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v. Turnpike Co. 46 N. Y. 23; Robbins v. Chicago, 4 Wall. 679, 18 L. ed. 432.

LOUIS HANAUER, Piff.,

บ.

ALDEN M. WOODRUFF.

(See S. C. 15 Wall. 439-449.)

sideration for a note.

†1. Bonds issued by authority of the convention of Arkansas, which attempted to carry that state out of the Union, for the purpose of supporting the war levied by the insurrectionary bodies then condo not constitute a valid consideration for a promtrolling that state against the Federal government, issory note, although bonds of that character were about Memphis, in the common and ordinary busiused as a circulating medium in Arkansas and ness transactions of the people.

It is said that, by the act of the general assembly, passed January 21, 1870 (No. 31, p. 75 of the Session Acts), the liability of this corporation is defined in a number of cases. Bonds of insurrectionary state, not good conThe 2 section of the act declares "that the said corporation, its officers or employees, shall not, in any case, be liable for any debts contracted or liabilities incurred by any person or persons who shall have contracted, or who shall contract with it, to construct any portion 659*] *of its road, buildings, or appurtenances, or its rolling stock, or to furnish any materials or labor to be used for such construction, or for its maintenance or operation. Nor shall said company, its officers or employees, be liable for any injury to person or property, or loss of life, which shall be caused by any act or omission of any person or persons so contracting with it, or any of his or their employees or agents."

2. The case of Thorington v. Smith, 8 Wall.

19 L. ed. 361, approved but distinguished from the [No. 178.]

present case.

Submitted Mar. 19, 1873. Decided Apr. 7, 1873.
N a certificate of division of opinion between
States for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
The case is fully stated by the court.
Mr. A. H. Garland, for plaintiff:

ed

or

2 Austin, Jurist, 1015, 1016.

This was doubtless intended as a declaration of the rights of the company convenient to be embodied in its charter, and is in affirmance of the existing law. It contains two general prinThe immorality or illegality complained of ciples: (1) That the corporation shall not be pleaded must exist in the particular conliable for the debts to third parties, of those contract sought to be imposed. When this is estabtracting to construct its road or to furnish ma- lished, then, as the common law has it, the conterials therefor. It would not be upon general tract is void; but, as the civil law more thorprinciples of law. The statement, in fact, con- oughly expresses it, the contract is not clothed fers no exemption. (2) That it shall not be liable with rights of action. for injury to person or property, caused by the acts of such contractors or their servants. In each of these instances the exemption is in the case of contractors, who are themselves the principals, not when they are the agents or servants of the company. In each case there could be no liability at common law had the statute not been passed. We think that, upon general principles of law, the company in this case are responsible for the negligence of Carvin, and that this statute does not alter its position.

That this is the true criterion in judging of a consideration is supported by a weight of authority that is overwhelming.

Barker v. Parker, 23 Ark. 390; Phillips v. Hooker, Law Reg. Phila. Nov. 1867, 40; 8. C. Phil. Eq. (N. C.) 193.

This last case decides almost the identical question here, and the reasoning of the supreme court of North Carolina in that case is unanswerable.

See 2 Sedg. Const. 84, and notes to 91; Ins. Co. v. Cadwell, 3 Wend. 301; Yeates v. Williams, 5 Ark. 684; Holder v. Meggison, 2 Stew. (Ala.) 175; Greenwood v. Curtis, 6 Mass. 358; Witherby v. Mann, 11 Johns. 518; Smith v. Harris, 3 Sneed, Tenn. 554; and see, particularly, Oneida Bk. v. Ontario Bk. 21 N. Y. 496; Sherfy v. Ardenbright, 2 Am. Rep. 690; S. C. 1 Heisk. (Tenn.) 128; 4 Rob. Pr. ch. 87-89, and 547 et seq.; The St. Jago de Cuba, 9 Wheat. 409; Armstrong v. Toler, 11 Wheat. 258; Kennet v. Chambers, 14 How. 38.

Decisions without number in England and this country support this view of the matter.

It would seem that, prior to the passage of the act authorizing the defendants to occupy and possess the wharf, it had been open to the public, free to the passage of all, at their pleasure to come and go. The judge charged, in substance, that this right of passage to the public continued until some notice should be given to those accustomed to use it that their rights had ended. This principle is one of quite general application. A railroad or steamboat company, by the departure and arrival of their conveyances, give an invitation to all who desire to approach their boats or cars to pass over their wharf or platform. One accustomed so to pass cannot be deemed a trespasser in repeating his act after a new station or landing has been adopted and the cars or boats have ceased to 660*] use the old one. To exclude the *pass-113; er's right so as to make him in fault, and to prevent his recovery for an injury sustained by leaving the place in a bad condition, notice must have been given of its changed character, and that the rights of passers are terminated. This principle is so familiar, and exists in so many forms, that it is unnecessary to elaborate it. 2 Add. Torts, 141; Corby v. Hill, 4 C. B. (N. S.) 556.

Upon the whole record we are all of the opinion that the judgment should be affirmed.

Smith v. Bromley, 2 Doug. 697, and notes; Hodgson v. Temple, 5 Taunt. 181; Simpson v. Bloss, 7 Taunt. 246, n. a; Bulmer's Case, 13 Ves. 313; Brisbane v. Lestarjett, 1 Bay (S. C.)

Merrill v. Melchior, 30 Miss. 516; 1 Bay 343; 27 Miss. 13; 1 Pars. Cont. 365, 580; 2 Pars. Cont. 252 et seq.; Sedg. Const. 396, 400; Brown v. Tarkington, 3 Wall. 377, 18 L. ed. 255; Benj. Sales, 78, 417; McBlair v. Gibbes, 17 How. 235, 15 L. ed. 134; Miller v. Gould, 38 Ga. 465; Blalock v. Phillips, 38 Ga. 216; Martin v. Hortin, 1 Bush (Ky.) 629-this last case is very expressive; Taylor v. Turley, 33 Md.

500.

Head notes by Mr. Justice FIELD.

The principle is not peculiar to this country | transaction between the parties, that is, at the and England at all.

1 Domat, p. 513, par. 1266, 1267; 1 Poth. Obl. 126, 127; 2 Poth. Obl. 1, 16.

Woodruff got the bonds and used them legitimately, and they were worth to him not much less than their face. He did not give them to the was, nor use them for the war, nor did he intend to do so. To him they were as money. He should not be heard to say they were not money.

Pickard v. Bankes, 13 East, 30; Mason v. Waite, 17 Mass. 563.

Illegal though they may have been in the issuing, yet a party using them to his benefit cannot profit by the loss of another in this way, nor more especially will he be permitted to do so in alleging his own shortcoming towards the government.

2 Poth. 271, 334; Walton v. Shelley, 1 T. R. 296; Jordaine v. Lashbrooke, 7 T. R. 601; Lyman v. Townsend, 11 Am. Law Reg. (N. S.) 547.

He used this money for his own support. It was of great value to him. The law will not allow him now to repudiate it. But the question has now been repeatedly settled as to the money called Confederate money in the states. Martin v. Horton, 1 Bush, 629; Phillips v. Hooker, Phil. Eq. (N. C.) 193; the two cases in 38 Ga. 465, 2 Am. Law Rev. 501, 568, 570, 571; Law Reg. Mar. 1869, p. 166; Robinson Life Ins. Co. But more in point still are Evans v. Richmond and Mrs. Keppel's Case, both decided by the Chief Justice in the Virginia circuit.

But the finding by the court the facts that these bonds were used as a circulating medium among the people within the confederate lines at and about Memphis, and had with them much value, brings the case as directly as can be within Thorington v. Smith, 8 Wall. 1, 19 L. ed. 361. Indeed, without Thorington v. Smith, apon this general principle, this court has fully recognized as law all that is claimed for Hanauer, and places that recognition upon the very cases already cited in this argument.

Thomas v. Richmond, 12 Wall. 349, 20 L. ed.

453.

No counsel appeared for defendant.

Mr. Justice Field delivered the opinion of the court:

time the note was given, these war bonds had, at Memphis and in Arkansas, a value of twentyfive per cent below their par value; that those received by the defendant were not used or intended to be used by him in direct support of the war, but were received by him to be used in the ordinary course of his business; and that bonds of this character were at that time used as a circulating medium in Arkansas and about Memphis, in the common and ordinary transactions of the people.

Upon the facts thus found, the following questions of law arose according to the record upon which the judges of the circuit court were divided in opinion:

1. Was the consideration of the note void on the ground of public policy, so that no action could be sustained upon it in the Federal courts?

2. Was the consideration of the note illegal, under the principles of public law, the Constitution of the United States, the laws of Congress, and the Proclamation of the President relating to the rebellion, which existed and was pending when the note was made?

3. If the bonds were a sufficient consideration to sustain the action, what was the measure of damages?

The case comes before us on a certificate of this division of opinion.

The first question presented is embraced within the second, for if the consideration of the note was illegal under the Constitution of the United States and the laws of Congress, there can be no inquiry whether it was void for reasons of public policy. There can be no public policy in this country which contravenes the law of the land. And that the consideration was illegal and void under the Constitution and laws of the United States does not admit of a doubt. If the Constitution be, as it declares on its face it is, the supreme law of the land, a contract or undertaking of any kind to destroy or impair its supremacy, or to aid or encourage any attempt to that end, must necessarily be unlawful, and can never be treated in a court sitting under that Constitution and exercising authority by virtue of its provisions, as a meritorious consideration for the promise of anyone. The obligation of a traitorous combination, issued expressly to make war against and overthrow the government of the United States can never give validity to any transaction which must seek the courts of that government for enforcement.

The issuing of the bonds in question was an act of open hostility to the United States; it was an act by which the convention declared its adherence to their enemies, and it gave aid and comfort to them. The purpose of their issue *being inscribed upon their face, no- [*443 tice of their character was imparted to everyone. Wherever they were carried, they showed the taint of their origin, and no one could take them, or give currency to them, or part with

This is an action under a promissory note executed by the defendant at Memphis, Tennessee, on the 22d of December, 1861, for $3,099, 440*] twelve months after date, if not before, with interest after maturity, at the rate of eight per cent per annum. It was tried in the district of Arkansas by the circuit court, without the intervention of a jury, by stipulation of the parties. And the court found specifically, that the only consideration of the note was certain bonds issued by authority of the convention, which attempted to carry the state of Arkansas out of the Federal Union by an ordinance of secession; that these bonds were is sued for the purpose of supporting the war lev-value for them, without knowingly adding to ied by the insurrectionary bodies then controlling that state against the Federal government, and were styled "war bonds" on their face; and that the purpose of their issue was well known to both plaintiff and defendant. The court further found that the time of the

the strength of the insurgents, and thus in some degree furthering their cause.

An ingenious argument is presented on the part of the able and learned counsel of the plaintiff, by which it is attempted to sustain the validity of the note in suit on the ground

that it is a contract collateral to that upon | occupation of the civil and military authorities which the bonds were issued, and therefore not tainted by it; and on the further ground that it is a contract based upon a valid consideration within the authority of the decision in the case of Thorington v. Smith, 8 Wall. 1, 19 L.

ed. 361.

Neither ground can be maintained. The contract expressed by the note is indeed collateral to that upon which the bonds were issued; that is to say, it is not the same, but a different contract. Yet it is connected with that contract by the fact that the bonds constitute its coneideration; it therefore gives value and currency to those bonds, and to that extent advances the purposes for which the bonds were issued. It thus draws to itself the illegality of the original transaction.

When a contract is thus connected by its consideration with an illegal transaction a court of justice will not aid its enforcement. It is sometimes said that the test whether a demand connected with an illegal transaction is capable of being enforced at law is, whether the plaintiff requires any aid from the illegal transaction to establish his case. This test was given in Simpson v. Bross, 7 Taunt. 246, by the court of common pleas, in England. But it is too narrow in its terms and excludes many cases where the plaintiff might establish his case independently of the illegal transaction, and yet would find his demand tainted by that transaction. He might, in some instances, establish his case by showing a simple loan of money, or a simple *444] sale of goods, yet the court would *hold the contract of loan or sale to be invalid if at the time the money was loaned or the goods were sold he knew they were to be used for an illegal and criminal transaction, and the contract was made to further its execution. Cannan v. Bryce, 3 Barn. & Ald. 179; Pearce v. Brooks, 1 L. R. Ex. 214. Such was the decision of this court in the recent case of this same plaintiff against Doane, reported in 12th Wallace, 342, 20 L. ed. 439. There goods were sold to the defendant, the vendor knowing at the time that they were to be used in aid of the rebellion, and it was held that the sale was, from this knowledge, an illegal transaction on the part of the vendor, and did not constitute a valid consideration for the note of the purchaser; and it was further held that due-bills given by the purchaser, when taken up and paid by third parties with knowledge of the purpose for which they were issued, were equally invalid as a consideration for his note in their hands. But notwithstanding the narrow terms of the test mentioned in the English decision, the present case falls directly within them. No inquiry can be made into the consideration of the note in suit without disclosing that it consists of bonds issued by one of the insurgent states to support the war levied by them against the United States. The plaintiff, therefore, can not establish his case, his demand being contested, without aid from that illegal and treasonable transaction.

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of the confederate states. There was no gold or silver coin, nor were there any notes of the United States in circulation in that state. The only currency in ordinary use, in which the daily business of the people was carried on, were treasury notes of the confederate states, which in form and general appearance resembled bank bills. In these notes $35,000 [*445 of the purchase money of the land was paid, and a note was given for the balance, payable by its terms in dollars. It was by that term that confederate notes were designated.

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Upon the suppression of the rebellion these notes becaine, of course, valueless. Thorington then filed a bill to enforce a vendor's lien upon the land sold, claiming the balance of the stipulated purchase money in lawful money of the United States. The defendant set up as a defense that the purchase of the land was made at Montgomery, Alabama, where the parties at the time resided; that the only currency then in vogue there consisted of treasury notes of the confederate government; that the contract price for the land, $45,000, was to be paid in those notes; that $35,000 were thus paid; that note in suit given for the balance was to be paid in the same manner, and that the actual value of the land in lawful money of the United States was only $3,000. The court below held that as the payment was to be made in confederate notes the contract was illegal, and dismissed the suit and the case was brought to this court for review. One of the questions presented, and the most important one, was: whether the contract thus made for the payment of confederate notes during the rebellion between parties residing in the confederate states could be enforced in the courts of the United States.

In examining this question, the court referred to the establishment of the confederate government in 1861, and to the power it exercised over the territory of the states confederated in insurrection, observing that it was the actual government of all the territory of the insurgent states, except those portions protected from its control by the presence of the armed forces of the United States. It then considered the character of this government, and classed it in that description of de facto governments, which were aptly termed governments of paramount force. The distinguishing features of this kind of government, the court said, were, "(1) that its existence is maintained by active military power within the territories and against the rightful authority of *an [*446 established and lawful government; and (2) that while it exists it must necessarily be obeyed in civil matters by private citizens, who by acts of obedience rendered in submission to such force do not become responsible as wrong-doers for those acts, though not warranted by the laws of the rightful government."

Illustration of this sort of government were found in the case of Castine, in Maine, reduced to British possession during the war of 1812, and in the case of Tampico, in Mexico, occupied by the troops of the United States during the war with that country in 1846 and 1847.

As to Castine, that place was captured in September, 1814, by the British forces, and remained in their possession until the ratification

of the Treaty of Peace in February, 1815. "By the conquest and military occupation of Castine," this court said, by Mr. Justice Story, in United States v. Rice, 4 Wheat. 254, "the enemy acquired that firm possession which enabled him to exercise the fullest rights of sovereignty over that place. The sovereignty of the United States over the territory was, of course, suspended and the laws of the United States could no longer be rightfully enforced there, or be obligatory upon the inhabitants who remained and submitted to the conquerors. By the surrender, the inhabitants passed under a temporary allegiance to the British government, and were bound by such laws, and such only as it chose to recognize and impose. From the nature of the case no other laws could be obligatory upon them, for where there is no protection or allegiance, or sovereignty, there can be no claim to obedience."

As to Tampico, that place was taken possession of in November, 1846, by the military forces of the United States, and in December following the entire state of Tamaulipas, in which Tampico is situated, was reduced to military subjection by our forces, and both Tampico and the state remained in our occupation until the treaty of peace in 1848. While thus captured and held in subjection other nations 447*] *were bound, as this court said, speak ing through Chief Justice Taney, in Fleming v. Page, 9 How. 614, "to regard the country, while our possession continued, as the territory of the United States, and to respect it as such. For by the laws and usages of nations, conquest is a valid title while the victor maintains the exclusive possession of the conquered country. The citizens of no other nation, therefore, had a right to enter it without the permission of the American authorities, nor to hold intercourse with its inhabitants, nor to trade with them. As regarded by all other nations it was a part of the United States, and belonged to them as exclusively as the territory included in our established boundaries."

After referring to these cases of Castine and Tampico the court said that it was among the governments, of which these are examples, that the confederate government established for the insurgent states must be classed, though it differed from them in the circumstance that its authority did not originate in lawful acts of regular war; that it was not, however, on that account less actual or less supreme; that to the extent of its actual supremacy, however gained, in all matters of government within its military lines, the power of the insurgent government could not be questioned; that though that supremacy did not justify acts of hostility to the United States, it made obedience to its authority in civil and in local matters not only a necessity, but a duty; and that without such obedience civil order was impossible. It was by this government, said the court, exercising its power through an immense territory, that the confederate notes were issued early in the war; that they became in a short time almost exclusively the currency of the insurgent states; that while the war lasted they were used as money in nearly all the business transactions of many millions of people; and that they must, therefore be regarded as a currency imposed on the community by irresistible force.

From these considerations the court held that it followed *"As a necessary conse- [*443 quence from this actual supremacy of the insurgent government as a belligerent within the territory where it circulated, and from the necessity of civil obedience on the part of all who remained in it, that this currency must be considered in courts of law in the same light as if it had been issued by a foreign government temporarily occupying a part of the territory of the United States. Contracts stipulating for payments in this currency cannot be regarded for that reason only as made in aid of the foreign invasion in the one case or of the domestic insurrection in the other. They have no necessary relation to the hostile government, whether invading or insurgent. They are transactions in the ordinary course of civil society, and though they may indirectly and remotely promote the ends of the unlawful government, are without blame, except when proved to have been entered into with actual intent to further invasion or insurrection." And so the court held that such contracts could be enforced in the courts of the United States, after the restoration of peace, to the extent of their just obligation.

There is nothing in the case at bar which has any analogy to the case cited. In the latter case the transaction was in a currency imposed by irresistible force upon the community, in which currency the commonest transactions in the daily life of millions of people, even in the minutest particulars, were carried on, and without the use of which there would have been no medium of exchange among them. The simplest purchase in the market of daily food would, without its use, have been attended with inconveniences which it is difficult to estimate. It would have been a cruel and oppressive judgment, if all the transactions of the many millions of people, composing the inhabitants of the insurrectionary states, for the several years of the war, had been held tainted with illegality, because of the use of this forced currency, when those transactions were not made with any reference to the insurrectionary government.

In the case at bar the war bonds issued by the secession ordinance of Arkansas, though used as a circulating medium *in that [*449 state and about Memphis, did not constitute any forced currency which the people in that state and city were obliged to use. They were only a circulating medium in the sense that any negotiable money instruments, in the payment of which the community has confidence, constitute a circulating medium. The difference between the two cases is the difference between submitting to a force which could not be controlled, and voluntarily aiding to create that force.

The first two questions certified to us must, therefore, be answered in the affirmative. The third question does not show any matter upon which the judges of the Circuit Court were divided in opinion, but, in any event, it requires no answer.

Mr. Justice Miller concurring:

I assented with much reluctance to the opinion in the case of Thorington v. Smith, supra.

But I did assent to it on the ground that, while it was unsupported by and in some de

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES.

gree at variance with the general doctrine of the turpitude of consideration as affecting the validity of contracts, it was necessary to be established as a principle to prevent the grossest injustice in reference to transactions of millions of people for several years in duration. I think the present case comes within that principle.

But am content that the case of Thorington v. Smith shall be so limited, modified and explained, as to make it inapplicable to any further class of cases at all probable in the history of this country.

The necessity in which it was founded has passed or is rapidly passing away, and I acquiesce.

MORITZ DEITSCH, Plff. in Err.,

บ.

HENRY B. WIGGINS, Daniel Hart and Henry
Hart, Partners, as Hart, Wiggins & Co.

(See S. C. 15 Wall. 539-547.)
Evidence of fraud-attachment.

1. Where goods are attached by a creditor, and a third person claims title, evidence that the debtor had owned the goods, and that in his absence his clerks, without authority and in fraudulent combination with such third person, had made a sale of them to him, is proper in an action brought by such third person to recover the goods. 2. The attachment is also evidence in connection with the proof of the unauthorized and fraudulent sale.

[No. 167.]

Submitted Mar. 14, 1873. Decided Apr. 7, 1873.

IN

N ERROR to the Supreme Court of the Ter-
ritory of Colorado.

Suit was brought in the district court for the second judicial district of Colorado, in Gilpin county, by the plaintiff in error to recover the value of certain goods. Judgment having been given for the defendants in said court, and affirmed upon appeal by the supreme court of Colorado territory, the plaintiff sued out this writ of error.

The assignment of errors was as follows: Error. The supreme court of the territory of Colorado erred in affirming the judgment of the inferior court of said territory, which judgment was erroneous in the following par

ticulars:

1. In refusing a new trial upon the evidence contained in the record. 2. In admitting testimony improperly, as shown by the bills of exception, and specifically as follows:

In excluding testimony tending to show that the plaintiffs below closed up their business shortly after the levy.

In excluding evidence as to what was said and what occurred between Nash, one of the plaintiff's below, and Cozzens, one of the defendants below, at plaintiff's store, when the goods were invoiced.

In excluding testimony as to what was the occupation of Cozzens (sheriff), one of the defendants, at the time he took the goods, and the reasons he gave for taking them.

In overruling the offer of the defendants below to prove that the goods taken were a part of the merchandise of Oliver S. Buell, who transacted business under the style of O. S. 228

DEC. TERM,

Buell & Co., and that the witness, Charles E.
Sherman was a clerk of said O. S. Buell for
the space of about six months prior to May 4,
1867; that for two or three months prior to
May 2 or 6, 1867, the said O. S. Buell was ab-
sent from the said territory of Colorado; that
during the absence of said Buell, said Sherman
ular business of said Buell, in Central City,
was the clerk of said Buell, to carry on the reg-
Cilpin county, Colorado territory, which was
retailing clothing and merchandise; that the
said Sherman had no right or authority what-
goods of said Buell, but was only authorized to
ever to sell or dispose of the entire stock of
sell in the regular course of business; that,
Apr. 29, 1867, John Q. Nash, agent for the
plaintiff, well knowing that said Sherman was
not authorized to sell the entire stock of goods,
fraudulently agreed, combined, and confederat-
purpose of hindering, delaying and defrauding
ed with the said Sherman, to make a pretended
purchase of the entire stock of goods, for the
the defendants, Moritz Deitsch, Isador Deitsch,
and Jonas Deitsch, defendants herein and other
creditors; that the said Nash well knew that
said Buell to a large amount, and that such
the said Jonas Deitsch, Moritz Deitsch, and
sale was designed by him to cheat, hinder and
Isador Deitsch, defendants, were creditors of
defraud said defendants; that said stock of
goods was well worth the sum of $10,000, but
grossly inadequate sum; that whatever money
was so sold to Nash, Wiggins, & Co., for a
as to protect and place it beyond the reach of
was paid, if any, or other securities given, if
any, were so concealed, smuggled and arranged
Nash, Wiggins, & Co., and for John Q. Nash
defendants and for the benefit of the said Buell,
and said Sherman.

proceedings against O. S. Buell & Co.
In excluding the evidence of the attachment

and the instructions refused.
In instructions of the court given to the jury

court, which applies to this case, is as follows:
That part of the 21st rule referred to by the

Section 4. This brief shall contain in the or-
der here stated: 1. A concise abstract or state-
tions involved and the manner in which they
are raised. 2. A specification of the errors re-
ment of the case presenting succinctly the ques-
lied upon, which, in cases brought up by writ
of error, shall set out separately and particu-
urged; and in cases brought up by appeal, the
assignment shall state, as specifically as may
larly each error asserted and intended to be
be, in what the decree is alleged to be erroneous.

charge of the court, the specifications shall set
out the part referred to, totidem verbis, wheth-
Section 5. When the error alleged is to the
fused.
er it be instructions given or instructions re-

admission or to the rejection of evidence, the
specification shall quote the full substance of
Section 6. When the error alleged is to the
the evidence admitted or rejected.

The case is further stated by the court.
Mr. James Hughes, for plaintiff in error.
Messrs. Chipman & Hosmer, and Johnson &
Teller, for defendants in error.

the court:
Mr. Justice Strong delivered the opinion of

Most of the assignments of error have been

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