame, fubjeft to the futuredireftion of the Le-44 giflature.

44' Seft. 2. And whereas it belongs not to the Legislature to 44 decide particular queftions, of which the judiciary have cogni-44 zancé, and it is therefore unfit for them to determine, whether .44 ⅜-e payments fo made into the loan office, as aforeuid, be good. 44 or void between the creditor and debtor. But it is expedient - 44 to declare to what amount this commonwealth may be bound 44 for.the payments aforefaid. Be it enabled .and declared, 1 hat' “ this-commonwealth ihall, at no time- nor in any event or con-44 tingency, be liable to any .per fon or perfons wbatfoever, for 44 any fum, on account of the payments aforefaid, ether than the 44 value thereof when reduced by th'efcalc of depreciation, efta-44 la bribed by one other aft of the General Aflcmbly, entitled 44 An abt direfting the mode of adjufiing and fettling the’pa y- merit of certain debts and contrails, and for .other • piirpofes, “ with intereft theteon, at the rate of fix per centum per an- “ num; any law, ufage, cuftom, or airy adjudication or con- “ ftruition of the firft recited ait already made, or hereaf-⅛ to be máde notwithftandipg.”

On the part of the Defendants; it has been alfo urged, that it is immaterial whether the payment-be voluntary or compul-fivej becaiife the payer, on complying with thé’ direitions of the aitj Ihall be difcharged from fo much of the debt. Be it fo. If the Legislature had authority to make the ait, the Con-grefs could, by treaty, repeal the ait, and annul every thing done under it. This leads iis to confider the treaty and its operation. Treaties mutt be conftrue'd in fuch manner, as to effeituate the intention of the parties; The intention is to be colleited from the letter and fpirit of the inftrument, and may be illuftrated and enforced by confiderations deduciblefrom the Situation of the parties; and the reafonablénefs, juftice, and nature of the thing, for which provifion-has been made. The 4th article of the treaty gives the text, and runs in the following words:

“ It is agreed, that creditors on either fide, ihall meet with no ⅛ legal impediment to thérecovery of the full value in fterling “ money, of all bona fide debts heretofore contracted/’

The phrafeology made ufe of, leaves in my mind no room to hefitate as to the intention of the parties. The'terms are unequivocal and univerfal in their Signification, and dbvioufly > point to and comprehend all creditors, and all-.debtors, previ-oufly to the 3d of September, 1783. In this article there ap*-péars to be a Selection of expreilions plain and extenfive in their import, and admirably calculated to obviate doubts, to. remove difficulties, to defignate the objects,- and afeertain the intention of the contending powers, and, in fhort, to meet and, ■provide for all poffible cafes that could arife under the head or debts. The words “creditors on either fide,” embrace every defeription of creditors, and cannot be limited or narrowed down to fuch only, whofe debtors had not paid into the loan office of Virginia. Creditors muft have debtors; debtors is th'e correlative term. Who are thefe debtors ? On the part of the Defendants in error, it fias been contended, that Virginia is the fubftituted debtor, fo far as repedts debtors, who may have paid money into the loan office under' its laws; Bur the Idea, that the, treaty may be Satisfied by fubíti-, tuting the ftate of Virginia in the Head of the original debtor, is far fetched, and altogether inadmiffible. The terms in which the article is exprefTed, clearly evince a contrary intention, and naturally and irrefiftably carry the" mind-'bacic to the . debtor; for, as between the creditor and rhe itate of Virginia, there was no expréfs and pre-exifting ftipii-latfon or debt. Befides, what lawful impediment was to be removed out'of the way of the creditor, if Virginia was the fubftituted or felf-created debtor ? Did this •claufe’make Virginia liable to a profecution for the debt ? Is Virginia now finable by fuch -Britijh creditor? No; he would in fuch cafe be totaily remedilefs, unlefs the nation of which he is a fubjecl, would interpole in his behalf. The wort's “ ihall meet with no. lawful impediment,” refer to legiílative arils, and every thing done under them, fo far as the creditor might be affc-Sed or obftrucfted in regard either to ids remedy or right. All-lawful impediments, of whatever kind, they might be, whether they-rclated to perfonal difabilities, or confifcatioris, fequef-trations, or payments into loan Offices or treafuries, are reino-vedi No aril of 'any ftafe legiflature, and no payment made under fuch- act into -the public coffers, ihall obftrurit the credit- or in his courfe of recovery againfthis debtor; The aril i'tfelf is a lawful impediment, and therefore is, repealed ; the payment under the ait is alfo a lawful impediment, and therefore .¡s, made void. The article is to be conftrued according to the fubjerit matter or nature of Ae impediment; it repeals .in the firft iriftance, and nullifies in the fecund. Unlefs this be the conftrurilion, it is not true, that the creditor fha.ll meet with no legal in.pediment to the recovery ot his debt. Does not the plea in the prefent cafe contradiril tjie treaty,,arid raife an impediment in the way of recovery, when the treaty declares, there-lha-ll be- none ? Pa-yinents made in paper money into loan. 0Fees, and treafuries, were the principal impediments to.be removed, and rnifehieis to he redreffed. The article ritakes provifion accordingly. It ftipulates, that the'' creditor Ihall recover the fall value of his debt in fterling money; hereby,iecuiing and guarding him- agairift-all payments' in paper money. Suppofe the creditor ihould call- on Virginia for payment—what Wo.u-ld it. be—the paper money .paid into the loan-office,. of its- value. Would'this be a compliance with the article ? In the one . cafe, the-money being cried down and dead, is no.better than•• w.afte paper; and in the other, the payment, when, reduced by the'table"of depreciation,, would be in-coafiderable, md in--.many cafes not more than. fix-pence in. the pounfif" Can- this be-.called' payment to the- full' value. pfAfe '• debt in.-ften'ing.money.?. The fiibfequent expref--lions- in-; the article,, enforce' the preceding obfervatiüns, and mark ¡the. will ■ and- intention; of the conrradfing'{Jarcies, in the moil clear and. precife terms. Theconcluding words are-, w all' bpn^idc- debts heretofore con trariced. ’ ’ In the conftruc-,⅜⅛⅛. ofi conCtedis,. words, aie to- be taken in- their natural and obvious, meaciog,; ur.kf&fcms good reaíba be affigned, ,to ihew,.' ' that they fhould be underftood in a different fenfe, Now, if a perfon, in reading this article, fhould take the words in thejr common meaning, and as generally understood, could he miftake the intention of the parties ? Their defign Qnqueftionably was, to reftore the creditor and debtor to their origina! fíate, and place them precifely in the fituation they would have flood, if no war had intervened, or aft of the Legifiature of Virginia had been pafied. The impediments created by Legifiative ails, and the payments made in purfuance of them, and all the evils ' growing out of them, were, fo far as refpeited creditors, done away and cured. This is the only way in which all lawful impediments'can be removed, and all debts, con ( rafted before the .date of the treaty, can be recovered to their full value, by the creditors againil their debtor'. It has, however, been urged, that this article muft be reftrided to debts-exifting and due at the time of making the treaty; that the debt in queftion was difcharged, becaufe it has been paid into the Loan Office,-agreeably to law ; and that thwtreaty ought not tobe confirmed fo as to renovate or revive it. To enforce this .objection, the rule laid down by Vattel was relied on, •“ that the fíate of things at “ the inftant of the treaty, is to be 'held legitimate, and any “ change to be made in it requires an exprefs fpccification in “the treaty; confequently aft things not mentioned in the “ treaty, are to remain as they were at the conclufion of-.it.” Vatt. B. 4. c. 2. f. ⅞1. Thefirfl part of the ohjeftion has been already anfwered; for it is within both the letter and fpirit of the inflrument, that the creditors fhould be reir.ftatcd, and, of courfe, that the debtors fhould be liable to pay. The aft of Virginia, and the payment under it have, fo far as the creditor is concerned, no operation, and are void. There is no difficulty in .anfwering the objection arifing from'the paflage in Vattel.. The univerfality of the terms is equal to an exprefs fpecification in the treaty, and indeed includes it. For it'is fair and conclusive reafiminc, that-if any deicription of debtors or clafs of cafes was intended to be excepted, it would have-been fpecified in the inflrument, and the words, “ that credi-,c tors on either fide, fhall meet with no lawful impediment to “ the recovery of the full value in ftcriing money of all debts “ heretofore contracted,” would not have been made ufe of in .the unqualified manner, in .which they Hand in the treaty. Another article in the treaty now under review, v/fti ferve by way of illuftration.

“Article VLÍ. There íhallhe a firm and perpetual peace, “between his Britannic Majefty and the faid States, and between the fubjects of the one and the citizens of the other, wherefore “ all hoftilitie?.both by fea and land jhall then immediately ceafe: ‘■‘‘.all prifoners on both tides fhall beLt at liberty, and his Britannic “ Majefty ihall, with all convenient fpeed, and without cauf- “ ing any deftruftion, or carrying away any negroes or other “ property of the American inhabitants, withdraw all his armies, “ garrifons and fleets from thefáid United States-, and from every “port, place and harbour within the fame; leaving in all fortifi-' “cations the American artillerythaf may be therein. And ihall “alfo order and caufe all archives, records, deeds, and papers, “belonging to any of the faid States, or their citizens, which ⅛ “ the courfe of the war may have fallen into the hands of his officers, to be forthwith reftored and delivered tothé proper States “and pérfons to whom they belong. ” Would it be an objection on the part of his Britannic Majefty, that the ftate.'of things at the inftant of the treaty is tobe held legitimate, and any change to be made in it, requires an exprefs fpecification ? That the forts are not. fpecified, and therefore npt to be given up ? The objection would beconfidered as futile and evafive. The an-fwer would be, that there is no doubt, becaufe. the expreifions are general; comprehend the forts, and are equal to an exprefs fpecification.' So in the prefént cafe, the univerfality of the terms are equal to a fpecification of every particular debt, or aq enumeration of every creditor and debtor, It is the fame thing as though they had been individually named,. All the creditors on either fide, without diftinCHon; muft have been contemplated by the parties in the fourth article. Almoft every, word, fe-parately taken, is expreffiveof this idea, and when all-thé words are combined and taken together, they remove every particle of doubt. But if the clafs of Br.itijh creditors, whofe debtors have paid into the Loan Office of Virginia, are not comprehended in the fourth article, then they pafs without redrefs, without notice, without fo much as a recommendation in their favour. The thing is incredible.' Why a diftinCtion—why ihould the creditors, whofe debtors paid into the Loan Office, be in a worfe fituation than the creditors, whofe debtors did not thus pay ? The traders, and others of this country,■ were largely indebted to the merchants of Great Britain. Topro- , vide fof the payment of thefe debts, and give fatisfa&ion to thi§ • clafs of‘fubjeCts,'muft have been a matter‘of'primary importance to the BritiJI) miniftry. ' This, doubtlefs, is at all times, and in all fituations, an objeCt of moment to a commercial country, The opulence, refources, and power of the Britijh nation, may, in no final] degree, be afcribed to its commerce; it is a nation of manufacturers and merchants. To proteCt their interefts and provide for ’the payment of debts due to them, efpecially when thofe debts amounted to an immenfe fum, could not fail of arrefting .the attention, and calling forth the utmoft exertions of the Britijh cabinet. A meafure of this kind, it .is eafy to perceive, would be purfued with unremitting diligence and ardour; facrifices would be made to enfure its fuccefs-; and, perhaps, nothing ihort of - extreme neceííity would induce them to give it up. But, if the debts, which have been confifcated, or paid into loan offices, or treafuries, be not within the provifion of the fourth article, then a numerous clafs of Britijh merchants are paffed over in filence, aud not fo much attended to as the loyalifts, or Americans, who attached themfelves to the caufe of Britain during the war. Is it a fup-pofable cafe, that the BritiJh negociators would have been more regardful of the interefts of the loyalifts than of their own merchants ? That they would make a diferimination between merchants, when in a national and political view, and in the eye of juftice, they were equally merritorious, and entitled to receive complete fatisfaftion for their debts? No line ftiould be drawn between creditors unlefs it' be found in the treaty. The. treaty does not make it: the truth is, that none was intended ; for, if intended, it would have been expreffed. The indefinite and fweeping terms made ufe of by the parties, fuch as “creditors on either fide, no lawful impediment to the recovery of the full value in fterling money, of all debts heretofore . contracted, ” exclude the idea of any clafs of cafes having been intended tobe excepted, and explode the doftxine of conftruc-tive diferimination. The fourth article appears to me to come, within the firft general maxim of interpretation laid down by Vattel. It is not permitted to interpret what has no need of “ interpretation. When an ait .is conceived in clear and pre-K cife terms, when the fenfe is manifeft, and leads to nothing “ abfurd, there can be no reafon to refufe the fenfe which this “ treaty naturally prefents. To goelfewhere in fearch of con- “ jeiftures, ⅛ order to reftrain or extinguifh it, is to endeavour “ to elude it. If this.dangerous method be Once admitted, “ there will be no a<ft which it will not render ufelefs. Let •C£ the brjghteft light fhine on. all the parts of the piece, let it “ be expreffed in terms the mod clear and determinate; all this “ fhall be of no ufe, if it be allowed to fearch for foreign rea- “ for.s, in order to maintain what cannot be found in the fenfe it “ naturally prefents.” Vatt*B. 2. ch. 17. f. 263. ..

To proceed, the conftrutftion on the part of the defendants excludes mutuality. The debts due from Britijh fubjetfts to American citizens were not confifcated, or fequeftered, or .drawn into the' public coffers. They.were left untouched. Now, if all the Britijh debtors be compelled to pay their’American creditors, and a part only of. the American debtors be compelled to pay their Britijh creditors, there will not be that mutuality in the thing, which its nature and juftice require. The rule in fuch cafe ihould work both ways: W hereas ¡the other conftrutftion. creates mutuality, and proceeds upon indifcriminatirtg principles. The former conftruftion does violence to the letter and fpirit of the inftrument; the latter flows eafily and naturally out of it.

It hás been made a queftion,'whether the confifcation of debts, which were contracted by individuals of different nations in time of peace, and remain due to individuals of the enemy in time of war, is au.thorifed by the law of nations among civilized ftates ? 1 {hall not, however, controvert the pofition, ■ that, by the rigour of the law of nations, debts of the defcrip-tionjuft mentioned,-may be confifcated. This rule has by fome been confidered as a relift of barbarifm; it is certainly a hard one, and cannot continue long among commercial nations; indeed, it ought not to have exifted among any nations, and, perhaps, is generally exploded at the'préfent day in Europe. ■ Hear the language of Vattell on .this fubjeft, B. 3. cc c. 5 .f. 77. “But atprefent, in regard to the advantage “ and fafety of commerce, all the fovereigns of Europe have “ departed from this rigor. And as this cuftom has been ge- “ nerally received, he who ihould aft'contrary to it, would injure the public faith; for Arrangers trufted his fubjefts only “ from a firm perfuafion, that the, general cuftom would be “ obferved., .The Arate does not fo much as touch the fums which it owes to the enemy. Every where, in cafe of war, “ funds credited to the public are exempt from confifcation, “ and.feizure.” The Légiflátors .of Virginia,' who made the aft, which has been pleaded in bar, lay down the doftrine relative to this point, in firrong and unequivocal terms. For, they exprefsly declare, that the law and ufages of nations require, that debts ihould not be confifcated. If the enemy ihould, in thefirft inftance, direft a confifcation of debts, retaliation might in fuch cafe be a proper and juftifiable mea-fufe. The truth is, that the confifcation of.debts is at once tin juft and .impolitic; it dcftroys confidence, violates good faith,, and injures the interefirs of commerce; it is alfo unpro-duólive, and in moil cafes imprafticable. ingenious writers have endeavoured to defend the doftrine on the 'gróiind, that the confifcation of debts weakens the enemy and ennch.es qur-fel.ves.. The firft is not true, becaufe remittances are ieldom, if ever, made during a war, and the fecond generally proves', unprofitable, when attempted .to be carried, into praftice. The gain is, at fnbft, temporary, and inconfiderable ; whereas the injury is certain and incalculable, and the'ignominy great and faffing. Hiftory furniíhés a remarkable inftance in lupport and illuftration of the foregoing remarks. For, in the ⅛-ar that broke out between France and Spain in the year 1684, his Catholic Majefty. endeavoured to' feize the effects of the 'fubjects.of France in. Iris kingdom;'but the-attempt proved ■abortive, for not one Spanijh agent or factor violated his truft, or'betrayed his French principal or correfpondent. If the payments, which have been made into the loan’office, purfuant to the act of Virginia, íhould be fcaled according to a fubfequent act' of that ftate, they would not, it is probable, amount to a very' large fum. Other reafons in Support of the doctrine have been affigned, namely, that the confiscation of debts operates as an indemnity for paft Ioffes, and a Security aginft future injuries ; but they do not appear to me to be more folid than thofe already mentioned. Confiscation of debts is confidered a difreputable thing among civilized nations of the prefent day j and indeed nothing is more ftrongly evincive of this truth,' • than that it has gone into general deffuetude, and whenever put into practice, provifion is made by the treaty, which terminates the war, for the mutual and complere reftoration of contracts and payment of debts. I feel no hefitation in. declaring, that it has always appeared to me to be incompatible with the principles of juftice and policy;- that contrails entered into by individuals of different nations, íhould be violated by their refpedtive governments in eonfe-quence of national quarrels and hoftilities. National differences Should not affeit private bargains. The confidence, both of an individual and natipnal nature, on which the con- ' trails were founded, ought to be preferved inviolate. Is not this the language of honefty and honor ? Does not the Sentiment correfpond with the principles of juftice, and the dictates of the moral fenfe ? In íhort, is it not the refult of right reafon and natural equity ? The relation,- which the parties ftood in to each other at the time of contrailing thefe debts, ought not to pafs without notice. The debts were cóntrailed. while- the creditors and debtors were fubjedls of the fame king, and children of the fame family. They' were made under the fandtion of laws common to, and binding on, both. A re volution-war could not, like other wars, be forefeen or calculated upon. The thing was improbable. No. one, at the time that the debts were contracted, had any idea of a fevc-rance or difmemberment of the empire, by which perfons, who"' had been united under one fyftem of civil polity, íhould 'be torn afunder, and become enemies for a time, and, perhaps, . aliens forever. Contrails erit.ered into in fuch a ftate of things ought tó be facredly regarded. Inviolability feems to b,e attached to them. Considering then the ufages of civilized nations, and the opinion of modern writers, relative to ^confiscation, and alfo the circumftances under which thefe debts were contracted, wc ought to take the expreffions in this fourth article in their molt extenfive fenfe. We ought to admit of no comment, that will narrow and reftriit their operation and import. 1The conftru~ion of a treaty made in favor of fucif creditors, and for the refforation and enforcement of pre-exiff-ing coritra~ts, ought to be liberal and benign. J~'or theic re~-fons this claufe in the treaty deferves the utmoft latitude of expoiltion. t ne totirtil article embraces au creditorS, extends to all pre~exifting debts, remav~s aI1 lawful impediments, repeal's the legiflative a~ of Virginia, which has been pleaded in bar, and with regard to the creditor anntils every thing done undcr it. This article reinflates the parties; the creditor and debtor before the war,. are creditor and debtor fince ;as they fiood then, they ftand now. To prevent miflakes, it is to be' und~rftood, that my ai~ument embraces none but lawful im-pedim~nts within th~ .m~ning of the treaty, fuch as légifla~iv~ aE~s, and payments under them into loan offices and treafuriesi An impediment created by law fiands on difFerent' groUndS froni an impediment created by the creditor, To conclude: I am o~ opinion, that the demurrer ought to have been fuftaintd; and, of ~ourfe, that the jud~r~ent rendered in the court be1ow~ is erroneous; and muft bereverfed.

I

R~DELL,'7ujh~?~.

In delivering my opinion on this impàr-tant cafe,1 I feel myfeif deeply ~ffe&ed by `the awful fittiatiori in which I ffarid. The uncommon magnitude of the fuhje&~

its novelty, the high expe&a.tior~ it has excited, and ~e con-l~qu'ences with which a decifion maybe attended, have all im-preffed me with their fullef'c force. I have trembled left by an.

• ill informed or precipitate opinidn of mine, either the hoñour~ the interefi-,' or the fafety of the United States Ihould fuffer or • •

be endangered on the one hand, or the juft rights and proper . Security of any individual on the other. In endeavouring to form the opinion 1 (Hall now deliver, I am fure the great object of. my heart has been'to. difcover the trute principles upon which a decifion ought to be given, unbiafled. by any other con-fideration than the molt facred regard to juftice. Happy íhould I have thought myfelf, if I could as confidently have relied on a ftrength of abilities equal to the greatnefs of. the ©ccafion.

The caufe has been fpoken to, at the bar, with a degree of ability equal to any occafion. However painfully I may at any time refiedl oh the inadequacy of my own talents, I ihall as long as I live remember with pleafure and refpe<ft,.the arguments which I have heard on this cafe: they, have difcovered an ingenuity, a depth of inveftigation, ánd a power of rea'fin-ing fully equal to any thing I have ever withefled, and fome of them have been adorned with a fplendor of eloquence fur-paffing what I have ever felt before. Fatigue has given way under its. influence, and,the heart has been warmed; while the underftanding has been inftrinSed:

The a ¿lion now before the court is an aSion. of debt; brought by a Britijh creditor .againft an Jmerican debtor, to recover upon a bond executed before the late war.

To this a£tion there are five pleas* fubftantially as follow:

The ift, a plea of payment, oh. which ¡flue is joined, but hot now before the court, and which is to be tried by a jury, iri ' cafe judgment' be given for the Plaintiff upon.the legal quef-tions arifing on the other pleas, fo as to entitle him to try the the ¡flue-.

The 2d is a plea of a payment into the treafury of the State; of part of the debt, under-an ⅛⅞ of affembly of the-aoth of . OSlober, 1777- ■

The 3d. plea is grounded oh two adds of affembly ': One of May Í779, under which it is alledged that the debt in qúeftion became forfeited to the State; the other of May 1782, which is relied óri as a bar to the recovery. The former part of the. plea I underftand to be given up by the defendant’s counfci, and certainly with great propriety, becáufe debtsare exprefsly excepted in the adHt refers to.

The 4th plea, alledges a non'-compliance with the jtreaty 6n . the part of Great Britain, and, therefore, that the Britijh ere 3itor cannot nove recover a benefit under the fame treaty. It alfo alledges afits of hoftility by Great Britain fince the peace, as likewife forming a bar ..toddle recovery'of the Plaintiff, who is a Britijh creditor. ■

The 5th plea is, that this, debt was abfolutely annulled by the' change of ' This alfo I underftand to havé been given up in the courfe of the argument, and. undoubtedly it is not tenable. ■ ' .

The only pleas, therefore, for us- to confider, are the feconcf, part Of the third, and the fourth. Every thing I hav/e to fay on that part of the 3d, not relinquiihed, admitting the fulleft operation of the a£t of 178a, as intending to affeift Britijh creditors themfelves, as well as aift^nees,'which does not appear to me to have formed any part of its obj eel, will appeal- from my obfer-vations on the feco'nd plea; .and; therefore, to prevent unneceftaty repetition, I (hall not confider it feparately by itielf.

It leems proper to fpeak of the fourth piba firft, becaufe, if that can be maintained, it is altogether immaterial to confider cither of the others.

I am clearly of opinion, that the fourth plea is not maintainable.

' it is grounded on two'allegations.

ift. The breach of the treaty by Great Britain, as alledged in. the plea.

. 2d. New a£ts of hoftility on the part of that kingdom. •

1. In regard to the firft, I confider the law of nations to be decided as to the following pofition, viz:'

That.if a tre ity be broken by one of the contra&'ng par- •“ ties it becomes (in the exprefiive language of the law) not “ ahfolutely void, but voidable5 and voidable, not at the option “ of any individual of the con trailing country injured, however “ much he may be affe&d by it, hut at the option of the fo-u vereign power of that country, of which fuch individual is a a memberThe authorities, I tnink, are full and decifive to that effect. Grotius, b, 2. c. 15. f 15. ib. b. 3. c. 20. / 35> 36> 37> 38- Burl■ P- 35^ port 4- c. 14. in f. 8. Fattel, b. 4, c. 4. f 54.

The gentlemen for the defendant, taking hold of fome particular exprelilions, without regarding the whole of thefe authorities, and confidering the reafon of them, have argued, that true, in the, prefent inftance (Tor example). Congrefs might have remitted the infradtion, but not having done fo, the Plaintiff is barred for the prefent, however he might be teftored to the right, in cafe the infraction fhould. hereafter be actually .remitted.

But to me it is very evident, that fuch a pofition is not maintainable, either by the authorities I have recited, or the reafon of the thing.

The words of Grótius are pointed and exprefs to fhew, not-that the treaty ihall.be reputed broken until a rcmijfion is a£iually pronounced by the injured party, but that itihall not be reputed as broken, until the injured party ihall think proper ao tually 'to proribunce it broken; and it is remarkable that his words to this effeffc, are calculated for the very purpofe of removing any dotibts which other more general expreffions might occafion. His words are: . .

“ When there is treachery on one fide, it. is certainly at the K choice of the innocent party to let thé peace fubfift; as Scipio “ did formerly after many perfidious actions of . the Carthage- nians. Becaufe ,no man, by doing contrary to his ebliga- “ tion, can thereby difcharge himfilf from ic. For though “ it is exprefied, that by fucb a fait the peace ihall be reputed “ as broken, yet this claufe is to he underjiood only in favour of Ci the innocent, if he thinks fit' to make ufe of it.”' Grotius.- . b. 3. r. ao. f 38.

The whole claufe of Fattel is fubftantially to the-fame pur-pofe; and, therefore, where in one part of the claufe he fays, “ the offended party may remit the infradiion committed,” this muft be understood, to make the whole confiftent, a remiffion not arifing from an exprefs declaration, but from a tacit ac-quiefcence in the breach. Ocherwife, what becomes of the words ?—“ but if he chufes not to come to a rupture, the “ treaty remains valid and obligatory;” The treaty, there-* fore, muft remain valid and obligatory, until the power, author ¡fed to come- to a rupture, does come to it.

The fame obfervations apply to Burlamaqui, who exprefles himfelf more generally, but ftates fubftantially the fame doctrine. His expreilion is, “it is at the choice of the innocent “ party to let the peace fubfift,” which certainly does not require a pofitive declaration that it ill all fubfift.

This doefrine appears to me to be grounded on the higheft reafon. It is undoubtedly tjue, that each nation is confidered as a moral perfon, and the w el fire and íñiereft of all the-individuals- of tht nation, fo far as they’may be aftedled by its concerns With foreign nations, are in each country entrufted to fome particular . power authorifed to negocíate with them,’ or to fpeak the fenfe of the nation on any emergency.

When any individual, -therefore, of any nation, has caufe of complaint againft another' nation, or any individual of it, not immediately amenable to the authority of his own, he may complain to that power in his own nation, which is entrufted with the fovereignty of it as to foreign negociations, and he will be enitled to all the redrefs which the nature of. his cafe requires, and the fiutation of his own country will enable him to obtain,

The people of the United States, in their prefent Conftitution, have devolved on the Prefident and Senate, the power of' making treaties; and upon Congrefs, the power of declaring war.

,To one or other of thefe powers, in cafe of an infracliorf of a treaty that has been entered into with the UnitedrStates, I apprehend application is to be made,

Upon fuch an application various'important confiderations would neceifarily occur.

1. Whether the treaty was firft violated on the part of the United States, or on that of the other contracting power ?

2. Whether, if firft violated by the latter, it was a violation in an important or an inco'nfiderable article; whether the violation was by defign or accident, or owing to unforefeen obfta-cles; whether, in ihort, it was wholly or partially without ex-cufe ?

3. Whether, admitting it' was either, it was a matter for which compenfation could be made, or otherwife ?

Whether the injury was of fuch a nature as to admit of negociation, or to require immediate fatisfaftion, peremptorily and without delay?

5. Whether, if the circumftances in all other cafes juftified it, it was advifeable, upon an extenfive view and wife eftimation o.f all the relative circumftances of the United States, t9 declare the treaty broken, and of courfe void-, for though the parly firft|breaking the treaty cannot make it abfolutely void, but it is only voidable at the election of the injured party, yet when that eledtion is made, by declaring the treaty Void, I conceive it is totally fo as to both parties, and that all rights enjoyed under the treaty are abfolutely annulled, as if no ftipulation had been rnade for them ?

Thefe are confiderations of policy, confiderations of extreme magnitude, and certainly entirely incompetent to the examination and decifion of a Court of Juftice.

Miferable and difgraceful indeed, would be the fituation of the citizens of the United States, if they were obliged to-comply with a treaty on their part, and had no means of redrefs for a non-compliance by the other contra&ing power.

But tfiey have, and the law of nations points out the remedy. The remedy depends on the diferetion and fenfe of duty of theft own government.

This plea is therefore defective, fo far as concerns the breach of the treaty, rrot becauié this, court hath no cognizance of a breadh of treaty, but becaufe by'the law of nations, we have no authority upon any information or conceffions of any individuals, to confider or declare it broken; but our judgment rnuj be grounded on the folemn declaration of Gongrefs alone, (to whom, I conceive, the authority is entrufted) given for the verv purpofe of vacating the treaty on the principles I have ftated. The paper tranfmitted' by order of Congrefs, to the Executive of Virginia,-'on the fubjedl of a violation complained ,of on the part of the Britijh, certainly cannot amount to fo much, efpecially as there is another paper of theirs in the year ¾787, tranfmitted to the different States, complaining of violations on our part. They have pronounced no folemn decifion, which committed the firft infraftion; much lefs have they declared that in cónfequence of the infrañion1 on the part of the Britijhy they chofe that the treaty ihould be annulled

But it is faid .that a declaration by Congrefs, that the treaty was broken by Great Britain, would be exercifing a judicial power, which by the Cqnftitution in all cafes of treaties is devolved on the Judges. "

Surely fuch a thing was never in the contemplation of the Conftitution. If it was, a method is ftiil wanting by which it could be executed for, if we are to declare, whether Great Britain or the United States, have violated a treaty,,we ought to have fome way of bringing both the parties.before us.

The method contended for by the-defendaíH’s counfel is very ill fuited to another par.t of their dotftrine, which is certainly right, that a nation is a moral perfon, and that the a£t of afove-reign- power to whom its foreign concerns are entrufted, is the ait of every individual of that nation, becaufe he reprefents the whole.

But in this cafe, the King of Gr-eat Britain does not ait on behalf of the plaintiff, his fubjeit, and the United Staferon'be-half of the defendants, their citizens; but the plaintiff is alledged to reprefent the.fovereignty of the United States, a dignity for-aught I know, of which they may be refpeitively worthy,'but which certainly does not either politically or judicially belong to them.

The Judiciary is undoubtedly to determine in all cafes in law and equity, coming before them concerning treaties.

The fubjedi of treaties, Gentlemen truly fay, is to be determined by the law of nations. •

It is a part of the law of-nations, that if a treaty he violated by one party, it is at the.option of the other party, if innocent, to declare, in cónfequence of the breach, that the treaty is void.

If. Congrefs, therefore,, (who, I conceive, alone have fuch authority ^finder pur Government) ihall make fuch • a declaration, in any cafe like the.prefent, I ihall deem-it my. duty to regard the treaty as void, and then to forbear any ihare in-executing it as-a Judge.

But the fame law of nations tells me, that until that declaration be made,, I muft regard it (in the language of the lawj valid and obligatory.

The admiffion of the fadl, flared in the plea, cannot be, taken as an admiffion that the fa£i is JlriBly true, becaufe the plaintiff had no-way of avoiding the plea but by a demurrer, -whether it was true or not. If it was well pleaded, it is an admiffion of the entire truth, but not otherwife. For the reafons I have given, it is clear to me that it is not well pleaded.

2. In regard to the fecond branch of this plea, new ails op hoftility, if meant as conftitoting a breach, (which I don’t un-derftand it to be) the obfer'vationS I have already made will equally applv to this part of the plea. If meant as a proof, that a war in fail:, tho’ nothin name fubfifts, and therefore that the plaintiff is an alien enemy, the fame obfervations will apply ftill more forcibly We muft receive a declaration, that we are in a ftate of war, from ¿hat part of the fovereignty of the union to which that important fubjeft is entrufted. We certainly want feme better information of.tbe faft than we have at prefent.— However, this point feems fo clear, that the defendant’s counfel very faintly attempted to maintain this idea of the cafe.

I conclude, therefore, for thefe reafons, that there is nothing in the 4th plea which is a bar to the plaintiff’s aflion.

The great difficulty of the cafe arifes from the fecond plea.— This is the only part of the cafe, about which I have, from the beginning, entertained any doubt. And I muft confefs, I have had very great doubts, indeed, on this fubjefl. My opinion has varied more than once in regard to if. I have endeavoured to come to a cortclufion byanalyfing it in all its parts; and the jefult of my inveftigation has been, according to the beft judgment I am capable of forming, upon the moil deliberate examination, that the plea is fupportable. My reafons for this opinion, Í muft give at confiderable length, in order to ihew it is not a rafh one, and that Gentlemen may be enabled in the future progrefs of this cafe, more eafily to deleft my errors, i.f I ihould have committed any.

I will divide the corfideration of the. plea into two points :

1. Whether the plea would have been a bar if this cafe had . ftood independently of the treaty ?

2. Whether the treaty deftroys the operation of the plea?

• In confidering the firft point, ‡ fhall, for the greater perfpi-c:uity, coniider it under the following heads :

1. Whether the Legiflarure of this State had a right, agrea-ble to the law of nations, to confifcate the debt in queftion ?

2. Whether, admitting that the Legiflature had not a right, agreabiy to the law of nations, to confifcate the debt, 'yet if they in fail did fo, it would not, while it remained unrepealed by any fubfequent, Sufficient authority, have been valid and obligatory within the limits of the State, fo as to bar any fuit for the recovery .qf the debt ?•

3. Whether, if it fhall be confidered. that the Legiflature dj-cf not wholly confifcate the debt, foas totally to extinguifh all right in the creditor, (as I apprehend they clearly did not) but only fequefter it under the peculiar eircumftances ftated in the a<ft, the payment.ih queftion, under the authority of the aft, did not, at that time at leaft, wholly exonerate the debtor ?

i. It being clear that there was no abfolu'te confifcation in this cafe, I lhall not give a conclufive opinion upon the right; but as I think it .highly probable fuch a right did exiffc, fome obfervations on that fubjed will naturally-and properly lead'to t'hofe upon which my opinion, as to the validity of 'the pay-rrients, is ultimately founded. For this reafon, and this reafon only, I difdufs the prefent quellion.

/ Whatever doubt might have been entertained, by reafoning ■on the particular examples of Grotius and Fuffendorf Bynker-, flioek, (who, T believe, is alone, a very great authority) is full and decifive in the very point as toa general right of confifcat-ing debts of an enemy. His doétrine I take to be this, that the law of nations authorifes it, unlefs in former treaties between the belligerent powers', there be particular ftipulátions to the contrary. Vat te l recognifes the general right,-but ftates a prevailing cuftom in Europe to the contrary ;■ in confequence of which he fays, “ As this cuftom hás been generally obferved, “ he who would a<ft contrary to it would injure the public faith; “ for ftrangers trufted his fubjeits only from a firm perluafion “ that the general cuftom would be obferved.” Vattel mentions the fa£t( but does not'ftate the origin of the faól; which, I think, it is not improbable, may have arifen in confequence of particular ftipulátions, as mentioned by Bynker jhoek 5 very few of the civilized .nations of Europe, not having treaties with each other. '

Whether this cuftomary law (admitting the principle topre- ' vail by cuftom'pnly) was binding on the American States, during the late war, in refpect to Great Britain at leaft, maybe ■ a queftion of confiderable doubt. There were particular cir-eumftances in the relative fituation of the two countries, which . might porfibly exempt this from the-force of fuch a cuftom, could itbe fuppofed that when this country became an independent nation, this cuftomary law immediately attached upon it. However this c'ouhtry might have been confidered bound to obferve fuch a law in regard to any nation recognizing its independence, had we been unfortunately at war with fuch, and ■ who obferved it on her part, (for, undoubtedly, a breach on one fide would juftify a non-obfervance by the other) it did not. he-ceflarily follow, that the people of this country were bound to obferve. it to a nation, which not only did not recognize, but lought to deftroy their very exiftence as art independent people, confidering them in no other light than as traitors, whofe lives and fortunes were forfeited'!» the law. The people of this country literally fought pro aris ⅛’ foe is; and, therefore, means of defence, which, when inferior objedls were in view, might not be ftridlly juftifiable, might in fuch an extremity bej-*ome fo, on the great principle, on which the laws of war are founded, -felf prefervation ; an objeCt that may be attained b.y any mean's, not inconfiftent with the eternal and immutable rules of moral obligation.

The principles of the common law of England, as appears from a cafe"! Shewed to the bar, (that in Sir Thomas Parker’s Reports, p. 267. the Attorney General againft Weeden and. Shales) do undoubtedly recognise the forfeiture of a chofe in aStion due to an enemy. At the utmoft it only requires, that an inquifition fhould be completed during the war, fo as,, by ascertaining the fa&, fully to eftabliih the title cif the .crown. I can fee no reafon why .that principle of the common law fhould not obtain here. If fo, then independent of any aCt of legiilation whatever,-'an inquifition completed during the war, finding the faCt,.would have veiled the title to the debt in queftion ab-folutely in the State, unlefs this debt can be diftinguifhed from any other chofe in aStion. Such a diftinCtion has been attempted : ift, Becaufe this debt was due . before thd war. 2d, Be-caufe the State had not poileffion of the bond. To thefe objections, I think, eafy anfwers may be given, ift, The right acquired by war, (detached.from cuftom, which I am not now-confidering, or any exprefs ftipulation, if there be fuch) depends on t'he power of feist,ing the enemy’s ejfeSis. • It js not grounded on any antecedent claim of property, but on the contrary, the property is admitted to be the enemy’s, in the very aCt of Seizing it. Its foie juftification is, that being forced into aftateof hoftilityi,by an,injury for which no Satisfaction could be obtained in a’peaceable manner, reprifals may be made ufe of, as a means to compel juftice to be done, or to enable the injured party to obtain fatisfaCtion for itfclf. Such a power, from its nature (being grounded on neceffity only) feems incapable of limitation by any general rule, 'and if confci.entioufly ufed (of which each nation muft judge fob itfclf) the principle applies as well to property, which' was in the country before the war began, as to any other which may by accident come into- its pof-feffion. The fame objection would apply to the Seizure of any other property of an enemy, which had been in the country before the war began, as of an incorporeal right. The firft refo-lution in the cafe I cited is, as to chafes in aStion generally, tho’ , tha chofe, in aStion therein queftion, was, in fa£t,'one which had accrued during the war.. 2d, The objection from the State nothavíng poiiefTion of the bond, (though countenanced by one or two writers) I think, isalfo, fufceptible of a Satisfactory' an-fwer. The bond doés not create the debt, but-is only evidence of it. Poffeflion of it alone can give no right. A robber, or in? individual coming.to the poiTefliorrof it by accident, acquires bo more title to the money than he had before. The law is fo even as to prornilfory notes payable to bearer, if the faCtcan be. made to appear. If a bond-be loft, equity has long fince afforded a remedy. In a modern cafe in a court of law, a proferí of a deed has been difpenfed vritb, upon a fpccial declaration ftating the lofs of it. It was while the pojjejjien and the right were confounded, that this objedlion was thought of weight. It is obfervable alfo, that it would .create an idle and a trifling diftindtion between debts due by fpecialty, and limpie contradi debts, a diftindlion.that might be fupported by ingenuity, but certainly not by reafon. And it would found harfh, to fay that fimple contradi debts ihould be forfeitable, if the witneffes were in the country, but otherwife not. Now, if the forfeiture of the debt in queftion, could have been effedled at common law, by an inquifition completed during the'war, I can fee no rea-fon why the Legiflature could not, with equal propriety as to the right, have effedled the fame objedt fubftantially in any other mode. The proceeding, in each cafe, muft be ex parte, and the objedt affedted can be-concluftvely bound by neither, if his cafe did not come within the principles of the law. This I argue, upon a fuppofttion that the cuftomary law of nations, was not binding here, at leaft in this inftance. That, however, is a point of fame delicacy, and not neceffary for me now to determine, becaufe, gd, I am of opinion, that admitting that the-Legiflature had not ftriclly a right, agreeably to the law of nations, to conftfcate the debt in queftion ; yet, if they in fadt did fo, it would; while it remained unimpeached by any fubfequent fuiflcient authority, have been valid and obligatory within the limits of the Stale, fo as to bar any fuit for die recovery of the debt.

In this opinion I have the misfortune to differ from a very high authority, for which I have the greateft refpedt. But however painful it may be, to differ from gentlemen, whofe fu-perior abilities and learning I readily acknowledge, I am under the indifpénfabie necelaty of judging according to the beft lights of my own unu’erftanding, aflifted by all the information I can. acquire. I confefs, therefore, that I agree entirely with the Defendant’s Gounfel in thinking, that the adts oftheLegiflatureofthe State, in regard to the fubjedl in queftion, fo far as they were . conformable to the Conftitution'of the State, and not in violation of any article of the confederation (where that was concerned) were abfolutely binding de faEto, and that if, in refpedt to foreign nations, or any individual belonging to them, they were notftridlly warranted by the law of nations, which ought to have been their guide, the ails were not for that re'afon void, . but the State was anfwerr.ble to the United Stales, for a violation of the law of nations, which the nation, injured might complain of to the fovefeignty of the Union. There is no doubt that an act of- Parliament in Great Britain, would bind in its own country in- every poiiibie cafe in which the Legif-lature thought proper to ait. Blazhjianc is precife as to that point, even, in cafes mauifeflly unjufr, -if the words of the law are plain and unequivocal. In this, contry, thank God,- a lefs arbitrary principle prevaiiá. -The power of the Legiilatures is limited; of the State Legifiatures by their own State Con-futations, and that of. the United States-, of the Legislature-of the Union by. the Conftitution of the Union. Beyond thefe limitations, I have no doubt, their afts are void, becaufe they are not warranted by the authority given. But within them, i think, they are in ali cafes- obligatory in the country fubjecl to their own immediate jurifdiction, becaufe in fuch cafas the Legiilatures only exercife a diferetion exprefsly confided to them by the conftitution of their country, and for the abufe of which, (if it íhould be afcufec) they alone are accountable. It is a dilcretion no more qoncrot'lable (as I conceive) by a Court of juflice, than a judicial determination is by them, neither department having any fight to encroach oii the exclusive province of the other, in order to rectify any error in principle, which it may fuppofe the other has committed. It is fufiicient for each to take care that it commits no error .of its own. As to a diilinction between a State Court and this Court, in this refpcct, I do, for my part, difclaim, according to my prefent fentiments, any authority to give a diiTerenr decifion in any c'afe whatfoever from fuch as a State Court would be competent to give under the fame circumílances. I have no conception that this court is in the nature of a foreign jurifdiction. The thing itfelf would be as improperas it would be odious, in cafes where acts of the State have a concurrent jurifdiction y/ith it.

With regard to. the exception I fpeak of, no one has fuggeft-ed, that the aft of OSfoher, 1777, was in any manner incon-fiftent with the Conftitution of the flats; and” at that time the articles of Confederation were not in force; but if they had been, I think there is no colour for «Hedging any inconfiflency with them, fir.ee Congrefs could have patted no aft on this fubjeft, but if they had wifhed for an aft, limit have recommend..d to the State Legiilatures to pafs'it. And the very nature of a recommendation implies, that the party recommending cannot, but the party.to whom the recommendation is made, can do the thing recommended.

The 3d queftion under the preient bead, that.I propofed, •£ was this: “ Whether, if it íhall be confidered that the Legif- ££ lature did not abfolutely csnfifcate the debt, fo as totally to ££ exlinguiih all right in the creditor, (as Í apprehend they ckar- “ ly did not) but only fequeftered it under the pec iiliarcircum- ££ fiances ftated in the aft; the payment in queftion, under the “ authority of the aft, did nor, at that time at leaft, wholly ex- “ onerate the debtor.”

The words of the enafting claufe concerning this fubjeft, are as follow : “ That it ihalT and may be'lawful for any citi- “ tizen of this commonwealth, owing money to a fubjeft: of “ Great Britain, to pay (he fame, or any part thereof) from “ time to time, as he iliall think fit, into the faid loan office, “ taking thereout a certificate for the faid fum, in the name of the “ .creditor, with an indorfement under the hand of the cofnmif-t£ fioner of the faid office, expreffing the name of the payer,' “ and íhall deliver fuch certificate to the Governor and Ccun- ££ cil, whofe receipt fall difeharge him from fo much of the debt. ££ And the Governor and Council Iliall in like manner lay bc- “ fore the General Aftembly once in every year, an account of “ thefe certificates, fpecifying the names of the perfons, by ££ and for whom they were paid, and fhali fee to the fafe-£t keeping of the fame, fubjeft to the future direftion of the ££ Legiflature.”

We are too apt, in eftimaling a law pafied at a remote period, to combine in oUr confideration, all the fubfequent events which have had an influence upon it, inftead of confining our-felves (which we ought to do) to the exifting- circumftances at . the time of its paffing. Let us, however, recolleft, that at this period no Britijh creditor cSuld inftitute a fuit for the recovery of his debt, as the war ccnfiituted him an alien enemy, and therefore his remedy ftood fufpended at common law, fo that he ran the rifque of the entire lefts of every debt, ■ where his debtor proved infolvent during the war. Cenfe-qncntly, it would, in his own eftimation, have been doing him aconfiderable forvice, that the ftaíe íhould authorife a receipt on his behalf, had there been no other currency in circulation than gold or filver. it would have been placing him in a ftate of fecurity, greater than he had any reafon to expeft. The extremity of the public fituation,- rendered paper money una-avoidablc, but this was an evil to which all American as well as Briiljh creditors wereliable, ánd the former (as weall know) were compelled, upon a tender, under pain of being deemed enemies of their'country, to receive it at its nominal value. It was natural fand perhaps) not altogether, if at all, unjuft, if a man had f. ioo.due to him from B. and he himfelf owed C, /. 100, and B, paid him the f. rño, though in depreciated money, that he ihould' immediately carry it to his creditor. Many, I have no doubt, paid their creditors upon thefe plain grounds of retribution, though others undoubtedly (for no government can make all men, honeft) took moll fcandalous advantages of depreciation in its advanced periods. When this law was 'palled, the depreciation, I believe, was little felt, and not at all acknowledged. De minimis non curat lex, is an. old law maxim-. * I may parody it on this occafion, by. faying De minimis non curat libertas. Whenlife, liberty, property, every thing dear to man was at flake,, few could have coldnefs of heart enough to watch the then fcarcely perceptible gradation in th.e value of money. In this fituati'on the Legiflature of the ftate palled the lW in queftion. It did all that the then fituation of affairs would admit of, even for the benefit of the Britijh creditors themfelves, and it put it in the power of American creditors, who were • compelled to receive the exiiling currency, .to pay their own debts with it. The depofiting of money jn the loan office, was at that time by many, even in Arnerica itfelf, thought an eligible method, of fecuring it, and with fome foreigners, it was a favorite, object of fpeculation. I know, myfelf, that the proceeds .of fome very valuable cargoes were ordered to be fo applied, and_probably there were fu.ch inítánces of which 1 knew nothing. The increafed difficulties of the American war, in a great degree, difappointed the intentions of the original-law, but ftill, Britijh and American creditors were placed on the fame footing, fo far as it was in the power of the Legiflature to effect it.

■ I thought it proper to fay thus much, as introductory. to the obíervatións I ihall make on the legal operation of thofe payments.- '

t.' If the ftate de jure, according to the law of nations (which I itrongly incline to think) had a right wholly to confifcate this debt, they had undoubtedly.¾ right to proceed a partial way towards if by receiving the money, and difeharging the debtor, fubflituting itfelf in his place. We are to be governed by things, and not names, and, confequently; if the ftate had. a right to fay to a debtor-—a We confifcate the right of “ your creditor, and you mull pay your debt to us, and not to “ him,”—they had a right -to fay—We do not chufe for the “ prefent, abfolutely fo confifcate this debt,-although we have “ the power fo to do, but if you will pay the money to us, you “ ihall be as completely difeharged as if we did.” jn this point of view, I think there can be no doubt but that a difeharge would,-under fuch circumftances, have as completely extin-guifhed the right.of the creditor as to the debtor, as if, in CiSe fio war had intervened, and therefore no right had accrued under it t& the. ílatss-, the debtor had actually paid the.money to the order of the creditor, and received a difcharge from himfeif.

2. For the reafons I have before given,.I think a confifcation, either whole *r partial, or any lefs exercife cif that power de fa fio, though not de jure, would, in this ftatc have been perfectly binding, and in legal contemplation as effettual to bar a recovery, as if the- law of nations had been ftrictly and unqueftipnably purfued.

3. I believe there, can be no doubt, but that according to the law of nations, even on the moft modern notions of it, z fequeftration merely, for the purpofe of recovering the debts, and preventing the remittance of them to the enemy, and thereby ftrengthening him, and weakening the government, would be allowable, and if fo, furely it follows, as a matter of eburfe, (perhaps it would follow without a folemn declaration) that when, in virtue of any fucb act, the money was paid to the go~ vernment, the debtor was wholly difeharged, and the government, if it thought proper, not to proceed to confifcation after-wards, became itfelf liable. ■ '

The cafe cited from the Law.of ■ Evidence, I think r -;ri authority fubftantially in point, to fhew the.complete difeb '.rge of the debtor.

tc In debt upon a leafe, the Defendant pleaded payment, and “ in evidence ihewed, he paid it to fequeftrators of the coro- “ monwealth, the Plaintiff being, a delinquent; and it was “ ruled this .was good payment to prove the iffue, which was a “ payment fo the Plaintiff himfeif.” Clayton, T29. Anonymous Laiu of Evidence, (Edit ofi^f) p. 196. c. f c. 11.

This erffe is certainly very ftronp;, for it was not ."deemed nfcceflary to plead it in bar, but it was admitted in evidence, upon a plea that he paid the .money to' the Plaintiff himfeif.; It dees not appear whether this action was tried under the commonwealth, or after the reftoration,. If under the former, it is more parallel to the prefent action. If if-was tried after-the reiteration, it is a ftill ftronger cafe, for it ihewed that 'courts of juftice.thought themfelves bound to protedt individuals, who a ¿ted under laws cfa government they deemed an ufur-pation, and on all occafions treated with contempt. Befides án objeition, which I iliall notice preferitly, I can imagine but one real difference'between that cafe and the. one before us; and that is, that in England the payment Was compelled, here ' it was voluntary. I once thought that circutnftance of weight, but on reflection, 1 confider the public faith equally pledged in one cafe as in the other; that the authority exercifed in both is the fame, and that it not only would be unjuft in itfelf, but of dangerous example, to tell men that they fhould be protected under a compulfory obedience to government, but not upon a chearful fubmiftion to it.

■ 4. My observations as to the paper money, which the neceflities of this country unfortunately conftrained u's to ufefo long, had no other tendency than to ihew the circumftances of the fact as they really exifted. As' a judge, I conceive rnyfelf bound to fay, that that makes.nó d:fterence as to the right. The com-petenc'y of fuch ails at tnat time was unqueftionable.' Their juftice depended on the degree of neceffity which gave rife to them. A payment in pager money, then a legal tender, I muft confider as complete and effectual a payment, at that time, as payment in gold or filvfcr. Such was the law of the country ! A law which fe-verc neccflity dictated ! and by which, in the courfe of the war, in which many facrifices became unavoidable, many thoufand American citizens, as well as many Briiijh merchants, fuffered. It is the lot of our nature to experience many evils for which we can find no remedy, and therefore- nothing can be more fallacious than in any thing of a general nature, to expeít perfcdt exaétnefs.

For thefe reafons, I am clearly of opinion, that under the aét of fequeftration, and the payment and difeharge, the dif-charge will be a complete bar in the prefent cafe, unlefs there be fomething in the Treaty of Peace to revive the right of the creditor againft the defendant, fo' as to difable the latter from availing himfelf of the payment into the treafury, in bar to the prefent action»

The operation of that Treaty comes, therefore, now to be confidered. None can reverence the obligation of treaties more than I do. The peace of mankind, the honour of the human race, the welfare, perhaps the being of future generations, muft in no inconsiderable d§gree depend on the facred obfervance of national convar,tions._ if ever any people on account of the importante of a treaty, were under additional obligations to obferve it, the people of the United States furely are to ob-ft-rve the Treaty in queftion. It gave peace to our country, after a war attended with many calamities, and, in fome of its periods, prefeuting a moil melancholy profpcil. It infured, fo far as peace could infure them, the freeft forms of government, and the greateft fhare of individual liberty, of which, perhaps, the world had feen any example. It prefente'd boundlefs views of future happinefs and greatnefs, which'ajmoft overpower the imagination, and which, I truft, will not be altogether ««realized: The means are in our power; wifdom and virtue arc alone required to avail ourfelves of them. Such was the peace which was procured by the Treaty now in queftion—a treaty which, when it ihali be fully executed in ail its parts, on both Tides, future generations will look up .to with gratitude and admiration, and with no fmall degree-of fervour "towards thofc who had an active fit arc in procuring it.

In proceeding:» examine the treaty with thefe fentimenis, it may well be imagined I do it with a reverential and facred awe, left by any miiconftruction of mine, I ihould weaken ..ny one of its proviiions.

The queftion now is, whether, under this treaty, the payment into'the Treafury is aliar to fo much of the Plaintiff’s claim, as comprehends money to that amount ?

I ihali examine this queftion under two divifions :

ift. Whether it would have been a bar, as the law exifted, after, the ratification'of the treaty, and previous, to the paffing of the prefent Conftitution of the United States, even if the words of the treaty mi:ft be conftrued to comprehend fuch a cafe.

ad. Whether, under that -Conftitution, it can now be conii-dered as a bar.

My opinion, Iconfefs, as to the firft queftion, is, that if the treaty had plainly comprehended inch cafes, the Plaintiff could riot have recovered in a Court of Juft ice in this State, as the law flood, previous to the ratification of the prefent Cor.ftitu-tiori of the United States.

I fteijjis I ought to do, great diffidence, when lam under the neceffity,'in the'execution of my duty as a Judge, of differing from the opinions of thofe entitled from; fuperior talents, and high authority, to my utmoft refpcct. I am compelled to do fo in the prefent inftance, but I ihali, at the fame time, affign myrea-fons for my opinion, and if, in the future courfe of this great caufeyl can be convinced that in this, or in any other, inftance, I have committed an error, I íhall moft chearfully acknowledge it. _

The opinion I have long entertained, and ÍH11 do entertain,. in regard to the operation of the fourth article is, that the ftipu-lation in favour of creditors, fo as to enable them to bring fuits, and recover the full value of their debts, could not at that time be carried into effect in any other manner, than by a repeal of theftatutes of the different States, conftituting the' impediments to their recovery, and the paffing of fuch other a£fs as might be neceffary to give the recovery entire efficacy, in execution of the treaty.

I confider a treaty, (fpeaking generally, independent of the particular proviiions on the fubjeft, in our prefent Conftitution, the effefl of which I iliall afterwards obferve upon) as a folsmn promife by the whole nation, that fuch and fuch things ihali be done, or that fuch and fuch rights fhall be enjoyed.

I think the diftin&ion .taken by the. Plaintiff’s counfel as to ftipulations in the treaty, executed or executory, will'enable me to illuftiate my meaning, by corifidering various ftipulations in the treaty in queftion.

ift. I will confider what may be deemed executed articles.

in this clafs I would place,—the acknowledgement of independence in the firft article ;—the permiffion to fiih on the Banks in the third;—the acknowledgement of the right to navigate the Mifftffippi in the eighth.

Tiielel call executed, becaufe, from the nature of them, they require no further a£t to be. done,

' ¿J. The executory (fo far as they concern our part in the execution) i would pláce in three clafies.

• Thofe which concern either, ift, the Legiflative Authority. —2¡1, The Executive;—3d, The Judicial.

The fourth article in queftion, I confider to be a provifion, the purpofe of which could only be effeefted by the Legiflative authority; becaufe when a nation promifes to do a thing, it is to be underftood, that this promife is to be carried into execution, in- the manner which the Conftitution of that nation preferibes.

When, therefore, a treaty ilipuiates for any thing of a le-giflative nature, the manner of giving effedi: to this ftipulation is by that power which poffeffes the Legiflative authority, and which confequently is autborized'to preferibe laws to the people ibr their obedience, palling fuch laws as the public obligation requires. Laws are always feen, and through that medium people know what they have to do. Treaties are 'not always feen. Some articles (being what are called fecret articles) ' the public never fee. The prefent Conftitution of the United States., affords the firft inftance of any government, which, by faying, treaties ihould be the fupreme law of the land, made it, indifpenfablethat they ihouid be publifhed for the information of all. At the fame time I admit, that a treaty, when executed purfuant to full power, is valid and obligator)-, in point of moral obligation, on all, as well on the Legiflative, Executive, and Judicial "Departments, (fofar as the authc (ity of either extends, which in regard to the laft, nnift, in this refpeff, be very limited) as on every individual of the nation, xinconnedted officially with .either ; becaufe it is a promife in efftift by the whole nation to another nation, and if not in fact couipiird with, unlefs there be valid reafons for non-compli-anee, the public faith is violated.

I have mentioned this great article which concerns the Legifi-lative department: Let me now, by wayof further illuftration, conftde'r one which concerns the Executive.

it is ftipulated in one part of this treaty, “ That all prifón- “ ers on both Tides ihall be fet at liberty.” I very much doubt, whether, the Commander in Chief, ^without orders from Cori-* grefs (then poffeffing the fupréme executive authority of the Union)_ could have been juftified in releafing fuch prifoners as he had then in cuftody, after the ratification. Certainly no inferior officer, in whole adtual care they were, could, without an order directly or indirectly fnpm the Commander in Chief: And yet, I can fee no reafon, if a treaty is to be confidered as. operating dejadlo, by fuperior authority, notwithftanding any impediment arifing from laws then in being, why the ri-gour of the treaty, which in that inftanc.e is faid to be uncon-troulable, ihould not be fo in every other. If Legijlative au-thoriiy is fuperfeded, why not Executive ? Surely the former is not lefs facred than the latter.

In like manner as to the judicial. It is ftipulated in the 6th article, “ That there íhall be no future confifcations made, nor “ any profecutions commenced agí hft any perfon or perfons, “ for, or by reafon of any parr, which he or they may have taken “ in the prefent war: and that no perfon (hall, on that account, “ fufFer any future lofs ,or damage, either in his perfon, liberty, ‘‘ or property; and that thofe' who may be in confinement on « fuch charges, at the time of the ratification of the treaty in “ America, fliall be immediately fet at liberty,.and theprofecu- “ tions fo commenced, be difcontirtued.” I. apprehend this article, fo far as it refpeded the releafe of prifoners confined, could only be executed by an order from the Judges of the Court, having judicial authority, in the cafes in q edition, in confe-quence either of an adtual alteration in the law, by the Legiflar ture, in conformity to the treaty, (where that was neceffary); or, of a particular pardon by the Executive; and that if a Jail- or, merely becaufe the treaty was ratified, and he found this ár-tide in it, had fet all fuch prifoners at liberty, he would' have been guilty of an efc-ape.

This reafdning, in my opinion, derives confiderable weight from the practice in Great Britain.

The King of Great Britain certainly reprefents the fove-reignty of'the whole nation, as to foreign negociations, as completely as the Congrefs of the United States ever reprefented ' the fovere.ignty,of the Union, in that particular. His power, as to declaring war and making peace, is as unlimited as the refpeélive authorities for thofe pur.pofes in ÚijUnited States.— The whole nation of Great Britain fpeaks as effed.üally', and as completely through him, as all the people of the United States a dedaration of war, or through the Prefident and Senate as to making peace j .and of courfe, as they ever did through Congrefs, under the old-articles of confederation, the'power certainly not being leflened. The law of nations equally applies to-his treaties on behalf of Great Britain,, as it can-apply to any treaty made on behalf of. the United States. Yet, I believe it is an' invariable practice in that country, when the King makes any ftipulation of a le-' giflative nature, that it is carried into effeét by an a£fc of Parliament. The Parliament is confldered as bound, upon a principle of moral obligation, to preferve the public faith, pledged, by the treaty, by palling fuch laws as its obligation requires j but uniil fuch laws are palled, the fyftem of law, entitled to actual obedience, remains de faSto, as before. I doubt not, if my time had admitted of a full feareh, and I could have had accefs to the proper books for information, that 1-could find many in-ftances of this. I will, however, mention one, which I have been able to procure here. It is a tranfadtion of this nature, fo late as the commercial treaty between Great Britain and France, in 1.786. The information I derive is from the Annual Regifters of 1786 and 1787, which I fuppofe, as to this point, are corred!.

One article of the treaty was in thefe words:

** The wines of France, imported diredtly from France to “ Great Britain, ihall, in no cafe, pay "any higher duties than thqfe which the wines of Portugal now pay.”

This treaty was figned at Verfailles, the 26th .of September, 1786.

On the 24th of January, 1787, the King met his Parliament,' and amo ig other things, informed the two houfes, That he “ had concluded a treaty of commerce with the French King, “ and had ordered a copy of it to be laid before, them. He re- “ commended, as the firft objeffc of their deliberations, the ne- “ cejfary meafures for carrying it into effeSi-, and exprefied his truft, that they would find the-provilions,' contained in it, to “ be calculated for the encouragement of induftry, and the ex- “ tenfion’of lawful commerce in bojh countries ⅛ and by pro- “ moting a beneficial inter’courfe between their refpedtive inha-u bitants, likely to give additional permanency to the bleflings “ of peace.”

On the 15th of February., the Houfe of Commons, being in a committee of the whole houfe, Mr. Pitt, the principal Minif- . ter of the Crown, moved the following refolutiqn:

« That the wines of France be imported into this country ‘‘.upon as-low.duties, as the prefent duties paid on the importa- “ tiou of Portugal wines.”

'Irhave not had time to examine them all, but, I doubt not, it will be .found, on infpe&ion, that the're was not a Angle p-rovi- -. fidn in the treaty, inoonfifteni with former parliamentary re'gu-lations,' but Parliament acted upon it by a new law, calculated to give it effect.

' The following quotation, (which is a literal one) I think, is very much to the purpofe:

“ On the Monday following, the report of the. committee, “ upon- the commercial treaty, was brought up, and, on the “ ufua-1 motion beings made, that the houfe do agree to the “ fame, notice was taken of the o-miffion of the mention of Ire- “ Land, both in the treaty and the Tariff-; and, i.t was allied, “ whether or no fhe was underftood to be included in it Í Tq “ this queftion Mr, Pitt replied, That Ireland .was undoubtedly “ entitled to all the benefits of the treaty; but it was entirely at her own option, whether fhe would choofe to avail herfclf of thofs advantages; Jar it was only to be done by her pajjing Ujuch laws as Jhould put the Tariff on the Jame Jooting in that “• country as' it was jlipulated jhould be done in this. Had the adoption of the treaty by Ireland, been a ftipulation neceflary “ to be performed before it' could b,e finally concluded on in “ this country, then this country would have been deprived of “ all the benefits refulting from it in the event of Ireland’s refufal.” _ < '

_ < Now it is obfer-v-abls, that in fpeaking of this Tariff, in the treaty, the King of Great Britain does not promife, that the Parliament jhallpajs laws to fuel) an ejjedi-, but the language is thus:

“ The two high contrail krg parties have thought propen to fettle the duties on certain goods and merchandifes, in order “ to fix invariably, the footing on which the trade therein fliall “ be eftabli&ed between the two nations. In confequence of “ which, they have agreed upon the following Tariff, &c.” viz.

In another part, the King of Great Britain fays, “ His Britannic Majefty referves the right of countervailing 'by additional duties on the undermentioned merchandifes, the . “ internal duties a£lually impofed upon the manufaflures, or “ the import duties which are charged on the raw materials j “ namely, on all linens or cottons, ftained or painted, on beer, ⅞ glafs-ware, plate-glafs, and iron.”

Here is no mention of the Parliament, and yet, no man living will (ay that a bare proclamation of the King, upon the ground of the treaty,-would bean authority for the levying of any duties whatever; but it muji be done in the conjtitutional mode, by • a¿fc .of parliament, which affords an additional proof, that where any thing of a legiflative nature is- in contemplation, it is con-ftantly implied and underftood, (without exprefs words) that it can alone he effeifted by the medium of the legiflative authority»

That this practice I have noticed is not an occáfionaÍ one, but has' been- conftantly obferved, I think is highly probable from_ this circumftahce; that if treaties were considered in that country as ipfo faSto repealing all laws inconfiilent with them, and impofing new ones, they ought to be.bound up with the ftatutes at.large, (which they never have been) otherwife the publication would be at leaft incomplete, if not deceitful-.

Thefe examples from Great Britain ! confiderof very high authority, as they are taken from a kingdom equally bound by the law of nations as we are; pofieffing a mixed form of -government as we do; and, fo far as common principles of le-giilation are concerned, being the very country from which we derive the rudiments of our legal ideas. ...

Rut i muft admit that there is.alfo a very high authority, and to which we naturally fhould be more partial, again® this conftrudtiori. It is the authority of the Congrefs of the United. States in the ye.ar I/Sy. It is an authority derived from an unanimous opinion of that truly refpectable body, conveyed in a circular letter from Congrefs to'the different States on-this very fubjedh I-bow with proper deference to that great authority: But I ihotfld be unworthy of the high ftatiorrl held, if I did not fpcak my real fentiments as a judge, uninfluenced by any authority whatfoever. It is certain, that in this particular, Congrefs were not exercífing a judicial power; and, therefore, the opinion is not conclufive on anycourt of juftice. I feel, however fome confolatiori in differing from an Opinion for which fo much refpedt-muft, and ought to'be entertained, by refledling that though ■ this was the unanimous Opinion-pf Congrefs, it was not the - unanimous opinion of the people of the United States. So far from it, that I believe no fuit was ever maintained in any court in the United States, merely on the footing of the treaty when an adt of the ligiea-ture flood in the way. It was to remove the obftacle arifing from fuch an opinion, that Congrefs recommended the repeal of all adts inconiiilent with the .due execution of the treaty. And I muft with due fubmiflion fay, that in my opinion without fuch a repeal, no Britijh creditor could have maintained a fuit in virtue of the treaty, where any legiilative impediment exifted, until the prefent conftitution of the United States was formed. .

2-d. The article in the conftitution concerning treaties I have always confidercd, and do now confider, was in confequence of the conflidt of. opinions I have mentioned on the fubjedt of the treaty in queftion. It was found- in this inftance, as in many others, that when thirteen different legiflatures were neceflary to -adt in Unifon on many occafions, it was in vain to expedt that they would always agree to adt ás Congrefs might" think it their duty to require. Requisitions formerly were made binding in point of moral obligation, (fo far as the amount of money, was concerned, of which Congrefs was the conftitutional judge,), but'the right 'and the power being fepa-rated, it was found often impracticable to make-them aCt in-■conjunction. To obviate this difficulty, which-every one knows had been the means of greatly diftrefilng the union, and injuring its public credit, a pfiwer was given lío the Reprefe.n-tatives.of the whole union to raife taxes by their own authority for the good of the whole. Similar .embarrafiments had been found about the treaty. This was binding in moral obligation, but could not be conftitutionally carried into effeCt (at leaft in the opinion of many,) fofar as afts oflegiflation then in being conftituted. an impediment, but by a repeal.' The extreme in-con veniencies felt from fuch a fyftem dictated the remedy which the conftitution has. new provided, “ that all treaties made “ or which ill all be made under the authority of the United -States', fhall be the fttpreme law of the land j and that the “ judges in every State ihali be bound thereby, any thing in “ the conftitution or laws of any State to-the contrary not-ci withftanding.” Under this Conftitution therefore, fo far as a treaty conftitutionally is binding, upon principles of moral obligation, it is alfo by the vigour of its own authority to be executed in faCt. It would not otherwife be the fupreme law-in the new fenfe provided for, and it was fo before in a moral fonje.

The provifion extends , to fubfifting as well as to future treaties. ' I confider, therefore, that when thi? conftitution was ratified, the cafe as to the treaty in queftion ftood upon the fame footing, as if every aCt conftituting an impediment to a creditor’s recovery had been expresfly repealed, and any further aCt pafled, which the public obligation had before required, if a repeal alone would not have been fufficient.

Before I go to the confideration of the words of the treaty itfelf, I think it material to fay a few words as to the operation which an aCtual repeal would have had.

I believe no one will doubt, that every thing done'under the ' ail while in exijlence, fo far as private rights at leaft were concerned, would have been uriaffeCted by the repeal. If a fta-tute requires a will of lands to be executed in the prefence of ■two witnefles ; and. a will is a&ually executed in that manner, and the 'ftatute is afterwards repealed* and- three witnefles are ' made neceflary, the will executed in the prefence of two others, when the former ftatute was in being, would be undoubtedly good ⅛ and if I am not rniftaken, a 'will made according to a law in being has been held gpod, even though the devifor died after, an alteration' of it. Of this, however, I am not fure; but; •the general pofitton, I imagine,, will not be queftioned,

Let us now fee the words of the treaty.

They are thefe :

“ It is agreed, that creditors on either fide (hall meet with “ no lawful impediment, to the recovery of the full value in ‘c fieriing money, of all bona fide debts heretofore contracted.”

The meaning of this provifion may perhaps be better con-fidered by an analyfation of its parts, fo far as they concern ' the queftion before us.

1. Creditors—There can be no creditor without two correlatives, a debtor and a debt.

Prima facie, therefore, if a debtor has been difcharged, he is not the perfon whom any other perfon can fue as a creditor. This probably may be fairly applied to the prefent Defendant, who as a debtor was difcharged by legal authority.

With regard to the debt, that in the prefent inftance was not extinguifhed even bv the a eft of the State, becaufe the right of the creditor to the money was not taken away.

The debt, therefore, remains but not from the fame debtor. The ftate may be confideredas fubftituting itfelfin fome mea-fure in the place of the debtor. -The full effedfc of that fubfti-tution, I am not now to confider, nor would it be proper for-me at prefent to give an opinion upon it.' The queftion is not, whether the creditor is entitled to his money, or in what manner, but whether he is entitled to recover it againft the prefent Defendant.

2. 'No lawful impediment.

Thefe words muft be conftrued as relative to the-former, for the whole claufe muft be taken together, Therefore, where there are a creditor and a debtor, there is to be no lawful impediment to the former recovering againft the latter.

If the prefent Defendant be not a debtor to the Plaintiff, how can the treaty operate as againft him ?

The words “ lawful impediment,” may admit of two fenfes,

One—“ Any lawful impediment wh ufoever arifing from *c any adl done to the prejudice of a creditor’s right during the “ war.” 1 add that reftridlion “ during the war,” becaufe the rules of conftrudtion as to treaties, muft narrow the words as to the objeft, the war., the affairs of which the Treaty of Peace was intended to operate upon.

Or,any impediment arifing from .any law then in being, “ or thereafter to be palled, to the prejudice of a creditor’s right.”

The latter, I think, is not an unnatural conftruction, and would give the words great operation, and I think is to. be preferred to the former, for the following reafons :

1. This would ftipulate for what each Legiflature of the Union would.rightfully and hpntftly do, relinquifh public, claims' to aelts exijling before the war, and which ptherwifé might have flood upon a precarious footing; for though peace alone would do away a common law difability to fue, yet 1 apprehend it would not ipfo failo remove a difability exprefsly created by ftatute, much lefs extinguiib any public right acquired under anyaél of confifcation.

• 2. Though Congrefs poffibly might, as the price of peace, have been autborifed to give up, even rights fully acquired by private perfons during the war, more efpecially if derived from the laws of war only againit ihe enemy, and in that cafe the individual might have been-.entitled to compenfation from the public, for whole interefts his own rights were facrificed; yet, nothing b'ut the úioft rigorous neceihty could juftify fuch a facrifice; fuch a f--.crifi.ee is not to be prefumed even to have been intended under the operation of general words, not making fuch a conflruchon unavoidable. For, it is reafonable to infer, that in fuch a cafe fpecial words would have been ufecj to obviate the lead colourable doubt. .

• Thus (for example) if it was ftipulated in a treaty of peace between two European powers, “ that all ihips taken during the v/dr íhould b? reftored,” I imagine this would - not be conftrued to include fliips taken by privateers, and legally condemned during the war, uidefs it had, in facS, happened ’ that no other ihips had been taken, and then i fuppofe they would be under flood as comprehended, and their own nation muilhave indemnified them'.

3..If, according to the practice in Great Britain, in conformity to the law of nations, and upon the principles of a mixed govenment, in cafe any impediments had then exijled,, by a£ts of Parliament in Great Britain, to the recovery of American debts*, fuch impediments could only have been removed by d repeal, we may prtfume the Britijh negociator had reafon to conclude, that the lawful impediments in-this country could onty be removed in the fame manner; and if fo, may we not fair . ly fay, that the impediments ⅛ view could be no other than fuch as ,the Legiflatures in the refpeitive countries could do away by a repeal, or might by fubfequent laws enact ? If they wanted a further act of legiilation, grounded not merely on ordinary legiflative authority, but upon power to deftroy private. rights acquired under legiflative faith, long fince pledged and relied on, very fpecial words were proper to effect that object, and neither ¡none country nor the other could it have been effected with the leaf! colour ofjuflice, but by providing at the fame time the fulleft means of indemnification.

4. This conítrutí’icm derives great weight from the recom-mendatory letter of Congrefs i before mentioned, for I will venture to fey, had -the »¿i they recommended been paffe ’ in the State, in the very words they recommended, they would not have had e.fficacy enough to deftroy thofe payments as a bar. And yet, if Congrefs'thought fuch a cafe Ought to have b’een comprehended, I prefume they would have recommended a fpecial provifion, clearly comprehending fuch cafes, and accompanied with a full indemnity. '

I laid the words of the treaty would have ■ gtcat operation, without giving them the very rigorous one contended-'for. And that will more fully appear when’we take up the remaining words, viz.

3. “ To the recovery of the full value in fterling money pi “ all- bona fide debts heretofore contracted.

The operation (exclufive of thefe payments) would there* fore be ⅛⅛:

ift. All creditors whofe debts had not been confifcated, or where the confifcations were not complete, and no .payments had been made, would have aright of recoverihg their debts.

ad. Perhaps all creditors, whether their debts were confif-cated or not, or whether confifcations were completé or not,excepting thofe only from whom the government had received the money, would be entitled to recover, becaufie undoubtedly the refpedlive Leglfiatures were competent to refiore all thefe.

3d. Another object of no fmall importance, was to iecure the payment of all thefe debts in Jlerling money fio that the creditors might not fuffer by paper currency, either then in exiftence, or that might be thereafter emitted.

When thefe general words, therefore, can comprehend fo many cafes, all reafonable objects .of the article, I cannot think I am' compelled as a Judge, and therefore I ought not to do fo, to fay that the general words of this article, jhall extin-guijh private as well as public rights.

I hold public faith fo facred, when once pledged either to citizens or to foreigners, that a violation of that faith is never to be inferred as even in contemplation, but when it ⅛ impcffi-ble to give any other reafonable conftruction to a public act. I do not clearly fee that it was intended in the prefent inftance. I cannot therefore'bring myfelf to fay, that the prefent Defendant having once lawfully paid the money, Jhall pay it over again. If the.matter be only doubtful, I think the doubt ihould incline irifavour of an innocent individual, and not- againft him. .1 ihould .hope that the prefent Plaintiff will ftill receive his money, as his right to the money certainly has not been divefted, but i think for all. the reafons I have given, he is not entitled to recover it from the prefent Defendant.

My opinion, therefore, on the whole of' this cafe- is, that judgment ought to be given for the Defendant upon the fecond pl.ea ; upon the third, fourth and fifth for the Plaintiff.

Wilson, JuJiice.

I íhall be concife in delivering my opinion, as it depends on a few plain principles.

If Virginia had a power to pafs the law of OSiober 1777, fhe muft'be equally empowered to pafs afimilar law in any future'war ; for, the powers of Congrefs were, in faft, abridged by the articles of confederation ; and in relation to'the pre-fent Conftitution, fhe ftill retains her fovereigr.ty and independence as a State, except in the inftance.s of exprefs delegation to the Federal Government.

There are two points involved in thedifcúlHon of this power of confifcation : The firft arifing from the rule prefcrihed by the law of nations ; and the fecond arifing from the conftriic- , tion of the treaty of peace.

When the United States declared their independence, they were bound to receive the law of nations, in its modern ftate of purity and refinement. Bv every nation, whatever is its form of government, the confifcation of debts has long been confideréd difreputableand, we know, that not a'ftpgle, confifcation of that kind ftained the code of any of the European powers, -who were engaged in the war, which our revolution produced. Nor did any aiithority for the confifcation of debts proceed from Congrefs (that body, which clearly pofleiT-•ed the right of confifcation, as ah incident of the powers of. war and peace)'and, therefore, in no .inftance can-the aft of 'confifcation be. considered as an aft of. the nation.

But even if Virginia had the power to confifcate, the treaty ■ annuls the confifcation. The fourth article is well expfefled to . meet the .very cafe : it is not confined to debts exifting at the time of making the treaty; but is extended to debts heretofore contrasted. It is impoffible by any glofiary, .or argument, to make the words more perfpieuous, more con'clu'five, than by a bare recital. Independent, therefore, of the Conftitution of the United States, (which authoritatively inculcátes the obligation of contrafts) the treaty is fufficient to remove every impediment founded on the law. of Virginia. The State made ' the'lawthe State was a party to the making of the treaty : a law does nothing more than exprefs the will of a' nation j and a treaty, does the fame.

Under this general view of the fubjeft, I think the judg-ment of the CircuitCourt ought to be reverfed.

Cushing, JuJiice.

My ftate of this cafe will, agreeably to my view of it, be ihort, I íhall not queftion the right of a State to confifcate debts. Here is an aft of the. Aflembly of Virginia, pafled in 1777, refpecting debts j which contemplating to prevent the enemy, deriving ftrength by the receipt of them during the war, provides, that if any Britijh debtor will pay his debt into the Loan Office, obtain a certificate and receipt as directed, hs íhall be difeharged from fo much of the debt. But an intent is expreffed in the. act not to confifcate, unlefs Great Britain iliould fet the example. This act, it is faid, works a difeharge and a bar to.the payer. If fuch payment is to be confidered as a difeharge, or a bar, fo long as the act had force, the queftion occurs ;—.Was there a power, by • the treaty, fuppofing it contained proper words, entirely to re-movp-this law, -and this bar, out of the creditor’s way ? .

This power feems not to have been contended againft, by the Defendant’s council: And, indeed, it cannot be denied ; the treaty having been fanctioned, in all its parts, by the Conftitution of the Ünited States, as the fupreme law of the land!

Then arifes the great queftion, upon the import of the fourth article of the treaty: And to me, the plain and obvious meaning of it, goes to nullify, ai initio, all laws, or the impediments .of any law, as far as' they might havé been defigned to impair, " or impede, the creditor’s right, or remedy, againft his original debtor. . “ Creditors on either fide Jhall meet with no lawful im-tc pediment to the recovery of the full value in fierlirtg moneys of w all bona fide'debts heretofore contra tied”

■The articlefpeaking of .creditors, and bona fide debts heretofore-contracted, plainly contemplates debts, as originally contracted, and creditors and original debtors; removing otit of the way all legal impediments ; fo' that a recovery might be had, as if nó fuch laws had particularly interpofed. The words—“ recovery.of the full value in fterling money,” if •they have-force, or meaning, muft annihilate all tender laws, making any thing a tender, but fterling money; and.the other . words, or at 1'eaft the whole taken together, muft, in like man-tier, remove all other-impediments of law, aimed at the recovery of thofe debts. -

What has fome force to confirm this conftrudtion,. is the fenfe of-all Europe, that fuch debts could not be touched by •States, without a breach of public faith: And^for that, and 'other reafons, no doubt, this provifion was infifted' upon, in ’full latitude,'by the Britijh negotiators. If the fenfe of the article be, as ftated, it obviates, at once, all the ingenious, - metaphyfical,' reafoning and refinement- upon the words, debt, difeharge, éxtinguijhnient, and affords an anfwer to the decifion ■ made in the time of the'interregnum!—'that payment to fequef-.■tors, was payment to the'creditor. ' ' 1 '

A State may make what rules it pleafes; and thofe rules muft neceff.riiy have place within itfelf. •

But here is a treaty, the fupreme law, which overrules all’ .State laws upon thefubjexfx, to all intents and'purpofes; and that makes tne. difference.- . Diverfe objedHons are made to this ■ conftruction-That it is an odious one, abd-as fuch;. ought to ' be avoided : That treaties regard the exiíiing Alte of things : That it would- carry an imputation -upon public .faith: That it is founded-on the power of eminent domain, which ought not to be exercifed, but upon’the moll: urgent occalions: That the-negociators'themfelv’cs did not think they had power to repeal laws of confifcation; becaufc they, by the 5th article, only agreed, .that Congrefsfiiould recommend a.repeal to the States.

As to. the rule refpeftingr odious conftruftjons • that’ takes place where the meaning is'doubtful, not where it is clear, as I think it is in-this cafe. But it can hgrdly be confidered as an odious thing, to inforce the payment of. anh’oneft debt, accord- ■ ing to the true intent and meaning oh the parties contracting; ■ .efpecially if, as in this cafe, the State having, received ibcur-o-ney, is bound in juftice and honor, io.itfd..Sr;-n.ify the .debtor, for what it in fact received. ’ In whatever other lights this a¿p Of AAembly may be-’fevieweJ, I conftder it in cqe, as ccnwining. a Arong implied-engagement, on the-part of..the- Statev('to.-i-n>'. demnify every one who ihould pay money under ic/purAai-it'to the invitation it held out. ... , ' ' .

Having never confifcated the dabt, the Siate.raúíly in"the nature and reafon of things, confider itfclfas ar.fwc&5b1-e'tOj-the' value. And this feems to-be the full fenfe of the vjegiilators . upon this Abject, in a fubfcqutnt aft of aAembiy but the treaty holds the original debtor anljverable Co his.creditor, .as Í underirand. tiie. matter. The State, therefore, ■ muft- be r^fpon-’ lible to the debtor.

Thefe confiderations will, incAeft, exclude, the idea, of the. power .of eminent domain; and if they did -not,- yet ⅛there was AiBcient authority to exetcile it, and the greattA occafion that perhaps could ever happen,'. The' fame coniideratidnswi.il alfo takeaway all ground of imputation upon public faith. ; ..

Again, the' treaty -regarded^.the' .exifting. fiate -of things, by removing the laws then cxifting, which intended 10 defeat the creditor of his ufual remedy at law.

As to the obferva'tions 'Upon the..recommendaioiT -próvifion of-the 5th article; I do not fee.that.wc can colleft the private opinion of the negcciators, refpeftrng their powers, -by 'whát they .did -not do: and if \ys could, this, court, is. not bound .by . their opinion, unlefs the reafons‘on which it was founded, being .known, were convincing. It would be hard upon them, to fuppofe they gave up all, that they might thmjc they Arjftly had a right to give up. W e may allow force what to ikili, policy and fidelity.

■ With refpeft to confutations of real and-perfonal dilates, which had been compleated, the eftates fold, and, perhaps, paiTcd through the hands of a number cfpurcbafors, ar.d improvements made Upon real eftates, by the then poíüítbrs; they knew, that to give them up abiblutely, rn.nt create much confufion in this country. Avoiding that;'(whether from an apprehenfion of want of power does not appear from the inftrument) they were lead only to agree, that Congrefs- ihould recommend a reftitution, or composition.

The 4th article, which is particularly and folely employed about debts,, makes provifion, according to the doCtrine then held fa'cred by all the fovereigns of Europe. ■

Although our negociators did not’gain an exemption for individuals, from bona fide debts, contracted in time of peace, yet •they gained much for this country: as- rights' of fiihery, large boundaries, a fettled peace, .and abfolute independence, with their concomitant and confequent advantages: All which, it might not have been prudent for them to rifque, by obftinately infilling on fuch exemption, either in whole or in part, contrary to the humane apd meliorated policy of the civilized world, in this particular.

The 5th article, it is conceived, can not affeft or alter the conltru&ion of the 4th article. For, firit, it is againft reafon, that a (pedal provifion madé refpedting debts by name, ihould' be taken away immediately after, in the next article, by general words, or words of'implication, which words too, have, other-wife, ample matter-to operate upon. ad. No implication'.from the 5th article,.- can touch the prefent cafe, becaufe that fpeaks only of aCtqái confifcations, and here was no confifcation. If we believe the Virginia legillators, they fay, “ We do not con- “ fifcate—we will not confifcate debts, unlefs Great Britain “•lets the example^1 which it is not pretended (he-ever did.

■The provifion, that-,'14 Creditors jhall meet - with no lawful “ impediment,” &c. is as abfolute, unconditional, and-peremptory, as words can well exprefs, and made not to depend on the will and pleafure, or the optional condu£l of any body of men whatever. -

To eiFecl the objeCl intended, there is no want of proper and ftrong language; there is no want of power, the treaty being fan&ioned as the fupreme law, by the conllitution of the United States-, which nobqdy pretends to deny to be paramount and controlling to all ftate laws, and even Hate conftitutions, wherefoever they interfere or, difagree. , '

The treatyj then,- aS to the point in queftion, is of equal force p'with the-conllitution'itfelf;- and certainly, with, any law- what-fover. And the words, “ Jhall meet with no lawful impedi-mentfi &c. are as ftrong-as the wit of man coul'd deviie, to avoid all effects, of iequeilration, confifcation, or any other ob-ftacle thrown in the way, by any law, particularly pointed againft the recovery of fuch .debts.

I.am, therefore, of'opinion, that the judgment of-the.Circuit Court-ought to b¿ reverfed.'

By the Court. All and fingular the premifes being feen by the court here and fully underftood, and mature deliberation had thereon, becaufe it appears to the court now here, that in the record and procefs aforefaid, and alfo in the rendition of the judgment aforefaid, upon the demurrer to the rejoinder of the Defendants in error, to the replication of the fecónd plea, it is manifeftly erred, it is confidered that the laid judgment .for thofe errors and others in the record and procefs aforefaid, be revoked and annulled, and altogether held for nought, and it is further confidered by the court here, that the Plaintiff in error recover againft the Defendants, two thoufand nine hundred and feventy-iix pounds, eleven ihillings and fix-pence, . good Britijh money, commonly called fterling money, his debt aforefaid, and his cofts by him about his fuit in this behalf expended, and the faid Defendants, in mercy, &c. But this judgment is to be, difeharged by the payment of the fum of 596 dollars, and intereft thereon to be computed after the rate of .five per cent per annum, from the 7th day of July, 1782, till payment, befides the cofts, and by the payment of fuch dama-, ges as ihall be awarded to the Plaintiff in error, on a writ of enquiry to be iffued by the Circuit Court of Virginia,-to af-certain the fum really due to the Plaintiff in error, exclufive-Jy of the faid fum of 596 dollars, which was found to be due to the Plaintiff ih'error, upon the trial in the faid Circuit Court, on the iffue joined upon the Defendant’s plea of payment, at a time when the judgment of the faid Circuit Court on the faid demurrer was unrev'erfed and in full force and vigor, and for the execution of the judgment of the courti the caufe aforefaid is remanded to the faid Circuit Court of Virginia.

Judgment 'reve'rfed. '■ 
      
       See the Ordinance of the ¿orh of November, t 7Sr. See, alfo, the Refs)!utio:i of the 23J of November, 1781, in which Congrefs recoin-» mended to the (bates, to pufs jaws to puniih inflations of the law cf nations.
     
      
       See the oath in the aft of the 24th of September, J7Í9. 1. vol. p. 53. f. 8. S.vift’s edition.
     
      
       7udge TREOELL, (oiie of: the Judges whq decided the origi~-~ iial caufC) in conformity to a pr~Uce which the Judges of this court Pave gene~aliy p~rthed, forbore taking any part in this decition, a~ a Jnd~e, "ponthe prefent wrtt of~rror. havine declared fr~n the uIrft he meant on1y to do Lo, in cafe of an. eq~aI divilioii of.opinion among the other Judges. But he obferved, that he thought there would be no im-~ proptiety in his readina in hi~ place the reàfon~ he had given in fuppor~ qt the judgment in the Circuit Court, a pra!tice exprefsly autho~rized inthe cafe of the Diftritft Judge~ upon an appe~d to the Circuit Court from hit own dècjfion tho' he is a~ the fame jinse &cluded from vot-iag. And Judge Iredril added~ that upon conmulting his brethren on the bei~ch, they.had acquicfced in the propriety of this proceeding. He therefore read thefe reafons in his place, fo far as th~'y reIpe~cd th~ 2~flC iiibje~t of.difcuffion in both courts, ~vhich was only as to the ct-±c~ of payments into the ticafury, every other point in contelt in th~ &~IrcuitConr~ having been relin~uifhed.
      It is, however, thought proper on this occahon, to publith. the \v~1OIC of th&~ argun~ent as delivered in the Cli cult Cotsrt, there beii~g fome Ol)~ fervationson that part of the fulde& that was r~linquiIhed which, it i~ copcei~d, ferve to illuftrate ~he great topk ofcontroverfy that occaf~oned the ~refentwrit of error. - - - - -
      The Judge, ~tterread~ngh~s.Opthidn, ãsdetlvered ~n t~e court ne1ow~ added, thati~th'~td not been chai~ged by any thins ~hich had .oc~ urred, i~I ~~the c~[e ou t1~e prclentwrit ~i etror.
     
      
      
         Rui.! againit Btmkman, 3 Term Rep. 151. By-thrse Judges againft-one, in the (Jouvc of King’s Bench, in KnglunJ,
      
     
      
       Chancellor H'ythc, of VhginU 1, who had given a contrary Opinion in . the High Court of Chancery of Virginia, a.few days before.
     
      
       1 Cimm. 91.
     
      
      
         The book commonly called “ The OM™£aw 6f,Evidence ;.T originally printed in 1735, and afterwards in 1739 and 17-14*
     
      
      
         Upon confulting the BiUioth-ca Isrguni, it appears that Chtytin't Rqs>n: were publilhed in 1651, fo that tjie decilion mud have been under th.e' commonwealth.
     