The plaintiffs procured a charter-party on the Live Oak, a vessel of which the defendant was master and part owner. The vessel at the time was lying in the port of Cardiff. The defendant executed and delivered the plaintiffs on the 15 th of April, 1866, the following agreement:
“London, 15 April, 1866.
Messrs. Stringer, Pembroke & Co.,
8 Austin Friars, London.
Gentlemen:
In consideration of your having procured a charter for the ship “Live Oak” from the Chincha Islands to Spain, hereby undertake to pay you a brokerage of five per cent, on the estimated amount of chartered freight — ship lost or not lost; such brokerage being due on the signing of the charter-party, but if not then paid, may under your order be deducted by the consignee from the freight upon settlement.
Gentlemen, yours respectfully,
N. H. Coombs.”
By the charter-party the freight was to be paid at the rate of eighteen hard Spanish dollars per ton of 2210 lbs. English, &c.
The English currency is in pounds, shillings and pence. The amount due was to be ascertained by reference to the value of hard Spanish dollars. Neither Gorman, Mexican or American dollars can be referred to as the measure of value. They may differ in value from the hard Spanish dollar, which was agreed upon and which alone would satisfy the terms of the charter.
The contract was made in London and the parties must be governed by the law of the place. The plaintiffs were there entitled to five per cent, of the freight computed at the rate specified in the charter-party. Their claim could only be satisfied by the payment of one-twentieth of the freight reckoned according to the terms of the charter and payable in London. If the debt is paid here, the plaintiffs should receive what their five per cent, was worth at the time when, and the place where, it was payable, in the currency of this country and interest. Nothing less would be just
“The proper rule,” remarks Story in his Conflict of Laws, § 309, “would seem to be, in all cases, to allow that sum in the currency of the country where the suit is brought, which should approximate most nearly to the amount to which the party is entitled in the country where the debt is payable, calculated by the real par,, and not by the nominal par, of exchange.” If the currency of the country has become depreciated, then depreciation ought to-be allowed for. Without that is done, justice is not done. The' party to whom the debt is due fails to receive the amount which is his due. If the contract were for specific articles, the measures of which though nominally the same were really different, would any doubt that the measure in use in the country whére the contract was to be performed, would be the one which is to govern in that where it is sought to be enforced ? But the principle must be the same whether it applies to a measure of quantity or one of value.
The case of Wood v. Watson, 53 Maine, 300, does not apply. That related to the damage where a foreign bill of exchange had been protested. As the damages in such case had been settled by a long continued series of decisions based upon such usage, which formed a part of the law of the State equally as if determined by statute, at ten per cent., it was held, and correctly, that the rule could not be changed by reason of any monetary crisis, and that such change would be a legislative rather than a judicial act.
It is apparent, therefore, that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover the value of one-twentieth of the freight, earned and payable in London.
By the agreement of the parties “the estimated amount of chartered freight was thirty-three thousand and three hundred dollars, ($33,300) hard Spanish dollars. Upon this sum it is agreed that the plaintiffs were in London, on the fifteenth day of April, 1866, entitled to five per cent, from the defendant, and that said five per cent, remains wholly unpaid, to recover which, this action is brought.”
“Five per cent, of the estimated amount of chartered freight” to which the plaintiffs are entitled for brokerage, is five per cent, of thirty-three thousand three hundred hard Spanish dollars. It is neither more nor less than that amount. It is what the plaintiffs would have received had the defendant performed his contract. It has relation to the sum from which it is to be deducted, and is necessarily a portion of that sum. It would not be five per cent, “of the estimated amount” if paid in a depreciated currency, or in dollars of less value than “hard Spanish dollars.” Five per cent, then, would be sixteen hundred and sixty-five hard Spanish dollars, for it was to be from the freight earned, and in the 'hard Spanish. dollars, in which the freight was payable. The
By the statutes of the United States, the Spanish dollar is equivalent in value to our silver dollar, and it is made a legal tender for the payment of all debts and demands, at that rate by Act of Congress passed April 10, 1806, § 1, 2 U. S. Stats. at Large, 374, c. 22.
It is well known that legal tender notes are of variable and fluctuating value. The plaintiffs are entitled to payment in coin, or in currency equivalent in value to the coin when and where the debt was payable. The value of legal tender notes may change between the date of a writ and the rendition of judgment — between the date of an execution and any service thereon. If judgment were to be rendered for the amount due in the currency of the country, the plaintiffs might receive more or less than was due as the currency should oscillate in value. Accordingly, the courts of the United States have recognized the fact that there are two descriptions of lawful money under the Acts of Congress. Bronson v. Rodes, 7 Wallace, 229, Butler v. Horwitz, 7 Wallace, 258. To avoid the fluctuations in value of legal tender notes as compared with gold. and silver coin, they have ordered, when the contract is payable in gold and silver coin or specie, that executions should issue payable in gold and silver. Trebilcock v. Wilson, 12 Wallace, 687. The courts of various States following the principles adopted and acted upon by those of the United States, have ordered similar judgments and executions. Phillips v. Dugan, 1 Ohio St. R., 466, Independent Ins. Co. v. Thomas, 104 Mass. 192.
By R. S. 1871, c. 81, § 1,the Supreme Judicial Courtis authorized to make, by general rules, such alterations in the forms of writs “as changes in the law or other causes require.” An execution is a writ. Authority to change a writ implies authority to change an execution issued upon a judgment rendered in a suit commenced by such writ.
To this end, judgment should be entered specifically for the current coin of the United States, and execution should so issue for the debt. The judgment for costs should be general as that may be satisfied by payment of either hind of lawful money. In this way alone the payment of what is due, neither more nor less, will be enforced. Judgment accordingly.