Case Name: William E. Woodruff, Plaintiff in error, v. Frederick W. Trapnall
Court: Supreme Court of the United States
Jurisdiction: United States
Decision Date: 1850-12
Citations: 10 How. 190
Docket Number: 
Parties: William E. Woodruff, Plaintiff in error, v. Frederick W. Trapnall.
Judges: Mr. Justice CATRON, Mr. Justice DANIEL, Mr. Justice NELSON, and Mr. Justice GRIER dissented.
Reporter: United States Reports
Volume: 51
Pages: 190–218

Head Matter:
William E. Woodruff, Plaintiff in error, v. Frederick W. Trapnall.
In 1836, the legislature >of Arkansas chartered a bank, the whole of the capital of which belonged to the State, and the president and directors of which w.ero appointed by the General Assembly. •
The twenty-eighth section provided, “ that the bills and notes of said institution shall be received in all payments of, debts duo to the State of Arkansas.”
In January, 1845, this twenty-eighth section was repealed.
The notes of the bank which were in circulation at the time of this repeal, were not affected by it.
The undertaking of the State to receive the notes of the bank constituted a contract between the State and the holders of these notes, which the State was not at liberty to break, although notes issued by the bank after the repeal-were not within the contract, and might be refused by the State.
Therefore, a tender, made in 1847, of notes issued by the bank prior to the repealing lay of 1845, was good to satisfy a judgment obtained against the debtor by the State; and it makes no difference whether or not the debtor had the notes in his possession at the time when the repealing act was passed.
. This case was brought up, by writ of error, from the Supreme Court, of the State of Arkansas.
On the 2d of November, 1836, the- State of Arkansas passed an act to incorporate the Bank of the State" of Arkansas. The capital was one million of dollars, which was raised by a sale of the bonds of' the State, or by loans founded upon those bonds. The president and directors were ¿ppointed by. a joint vote of the General Assembly. All dividends upon the capital stock were declared to belong to the State, subject to the control and disposal of the legislature.
The twenty-eighth' section was as follows, viz.: — “ That the bills and notes . of said institution shall be received in all payments of debts due to the .State of Arkansas.” The ' other sections of- the act were in the usual form of conferring general banking powers.
In 1836, William E. Woodruff was elected by the General Assembly of Arkansas Treasurer of the State, and on the 27th of October, 1836, executed a bond to James S. Conway, Governor of the State, in the penal sum of three hundred thousand dollars, conditioned for the faithful performance of his duties as treasurer. There were seven sureties, whose names it is not necessary to mention. The time for which Woodruff was to serve was two years, “ and until his successor shall be elected and qualified.” His term of office was thus from the 27th of October, 1836, to the 25th of December, 1838.
On the 23d of March, 1840, the State of Arkansas brought a-suit upon this official bond against the principal and sureties in the Pulaski Circuit Court. The, breach alleged was, that Woodruff had not paid over to his successor the sum' of
2,395.18. It is not necessary to trace the history of this suit; suffice it to say, that it eventuated in a judgment against Woodruff for $ 3,359.22 and costs.
On the 10th of January, 1845, the legislature passed an act relating to the revenue of the State, the' nineteenth section of which provided that, “ from and after the 4th of March, 1845, nothing shall be received in payment of taxes or revenue due the State, but par funds.”
In the progress of the- suit, Frederick W. Trapnall had become regularly substituted in place of the Attorney-General, to conduct the suit.
In .1847, Trapnall ordered an execution upon the judgment which the State had obtained against Woodruff, who, on the 24th of February, 1847, tendered and offered to pay to Trapnall the sum of $ 3,755 in the notes issued by the Bank of the State of Arkansas, which Trapnall refused to receive.
On the 25th of February, 1847, Woodruff filed a petition in the Supreme Court of the State, praying for an alternative' writ of mandamus, commanding Trapnall to “receive and accept, in payment of the judgment, the notes of the Bank, or to show cause why he shall refuse to do so.” The writ was issued- accordingly.'
To this, writ the following answer was filed : —
“The answer of Frederick W. Trapnall, attorney for the State pro tem., to an alternative mandamus hereto annexed, issued by the Supremé Court on the petition of William E. Woodruff.
“ This respondent'admits the judgment and tender as set out in the said petition, but allege? that he was not authorized, to receive the said Arkansas State Bank notes; because the twenty-eighth section of the bank charter, under which alone the said Woodruff cOuld claim a right so to satisfy the said judgment, was repealed by an act of the legislature of the State of Arkansas, approved January 10, 1845, and entitled, “ An Act making appropriations for the years 1845,1846, and part of the year 1844, and for balances due from the State, and for other purposes,” and by the nineteenth section of the said act.
“ And this respondent submits to the court, if the repeal of the said section does not deprive him of all authority to receive the said bank-notes from the said Woodruff in satisfaction of the said judgment in favor of the State of Arkansas against him and others.’ Respectfully,
“ Frederick W. Trapnalu.”
To this answer Woodruff demurred, and there was a joinder in demurrer.
Before the argument, the following agreement was filed by the counsel of the respective parties.
“ Be it remembered, that the following matters are agreed upon by the counsel for the petitioner and respondent in this cause, to the end that the same may be filed and become a part of the record herein.
“ 1st., The. record’and proceedings in the case of William E. Woodruff, and the said .perspns named in said petition as his securities, against the State of Arkansas, upon the first and second writs of error remaining in this court, and which are referred, to in said petition, shall form a part thereof by such reference, as fully as though the same were incorporated therein at full length.
“ 2d. That said respondent, as attorney of record for said State in the suit aforesaid, is the proper officer by law to receive and acknowledge satisfaction of said judgment.
“ 3d. That the notes of the Bank of the State of Arkansas, referred to in said petition and response, and tendered in this case; were issued by said bank, pursuant to the charter thereof, prior to the year 1840.
“ 4th.' That after the creation of said bank, down to. the year 1845, the notes of said bank were received- and paid out by said State in discharge of all public dues to and from said State.
“ 5th. That said bank continues to exist, with all its corpo- • rate functions, and that in the consideration of this case all the acts of the General Assembly of said State, affecting said bank, shall be deemed to be public'laws, as they have been heretofore decided by this court to be, and whereof this court will judi dally take notice; but to the end thereof, and for greater'certainty, the act of said General Assembly, entitled ‘ An. Act to incorporate the Bank of the State of Arkansas,’ approved November 2d, 1836, is here inserted at full length, and made part of the record in this causé, and which act-of incorporation is in the words following.” (Then followed the charter of the bank in-extenso.)
One of the grounds of the demurrer was the following: —
“ 1st, That^ the nineteenth section of said act, entitled An Act making appropriations for the years 1845,18Í6, and part of the year 1844, and for balances due from the State, and for other purposes,’ approved January 10th, 1845, is a law impairing the obligation of contracts, and is repugnant to-the Constitution of this State and of the United States, and therefore void.”
On the 28th-of July, 1847, the Supreme'Court of Arkansas overruled the demurrer, and on the 30th of July Woodruff sued out a writ of error to bring the case up to this court.
It was argued by Mr. Lawrence and Mr. Reverdy Johnson, for the plaintiff in error, and by Mr. Sebastian, for the‘defendant in error.
The following extract from the brief filed by Mr. Lawrence shows the ground upon which he'placed his argument. Of the argument of Mr. Johnson, the reporter has no notes.
The question presented is an important one. It is whether, under the Constitution of the United States, a-State can violate her solemn pledges, break her plighted word, and annul her sacred and deliberate contracts and promises. One would think it not a difficult question; and surely we should have supposed the mere statement of it enough, without a word óf argument, had not the highest tribunal' of a 'State decided in favor of this monstrous power, and announced principles which, as it seems to us, are at variahce with sound, well-settled, and universally admitted principles of constitutional and national morals.
We say the question 'is an important one. It is, whether •States and sovereignties are governed by the rules of ordinary honesty; whether the provision in the Constitution, that the obligation of contracts shall by no law be impaired, is merebrutum fulmen. For there is no doubt that private honesty cannot long survive when public dishonesty is legalized; that private promises and obligations, will not long be held sacred, when the judiciary, the guardian of the .public morals, admits and argues that the State may, at pleasure, violate her pledges and promises; that public and private morals are intimately connected; .and that a despotic government, that kept her faith and held her pledge and promise sacred and inviolable, would be far preferable to a republic whose promises were but ropes of sand, her public faith a mockery, .and her plighted honor the mere oath of a dicer.
The Supreme Court of Arkansas denies that the twenty-eighth section of. the charter so incorporated itself into the contract as to become a part of it, and holds such a position fallacious. One would think, on the contrary, it was self-evident. That court says that the position is a fallacy, because “ the act by which the State Bank was created was nothing more than a grant of power for certain purposes therein specified, which was exclusively under the control of the legislature, and consequently subject to be repealed at any time, whenever, in the wisdom of that body, it should seem expedient for the good of the country.” That, so far as it means that the legislature could repeal the charter, and end the existence of the bank, we admit. But the court proceeds to say that, on such repeal, the notes of the bank would become valueless, and the debt evidenced by them extinguished. And they further assert, that the provision allowing the debtors of the State to pay in notes of the bank was a mere gratuity; a privilege, on condition they should pay before the repeal of the law.
This is the whole argument, or rather series of assertions, used by the court. It assumes that a repeal of the act would repeal, and could constitutionally repeal,' the promise and pledge contained in the twenty-eighth section ; that, indeed, it is no pledge, but a privilege gratuitously conferred, on condition the law was not repealed. Now, is this true ? At first blush, it would seém extraordinary that any such conclusion could ever have been arrived at. If an individual was about to issue his notes to serve as currency, would it be a gratuity if he promised to receive them in payment of debts due him ? It might just as well be said that his promise to pay them was a gratuity. One would be just as much p gratuity as the other.
Suppose A wishes to induce me to loan money to B, and take for it his note, and, in order to do so, tells me that, if I will loan the money on B’s giving me his note for the amount, he (A) will, at any time, receive it in payment of any debt I, or any holder of it, may owe him. Suppose he puts this in writing, and seals it. Is this promise a gratuity ? On the contrary, it is a valid promise, for a good and valuable consideration. If it is not, in every case where a man becomes security for another, it is a gratuity. If we need an apology for quoting authorities to sustain a self-evident proposition, lying on the very surface of the law, it must be found in the fact that so trite and common and fundamental a principle is actually denied by the Supreme Court of a State.
That such a promise is not a gratuity, but a valid contract, for good- consideration, was established before cases were reported. It is repeated in a multitude of eases, and denied nowhere. Baily v. Croft, 4 Taunt. 611; Suffield v. Bruce, 2 Stark. 175; Brown v. Garbrey, Gouldsb. 94; Kirkby v. Coles, Cro. Eliz. 137 ; Stadt v. Dill, 9 East, 348 ; Leonard v. Vredenburgh, 8 Johns. 29; Hunt v. Adams, 5 Mass. 362; Howe v. Ward, 4 Greenl. 195; Minet’s Case, 14 Ves. 189; Violett v. Patton, 5 Cranch, 142, 152.
The twenty-eighth section of the charter of this bank is not a law, in any sense of the word. Municipal law is a rule of civil conduct prescribed by the supreme power of a state. (1 Kent, 446.) Statute law is the express written will of the legislature, rendered authentic by certain prescribed forms and solemnities. (Ibid.) The word law, in its most general and comprehensive sense, signifies a rule of aeticjn (1 Bl. Com, 38); a rule of action prescribed by some supreme being. (Ibid.) • Municipal law is a rule of civil conduct, prescribed by the supreme-power in a,state (1 Bl. Com. 46), commanding what is right, and prohibiting what is .wrong. (Ibid. 53.) The operation of a law must be from the supreme power or state, upon the individuals or corporations, or some of them, composing, it. It must be an exercise of the power of government. If I order a child to learn a task, that is a law; but if I, at the same time, promise him a reward for doing it, this is no law, but.a promise. It is no exercise of the paternal power;. An act of the legislature may be in part a law and in part a contract. So far as it is a contract or promise, founded on a valid consideration, it binds the state just as it does an individual; and the former can no more repeal such a contract than an individual caii repeal his bond.
It is perfectly well settled in this court, that a legislative act may be a contract, and that whenever it is so, and absolute rights have vested under that contract, a repeal of the law cannot divest these rights ; and that, if the act of annulling them is legitimate, it is rendered so by a power applicable to the case of every individual in the community. Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch, 135.
It is too well settled, by too many cases in this court and elsewhere, that a legislative grant is a contract, to. argue that; why it is a contract, is equally well settled. The indicia of a contract between a state and individuals are the same as between man. and man. If a grant, which is a gratuity, is a contract, because it vests a right, a fortiori is the promise in this case — for it is no gratuity, but a valuable promise — a good and valuable consideration. ' By this promise the State became the surety of the bank, as to all the paper that institution might issue. Certainly a suretyship, based on, and supported by, a consideration good in law, is a contract, and one of the highest obligation. It is not necessary to argue whether it is executed or executory. In either case it contains obligations binding on the parties. Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch, 137.
It is far from being true, that every act which a State does, she does as sovereign. When she takes stock in a banking •corporation, she assumes the character of an individual, and as such is subject' to all the ordinary obligations which could be incurred by an individual under like circumstances.
Certainly no court will deny the capacity of a State to. contract with other States, or with her citizens or citizens of other States. Sovereignty of course includes that power and capacity. If competent to contract, she may do it by a legislative enactment, or by a contract executed by her agents in pursuance of a law, or by implication. And if she can contract at all, the twenty-eighth section of this charter is unquestionably a contract. The grant of a franchise to one corporation is an implied contract that the- State will not confer the identical franchise on another corporation, and this implied contract is Tendered irrevocable by the Constitution. Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheaton, 518.
Two parties are necessary to form a perfect' contract, but the assent of both need not be given at the same time. Judge Story gives, as an instance to prove this, in Dartmouth-College v. Woodward, an act declaring that all persons, who should thereafter pay into the public treasury a stipulated sum, should be tenants in common of certain lands belonging to the State, and declares that to be clearly , a contract with a person after-wards born, who should pay the stipulated sum into the treasury. Would he not have given quite as strong an instance^ if he had said that a promise by a State to receive certain paper, about to be issued in payment of all debts due her, was a contract with every person who should afterwards take it, that she would receive it from them ? Undeniably, this position would have needed as little argument as the other. Both are toe plain to admit of argument.
That agreements between two States constitute a contract within the meaning of the Constitution, was expressly held in Green v. Biddle, 8 Wheaton, 1; The definition there given of a contract is, that it is an agreement to do or not to do certain acts, and it is said expressly that the Constitution of the United States embraces all contracts, executed or executory, whether between individuals or between a State and individuals; and that a State has no more-, power' to impair an obligation into which she. herself has entered, .than to impair the contracts of individuals. The sanie principle was declared in Briscoe v. Bank of Commonwealth of Kentucky, 11 Peters, 257; Providence Bank v. Billings, 4 Peters, 514.
In the State of New Jersey v. Wilson, 7 Cranch, 165, it was held, that a legislative act, declaring that land which should be purchased for certain Indians should not thereafter be subject to any tax, was a contract, and could not be rescinded by a subsequent legislature. It was- held that this privilege was annexed to the land, and not to the persons of the' Indians, and was a contract in favor of their vendees. It might as well have been said, that' that privilege was a gratuity, as the o,ne which is so called by the Supreme Court of Arkansas in this case.
The notes in these cases, were given in May, 1842. At that time the twenty-eighth section of the charter stood unrepealed, an act which attempted to repeal it not being passed until January,- 1845. It is certainly neither denied nor deniable, that, when the notes were given, they were payable, at the option of the debtor, in notes of the bank. They are éxpressly made payable “ in specie or its equivalent,” to show that they might be paid otherwise than in specie. As the law then stood, at least, the notes of the State bank were, to our State herself, equivalent to specie. It is too well settled to need argument or authority, that a law which authorizes the discharge of a contract by the payment of a smaller sum, or at a different time, or in a different manner, than the parties have stipulated, impairs the obligation, by substituting for the contract of the parties one which they never entered into, and to the.performance of which, of course, they have never consented. Hinkley v. Marean, 3 Mason, 88; Sturges v. Crowninshield, 4 Wheat. 122.
Srujely a law which prevents the debtor from discharging a bond in the manner and with the funds with tvhieh it could have" been discharged when made, — in which it was agreed, when it was made, it might be discharged, — is void for precisely the same reason. The wit of man can observe no difference.
It seems to iis that this is a case in which it needs only to' apply to the most trite and ordinary principles of law -'and honesty. Fides observando est, is a maxim older than the law. Upon its observance depend all reverence for government, all respect for authority, all confidence in mankind, all law, and the whole of morals. If the decision.of the court be low is the law of the. land, and a true application of the national Constitution, let Púnica fides cease to be a proverb. That such a doctrine could be announced anywhere among us .goes far to prove that America was first discovered and peopled by the Phoenicians.
The conduct of nations is governed by the same rules of morality and honesty that govern individuals. The day has gone' by, at least on this continent, when power can sanction and justify iniquity. Might no longer makes right. Thanks to our national Constitution, a new code of national morality has sprung into existence; and it is no longer possible for a State, even if she be plena fide a sovereignty, to violate her solemn pledges, and make her firmest faith as cheap as the empty wind.
One is grieved and ashamed to be compelled to argue á question like this in the nineteenth century,.and under a free government. • Perhaps it would have been better to say, with Judge Story, in Thorndike v. The United States, 2 Mason, 1: — “ By the statutes of the United States, under which treasury-notes have from time to time been issued, it is enacted, that all such notes shall be receivable in payments to the United States, for duties, taxes, and sales of public lands, to the full amount of principal and interest accruing, due on such notes. It follows, of course, that they are a legal tender in payment of debts of this nature due to the United' States, and by the very tenor of the act public officers are bound to receive them.”
Mr. Sebastian for the defendant in error laid down the following propositions: —
That the twenty-eighth section of the charter was not a contract within the -meaning of the prohibitory clause of the Constitution of the United States.
That it was simply a law, in its just and legitimate sense, and as such repealable by the legislature at any time.
The most important question which arises, and at the very threshold of the case, is whether the stipulation of the twenty-eighth section of the charter of the bank was a contract. That a law in form may in reality be a contract, is admitted; that it may partake of both features and perform both functions, is denied. It must be one or the other. Law is a rule, not compact. One is a command of the supreme power, arid an exercise of authority; the' other is the agreement of the parties, and the exercise of will. The one is supreme, because it emanates from the sovereign power; the other is obligatory, because of the assent of the parties. The contracts of the State are valid, not because they are .acts of the sovereign power, in a legislative form, but because they-are its compacts for a consideration with others, as a corporate person. In this last respect, the State is hot sovereign; not more than she is 'when a corporator,.partner, stockholder, or trustee. No doubt, if á State in form of law make a grant, deemed an executed contract, she may not resume it. If she in the same form make a contract with individuals, when it is accepted it is equally obligatory, and under the protection of the Constitution. Such was the doctrine of this court in Fletcher v. Peck, 6 Cranch, 87. And in New Jersey v. Wilson, 7 Cranch, 164. Thése latter cases, however, quoted by appellants, have ho bearing in this case, as they are instances in which the contract was express, conveyed property rights, and left no doubt from their nature that they were contracts. It is not believed that this court has ever in this class of cases gone beyond the protection of vested rights of property from resumption. No ease has ever pushed this doctrine any further. Rights-of the character just mentioned never, indeed, needed the protection of the .Constitution, and most probably never, in point of fact, entered into the intention of its framers. They exist not under the Constitution, but abdve it, and independent of it. ( Still, beyond this class, the courts have'not construed laws to be contracts, except in the charters of private corporations, which stand upon a different footing, and of which I shall say more hereafter. The principle has been extended to its utmost tension, and cannot go further, without an undue and unnecessary restraint upon the rights of the States in the regulation of their civil institutions and policy adopted for their internal govern-ment. Such was not intended, as is admitted in Dartmouth College v. Woodward. It would be of most mischievous consequence, if every law which promised a general benefit or advantage, which indicated -a particular, policy, or ventured upon an untried experiment, should be deemed a'compact with the citizen to adhere to it for ever. The legislation of a State would be fettered by so many restraints, that it would become a mere register of its contracts, rather than a code of its laws. It would only be potent for mischief, and impotent for good, possessing the strange faculty of perpetuating evil, withr out the power to arrest or correct it. To give stability to law, it is not necessary to perpetuate its mischief.
It is admitted that,-when a contract is clearly expressed or necessarily implied, no considerations should induce its violation ; but then the opposite extreme should be avoided, by which- too sacred a regard is paid ‘tq private right, and too little to public necessity; This prohibition being in derogation and restraint of the rights of legislation of the States over subjects peculiarly within their sphere, should be, if not strictly construed, at least warily watched, lest it go further than any' necessity warrants. Much more so, when in . this case the prohibition is sought to be. extended to the almost utter annihilation of State sovereignty. Every State, of necessity, must bé left undisturbed in the exercise of these powers, essential to its preservation' and safety. Among these, the chief one is the power over its'financés and credit, of laying and collecting taxes. So essential is this, that it is almost impossible to conceive of a government without a treasury. Upon the full enjoyment . of this prerogative depends the faithful performance of all the functions which devolve upon a State. Without it, how can government be established or maintained, its credit preserved, its depts paid, its obligations discharged, its .laws administered, and its trusts performed ? How. impotent for self-preservation is the State, when, under the pressure of an overruling necessity, she resorts to every resource and every power, calls upon every atm and every purse, if she must stay the last mighty struggle for existence until she redeems all the issues of a defunct and insolvent bank. There are periods in the history of every nation when laws and constitutions aré inadequate and 'feeble for their task, when resort must be had to that brief code, “ Sqlus república, suprema est lex.” It is the law of necessity. Constitutions are built upon it. They may suspend,-but can never, subvert it. What state has never found a period when she did not resort to it? What nation that has not found the preservation of faith inconsistent with its necessities? In plainer terms, What nation has not suspended or repudiated her obligations ? And where are the countless millions of Continental'money, which the necessities of the Revolution forced into circulation, and which the poverty of its exchequer as. quietly buried in oblivion ? May not a nation legitimate its own bankruptcy, as well as that of the citizen?
When the prohibition of the Constitution is to be extended in restraint of a necessary'and essential power of State sovereignty,— the control of its revenue and the performance of its trusty — it may be justly expected that it should be to protect a clear and an undoubted right from violation. Thése principles were asserted in a most forcible manner by the Chief Justice in an analogous ease of Providence Bank v. Billings and Putnam, 4 Peters, 514. Speaking of the taxing power, he says, — “ As the whole community- is interested in-retaining it undiminished, that community has a right to insist that its abandonment ought not to be presumed in a case in which the deliberate, purpose of the State to abandon if does not appear.” The power of collecting 'taxes a-nd prescribing the manner in which they may be paid, is a most essential part of the taxing power. These - principles were again distinctly approved in Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, 11 Peters, 547. A useful illustration of the mischief from such provisions being regarded as contracts, and the highest evidence that it was not so intended, are afforded in the very case before the court. The bank was authorized by its charter to issue $ 3,000,000 upon its $ 1,000,000 of capital. The State revenue ordinarily amounts to less than $ 100,000 per annum. In the event of a total insolvency, of the bank (and it has nearly approached that), the revenues of the State would have been absorbed for years, besides the utter swallowing up of every trust fund with which the munificence of Congress had invested her. The Seminary, Five per Cent., Salt Springs, Common Schools, Distribution, and Internal Improvement funds, all would have been swept away; potent evidence that the trust funds were not meant by “ debts due the State;”
It is difficult to conceive how any law, in the administration of which, the citizens may be interested, may not as well be considered a contract as the twenty-eighth section of the charter. It certainly possesses the same indicia of contracts. We have but to say, that the law prescribing a thing to be done, is a pledge that it shall be done, and the conversion is complete. Such is the case with all the laws for the administration of justice, the collection of revenues, and the regulation of the internal police of the State. In all these, certain duties are imposed upon the public officers as the agents of the States. Yet these laws are subject to repeal, and often inflict inconvenience and disappointment. The law in question is but a direction of the State to the treasurer, prescribing the character of funds which he may receive for her revenues ; and it 'would be; strange, indeed, if any'such law was not, from its very nature, repealable. In one sense, the twenty-eig.hth section was no part of the charterit found a place among the enactments which constituted the law of the corporation. It formed no part of the law of its^ being; it was a part of the fiscal regulations and revenue laws of the State, and as such might well’ be altered, modified, or altogether repealed, whenever the -public good required it. It contained no pledge to the bank; that was’a public corporation in which the State was sole proprietor, and alone interested. It was none to the government of the bank, for they were public officers of a public “ civil -insti.tution,” employed in the administration of the government, who might, with the. corporation which they governed,-have been instantly, at any moment, annihilated by a total ¡repeal. It conferred no immunity, franchise, or privilege. It contained no pledge to the bond holders who advanced the capital of the bank. As to them, the seventeenth section of the charter gave them only a pledge of the faith of the State for the principal and interest of the capital alone. As to the holder of the notes, it was the pledge which every law contains, that it wjll be executed while in force, and no longer. That the provision thus enacted formed a. contingent and auxiliary consideration, in giving currency and value to the nqtes of the bank, may be true. That it was the object and aim of the law, is not to be believed. It facilitated the collection and disbursement of ‘the public revenue, while the bank remained the fiscal agent and depositary of the State. . Had the bank been without a cash capital, it might be presumed that the State by this means sought to lend credit to its notes, and then they would'have been within the meaning, if not the spirit,'of “ bills of credit.” They derived their legal and permanent value from their being the bills of a specie-paying bank, with a cash capital, resources, and property of its own, amenable in court, and tangible to an execution. The Constitution only authorized the General Assembly to pledge “-the faith of the State to raise the funds necessary to carry into operation the bank.” This was done. Nothing beyond this was either done or intended to be done. It might with equal truth be asserted, that other provisions of the charter, which gave to the notes of the bank a contingent value, were also contracts with the note-holder, such as the deposit of the various trust funds of the State, the revenues of the State, the .Internal Improvement fund afterwards acquired by the State, the duration of the-charter, the franchises, powers, and privileges of the bank. These w&re all contingent and remote auxiliaries, which lent additional confidence to the public in the resources of the bank. Yet it is not denied that they were not contracts. These provisions ^rere all subsequently repealed without question. But for the act of 1845, the revenues of the State would to this day have been collected, and the whole of the public creditors paid, as for years previously ithey had been- in the depreciated notes of this institution.
Again, this section had all the indicia of a' law, none of a contract. Law, áccording to the most comprehensive and intelligible definition, “ is a rule of civil action, prescribed by the supreme power of a State, commanding what is right, and prqhibiting'what is wrong” ; or, according to a definition less technical, “ commanding what shall be done, and prohibiting what -shall nof be done.” It is a command from a- superior to, an inferior, to do or not to do. When addressed to the citizens at-large, it-forms the cavil jurisprudence of a country; when it is directed to the public officers of the State, it forms its public and political law. All laws' creating public, mujnicipal, or political corporations, are of this' class, over which the legislative power of a State is not restrained by the Constitution. They,.from their nature, must be repealable,.without any other limitation than that property held by such corporations shall be still secured for the use of those for whom, and at whose expense, it has been acquired. Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518. “ The character of civil institutions does not grow out of their incorporation, but out of the manner in which they are formed, and the objects for which they are created. The right to change them is not founded on their being incorporated, but on their being the instruments of government, created for its purposes.” “ The same institutions, though not incorporated, would be public institutions, and of course controllable by the legislature.” Ibid. 638.
The distinction between public and private corporations was thus defined: — “ If a charter be a mere grant of political power ; if it create a civil institution, to be employed in the administration of the government; or if the funds be public property alone, and the government alone be interested in the management of them, the legislative power over them is not restrained by the Constitution.” . It thus possessed all the features of a law. The whole charter was but law. On the contrary, this provision contained no portion of a contract. Law only becomes compact when it requires and obtains the assent of the other parties to it. It has been shown that the only legal value of the notes df the bank was as obligations of the bank. The quality which they possessed from being receivable at the State treasury was incidental, and, like a legal quality or privilege imparted to any other estate or property, could be withdrawn at the pleasure of the State. As obligations of the bank, they could not be reached by a legislative repeal of the charter.

Opinion:
Mr. Justice McLEAN
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case is before us on a writ of error to the Supreme Court of Arkansas.
An action was brought by the State of Arkansas in . the Pulaski Circuit Court, against the plaintiff in error, and his sureties, Chester Ashley and others, upon his official bond as late Treasurer of State, for the recovery of a certain.sum of money alleged to have been received by him, as treasurer, between the 27th day of October, 1836, and the 26th day of December, 1838. And a judgment was. recovered against him and his Securities, on the 13th of June, 1845,. for $ 3,359.22 and costs. An execution having been issued on the judgment,on' the 24th of February, 1847, the plaintiff tendered to the defendant in error, who prosecuted the suit as Attorney-General, the full amount of the judgment, -interest, and costs, in- the notes of the Bank of the State' of Arkansas, which were refused.
The above facts being stated in a petition to the Supreme Court of Arkansas on the 25th of February, 1847, an alternative mandamus was issued to Trapnall, the defendant in error, to receive" the bank-notes in satisfaction of the judgment, or show cause why he shall refuse to do so.
On the return of the mandamus", the defendant admitted the. judgment and tender of the notes ; but alleged that he was not authorized to receive them in satisfaction of the judgment, because the twenty-eighth section of the bank charter, under which alone the plaintiff could claim a right so to satisfy the judgment, was- repealed by an act of the legislature, approved January 10th, 1845.
It was agreed by the parties, that the record of the judgment should be made a part of the proceeding; that the defendant was the proper officer by. law to receive satisfaction of the judgment ; that the notes tendered were issued by the bank prior to the year 1840, and that down to the year 1845 the notes of the bank were received and paid out by the State, in discharge of all public dues; that the bank continues to exist with all its corporate functions.
The court were of opinion, that the return of the defendant showed a sufficient cause for a refusal to obey the mandate of-the writ, and gave judgment accordingly.
The twenty-eighth-section of the bank charter, -which was repealed by the" act of 1845, provided " that the bills and notes of said institution shall be received in all payments of debts due to the State of Arkansas." - And the question raised for consideration and decision is, whether the' repeal of this section brings the case within the Constitution of the United States, which prohibits a State from impairing the obligations of a contract.
The bank charter was passed on the 2d of November, 1836, with a capital of one million of dollars, to be raised by a sale of the bonds of the State, loans, or negotiations, together with such other funds as may now or hereafter belong to, or be pla.ced under the control and direction -of, the State "; the principal bank to be located at the city of Little Bock, and its concerns to be conducted by a president and twelv.e directors,' to be appointed by a joint vote of the General Assembly. Branches were, required -to be established, the presidents and directors whereof were to be elected-in the samé manner.
The president and directors were to have a common seal, were authorized to deal'in bullion, gold, silver, &e., purchase real property, erect buildings, &c., issue notes, make loans at eight per cent, on indorsed paper, or on mortgages, within the State ; a general board was constituted, who were to make report of the condition of the bank annually, to the legislature, and perform other duties ; and any debtor to the bank, " as maker or indorser of any note, bill, or bond, expressly made negotiable and payable at the bank, who delays- payment," should have a judgment entered against him on a notice of thirty days.
Some doubt has been suggested, whether the notes of this bank were not bills of credit within the prohibition of the Constitution. We think they cannot be so held, consistently with the view taken by this court in the case of Briscoe v. The Bank of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, 11 Peters, 311. It was there said, that, " to constitute a bill of credit within the Constitution, it must be issued by a State, on the faith of the State, and be designed to circulate as money. It must be a paper which circulates on the credit of the State, and is so received and used in the ordinary business of life."
The bills of this bank are "not made payable by the State. A capital is provided for • their redemption, and the general management of the bank, under the charter, is committed to the president and directors, as in ordinary banking associations. They; may in a summary manner obtain judgments against their debtors. And although the directors are not expressly made liable to be sued, yet it is not doubted they may be held legally responsible for an abuse of the trust confided to them.
The entire stoc of the bank is owned by the State. It furnished the capital. md receives the profits. And, in addition to the credit given to the notes of the bank by the capital provided, the State declares, in the charter, they shall be received in- all payments of debts due to it. Is this a- contract? A contract is defined to be an agreement between competent persons, to do or not to dó a certain thing. The undertaking on the part of the State is, to' receive the notes of the bank in payment from its debtors. ' This comes within the definition of a contract. It is-a contract founded upon a good and valuable consideration ; a • consideration- beneficial to the State, as its profits are increased^ by sustaining the credit, and consequently extending the. circulation, of the paper of the bank.
With whom was this contract made ? We answer, with the holders of the' paper of the bank. . The notes are made payable to bearer; consequently every bond fide holder has a right, under the twenty-eighth section, to pay to the' State any debt he may owe it, in the paper of /the bank. It is a continuing Suaranty by the State, that the notes shall be so received. uch a contract would be binding on an individual, and it is n'ot less so on a State.
That the State had the right to repeal the above section may be admitted. And the emissions of the bank subsequent» ly are without the guaranty. But the notes in circulation at the time of the repeal are not affected by it. The holder may still claim the right, by the force of the contract, to discharge any debt he may owe to the State in .the notes thus issued.
It is argued that there could have been violated or impaired no contract with the plaintiff in error, as it does not appear he had the note's tendered- by him in his possession at the time the twenty-eighth section was repealed.
It is admitted that he had the notes in his possession at the time he made the tender, and that they were issued by the bank before the repeal of the sec tion ; and nothing more than this could be required.
The guaranty of the State, that the notes of the bank should be received in discharge of public dues, embraced all. the bills issued by it; the repeal of the guaranty was intended, no doubt, to exclude all the notes of the bank then in circulation. Until the repeal of the twenty-eighth section, the State 'continued to receive and pay out these notes. Up to that time, no one doubted the Obligation of the State to receive them. The law was absolute and imperative on the officers of the State. The holder of the paper claimed the benefit of this obligation, and it is supposed his,right could never have been questioned. The notes were payable to bearer, and the bearer was the only person who had a right to demand payment of. the bank, or to pay them into the State treasury in discharge of a debt. The guaranty included all the notes of the bank in circulation as clearly as if on the face of every note the words had been engraved, " This note shall be received by the State in payment of debts." And that the legislature could not withdraw. this obligation from the notes in circulation at the time the guaranty was repealed, is a position which can require no argument. Any one had a right to receive them, and- to test the constitutionality of the repeal.
Suppose a State legislature should pass'a law authorizing the drawers of promissory notes, payable to bearer, to -discharge the same by the payment of produce. Would such a law affect the rights of the bearer ? The contract would stand, arid the law would be declared void. A standing guaranty by a nfercantile house, to receive in payment of its debts all notes drawn by a certain other house, is valid, on the ground that the notes were taken on the credit of such guaranty. It ihay be'terminated by a notice ; but when so terminated, axe not all the notes goo'd against the guarantors, which were executed and circulated prior to the notice ? Who could commend the justice of guarantors, who should endeavor* to avoid responsibility, on so clear a principle ? Louisville Man. Co. v. Welch, post, 461.
A State can no more impair, by legislation, the obligation of its own contracts, than- it can impair the. obligation of the contracts of individuals. We naturally look- to the action of a sovereign State, to be characterized by a more scrupulous regard to justice, and a higher morality, than belong to' the ordinary transactions of individuals. The obligation of the State of Arkansas to receive the notes of the bank, in payment of its debts, is much .stronger than in the above case of individual guaranty.
. The bank belonged to the State, and it realized the profits of its operations. It was conducted by the agents of the State, under the supervision of the legislature. By the guaranty, the notes of the bank, for the payment of debts to the State, were equaLto gold and silver. This, to- some extent, sustained their credit, and gave them currency. Loans were made by the bank on satisfactory security. The debts of the bank, ór a large proportion of them, may fairly be presumed to, have been collected. But the means of the bank, thus under the control of the State, became exhausted. Whether this was the result of withdrawing the capital from the bank, by the State, does not appear upon the record. We only know the fact, that its funds have disappeared, leaving, it is said, a large amount of its paper, issued before the repeal of the guaranty, worthless, in the hands of the citizens of the State,
The obligation of the State to receive these notes is denied, on the grdund that the twenty-eighth section was a general provision, liable to be repealed, at any time, by the legislature. And it is compared to a general provision to receive, for public dues, the paper of banks generally, unconnected with the State. There is,no analogy in the two cases. One is a question of public policy, influenced by considerations of general convenience, which every one knows may be changed at the discretion of the legislature. But the other arises out of a contract incorporated into the charter, imposing an obligation on the State to receive, in payment of all debts due to it, the paper of a bank owned by the State, and whose notes are circulated for its benefit. The power of the legislature to repeal the section, the stock of the bank being owned by the State, is not controverted ; but that act cannot affect the notes in circulation at the time of the repeal.
It is objected, that this view trenches upon the sovereignty of the State, in the exercise of its taxing power and in the reg ulation of its currency. "We are not aware that a State has power over the currency farther than the right to establish banks, to regulate or prohibit the circulation, within the State, of foreign notes, and to determine in what the public dues shall be paid.
It is a principle controverted by^io one, that, on general questions of policy, one legislature cannot bind those which shall succeed it; but it is equally true and undoubted, that a legislature may make' a contract which shall bind those that shall come after it.
•The notes of the bank in circulation: at the repeal of the twenty-eighth' section, if made receivable by the State in "discharge of public dues, may so far resuscitate them, as that, in the course of time, they will find their way into the treasury of the State, where in justice and by contract they belong. It is presumed there will be no complaint, as there will be no ground for any, by the citizens of the State, if these notes, now dead and worthless, should be so far revived as to reach their appropriate destination. . And if, as a consequence, some increase of taxation should 'be required by the State, it will be nothing more than is common to all other States that perform their contracts. It would be a most unwise policy for s State to improve'its currency through a violation of its contracts. In such a course, .the loss of the State would be incomparably greater than its gain. Any argument in commendation of such an action by a State cannot be otherwise considered than as exceedingly infelicitous, and unjust.
If these notes be receivable in payment of public dues by the State, having been in circulation at the time of the repeal •of the above section, as we' think they clearly are, no doubt can exist as to the sufficiency of the tender. The law of tender. which avoids future interest and costs, has no application in this case. The right to make payment to the State in this paper arises- out of a continuing contract, which is limited in time by the circulation of the notes to be received. They may be offered in payment of debts due to the State, in its own right, before or after, judgment, and without regard to the cause of indebtment.
Whatever may be the demerits of the plaintiff in error, they do not affect the nature and extent" of the obligation of. the State. And that obligation cannot be withdrawn from this paper. Into whosesoever hands it shall come, it carnes with it the pledge of the State to receive it in payment of its debts. In this case the páyment is made by the securities of Wood-ruff, and exacted by the State, to whose organization and management of the bank may be attributed its insolvency. In procuring the notes of the bank, these securities had a right to ' rely, and no doubt did rely, upon the guaranty of the State to receive them in' payment of debts.
In sustaining the application for a mandamus, the Supreme Court of the State exercised jurisdiction in the case. To that court exclusively belongs the question' of its. own jurisdiction. For the reasons stated, the judgment, of the Supreme Court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings to that court, as it may have jurisdiction, in conformity to the opinion of this court.
Mr. Justice CATRON, Mr. Justice DANIEL, Mr. Justice NELSON, and Mr. Justice GRIER dissented.