There is but one point in this case upon which I desire to express an opinion. The point involves the question whether the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment payable in coin only. A majority of my associates are of the opinion that the plaintiff is not entitled to insist upon payment in coin, and the reason given is substantially the same as that given for a like conclusion in Fox v. Minor, ante, 111. My reasons *150for dissenting in this case, so far as the principal on the bond is concerned, are the same in part as those given by me in the case of Fox v. Minor; but so far as the sureties are concerned, they rest upon a different, though cognate foundation. In the opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Sawyer, the Specific Contract Act is assumed to be the only test of the question. In my judgment that Act is a sufficient test so far as the principal on the bond is concerned, but has no immediate bearing upon the question as against the sureties; nor do I find any occasion for going to the provisions of that Act to find a rule applicable to the principal, for in my judgment there are other grounds, upon which both principal and sureties can be held liable to pay coin, and which are therefore common to both.
But first, assuming that the Specific Contract Act is the sole test, and that under its provisions the principal can be made to pay coin but his sureties cannot, I hold that'°he can be made to do so in this action as well as in any other, and I so hold for the reasons which are stated in my opinion in Fox v. Minor. The idea that in this State and under our system of practice, which recognizes no distinction between the forms of actions, certain relief can be obtained by the same party against the same party in one action and not in another, based upon substantially the same state of facts, is new to me. If a plaintiff recovers under our system it is because of the facts which are stated in his complaint and not by reason of the form in which they are stated. As against the principal on the bond in suit, no facts can be stated in another action which are not stated in this, and if the plaintiff is entitled to recover gold at all, or, in any event, it is so entitled upon the facts stated in the present case. This seems to me to be too obvious for argument. If, as my associates hold, the plaintiff is entitled to recover gold as to the principal, but not as to the sureties, there is no difficulty in so adjudging in the present case, and so disposing of the whole matter in one suit. Under our system there is no legal impediment in the way of granting different measures of relief against different defendants if, *151under the law, such is the right of the plaintiff, in the same action. If there is, it does not occur to me, nor has it been suggested by my associates, either in this case, or in the case of Fox v. Minor. The only difficulty hinted at lies in the circumstance that this is an action on the official bond of the party in question, and that in order to recover gold an action would have to be brought on something else. The supposed difficulty, if it has any foundation, either in law or reason, which, as I conceive, it has not, rests upon the idea that where there is a written contract there can be no recovery for gold upon it, under the Specific Contract Act, unless it contains a covenant to pay gold. This idea finds no countenance in the provisions of that Act. Under that Act the plaintiff is entitled to recover upon either of two different conditions being found—first, a promise in writing by the defendant to pay gold; and second, a fiduciary relation between the plaintiff and the defendant, followed by a receipt of gold by the defendant while occupying that relation. In the former case the plaintiff must show a promise in writing, but in the latter he need not. If, in the latter case, there happens to be a written contract between the parties, and there is quite as likely to be one as not, it makes no difference whether it calls for gold or not, for the law steps in and says that the plaintiff is entitled to gold upon the sole ground that the defendant received the money in a fiduciary capacity, and the money so received was gold. If there happens to be a written contract, and it happens to call for gold, the plaintiff is entitled to recover gold upon both grounds; but if it does not happen to call for gold then he is still entitled to recover gold, but only upon the latter ground, and in either case the action is upon the written contract as the foundation of the plaintiff’s right to recover. So, were the principal in this case sued alone, and sued squarely upon his bond, the plaintiff would be entitled to recover gold upon alleging that the defendant occupied a fiduciary relation and received the money of the plaintiff in gold coin, notwithstanding the bond is silent upon that subject. Hence, as I have already said, the idea upon which it is *152assumed that the plaintiff cannot recover a gold judgment against the principal in this action (because it is upon the bond and the bond does not call for gold) finds no countenance in the Specific Contract Act or anywhere else, so far as my observation goes, except in the leading opinions in this case and in the case of Fox v. Minor. Where the parties to a contract, which bears interest, fail to insert a rate of interest in their contract, the law steps in and determines the rate of interest for them. So in the case of a written contract in which the parties have failed to specify the kind of money in which payment is to be made, the law steps in and determines the question by first ascertaining whether a fiduciary relation •exists between them, and if it does, gold is awarded.
Under the rule adopted by my associates in this case the door to the most stupendous frauds is opened, and those who have the collection, custody and disbursement of the public funds, and the sureties upon their official bonds, are invited to enter and divide the spoils. Under it those persons, as contradictory as it may seem, may lawfully do what the law has expressly prohibited under penalty of fine and imprisonment. Under it the Treasurer of State may, upon the expiration of his term of office, or at any other" time, pocket the hundreds of thousands in his vaults, paid by the people of the State in gold coin, as required by law, for the support of the Government, and quietly wait to be sued upon his official bond for its recovery, and when judgment is rendered against him legally satisfy the same in full with the same number of dollars in legal tender notes, making by the transaction a clear profit of a quarter or a half million in gold, according as the Treasury is more or less plethoric. The same is true of every other officer throughout the State who has anything to do with the collection or custody of public moneys. It is true that the law provides that any officer who may change in any way or use in any manner the public funds in his custody, other than as provided by law, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and punished by fine and imprisonment. But if he may lawfully do what this Court holds he may in this *153case, how can it be said that in so doing he has acted unlawfully ? He does nothing secretly, but acts openly and claims to be doing nothing to the legal wrong and injury of the State; on the contrary, he is willing to pay the State all that she can legally claim at his hands, and is willing, if she desires, to go into Court at once and confess judgment for that amount and then pay it on the spot. In legal tender notes, it is true; but if the State has no right to claim anything else, what right has she to punish him when he has done all that he can be legally required to do ? It certainly cannot be possible for the same Court to say to him to-day in one action before it “ what you propose to do is strictly legal,” and to-morrow, in another action involving the same subject matter, “ what you proposed to do yesterday and have done in the meantime is in violation of the law against crime, and you must therefore be fined and imprisoned.” The same act cannot be lawful and criminal at the same time.
Where consequences so absurd follow, it is certainly safe and judicious to look a little further into the matter and see whether the law is really as represented. If it is, the Courts are not responsible for the consequences, however absurd they may be.
It is proper for me to say at the outset that I do not claim that the sureties in this case are affected by the Specific Contract Act, or that the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment in express terms payable in coin, though I see no sufficient reason for not inserting those terms in the judgment. While I claim that the principal is bound by the Specific Contract Act, the same as in the case of Fox v. Minor, I admit that the sureties are not, for they have neither agreed to pay gold, nor have they received the money in a fiduciary capacity, or in any other capacity. The bond in this case does not belong to the same class as the bond in Irwin v. Backus or in Fox v. Minor, and is not therefore within the rule announced in the former case and contented for by me in the latter. What I do claim, however, is that under the laws of this State, as *154heretofore interpreted by this Court, the liability of the sureties is unaffected by the Legal Tender Act of Congress, and that the judgment against them, whether in terms a gold judgment or not, cannot be legally paid or satisfied by the tender of legal tender notes.
I do not propose to open the question whether the legislation of this State, to which I am about to refer, is or is not repugnant to the Legal Tender Act, and if so therefore unconstitutional, or whether this Court erred in deciding as it did in the cases to which I am about to refer. All that I propose to do is to show that under the laws of this State, as interpreted in the former decisions of this Court, the defendants in this case cannot discharge the claim of the plaintiff by the payment of legal tender notes, but can only do so by the payment of coin of the United States.
The General Revenue Act, passed on the 17th of May, 1861 (Statutes, 419, Sec. 2), provides that all taxes for State or county purposes “ shall be paid in the legal coin of the United States, or in foreign coin at the value fixed by the laws of the United States,” with a proviso that county taxes levied in accordance with any special Act may be collected in such funds as the special Act may designate.
“ An Act concerning the State revenue,” passed on the 4th of April, 1864 (Statutes 1863-4, p. 364), provides that “ all taxes upon real or personal estate, all poll or other taxes, and all licenses levied, in whole or in part, for the use and benefit of the State, shall be collected and paid into the State Treasury exclusively in the gold and silver coin of the United States, * * * and all dues to the public treasury of the State, or of any county or city, shall be payable and be paid exclusively in the gold and silver coin of the United States.”
This provision of the Act of the 17th of May, 1861, came before this Court in the case of Perry v. Washburn, 20 Cal. 318. The case was an application for a mandamus to compel the defendant, who was Tax Collector of the City and County of San Francisco, to receive from the relator legal tender notes in payment of his taxes, which the defendant claimed were *155payable only in United States gold and silver coin, or foreign coin at the value fixed by the laws of the United States. The mandamus was denied, the Court holding that legal tender notes were not legal tender in the payment of State and county taxes. The ground of the decision was that a tax was not a debt within the meaning of the Legal Tender Act, and that by the use of the terms, “ debts, public and private,” Congress only intended such obligations for the payment of money as are founded upon contract.
The Act of the 4th of April, 1864, came before this Court in Ex parte Whipple, on habeas corpus, at the January term, 1866. The case has not been reported. Whipple had been convicted of a violation of the law against gaming, and fined in the sum of one thousand dollars, and ordered to be imprisoned until the fine was paid at the rate of two dollars per day. He had tendered in payment of his fine the requisite sum in United States treasury notes, which had been refused on the ground that the fine was a public “ due ” within the meaning of the Act of the 4th of April, 1864, and therefore could be paid only in gold and silver coin of the United States. Thereupon he sued out a writ of habeas corpus and came before • this Court claiming to be entitled to be discharged from custody by reason of the premises. The Court denied his petition and remanded him, holding that United States treasury notes were not a legal tender in payment of the fine. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Mr. Justice Sawyer, who, among other things, said: “ We also think the fine in question in this case was required by the Act of the 4th of April, 1864, to be paid exclusively in the gold and silver coin of the United States.” So this Court held that the fine was a “ due to the public treasury,” in the language of that Act, and therefore payable only in United States gold and silver coin.
It is obvious from the statutes to which I have referred, that it is and has been the clear intent of the Legislature of this State to save its finances of all kinds from the operation of the Legal Tender Act of the Federal Government, and to *156allow nothing in the form of money, except gold and silver coin of the United States, to find its way into the Treasury of the State, or into the Treasury of any county or city. But, as if to leave no room for doubt or argument on that head, it has been expressly provided, in addition to requiring all taxes and public dues of every kind to be paid in coin, that any officer having to do with the public moneys who shall change the same into a different kind of money shall be deemed guilty of a felony and on conviction thereof shall be punished by fine or imprisonment. (Statutes 1863, p. 97, Secs. 3, 4.) This legislation necessarily, if constitutional, has the effect to completely nullify the Congressional legislation upon the subject of legal tender, so far as the payment of taxes and other public dues are concerned; or, which amounts to the same thing, to withdraw all questions touching, or in any way affecting State, county and city funds from the operation of the Legal Tender Act. The result has been, and is the same, as if the Legislature had provided in express terms that “ United States treasury notes shall not be a legal tender for the payment of taxes upon real or personal estate, poll or other taxes, or licenses, levied in whole or in part for the use and benefit of the State; or for the payment of any dues, of any kind whatever, to the public treasury of the State, or of any county or city; but gold and silver coin of the United States shall be and remain the only legal tender for the payment of the same, notwithstanding any law of Congress to the contrary.” Such being the case no argument is required to show that the money sued for in this case is a “ due ” to the public treasury of the County of Mendocino, and therefore within the rule requiring payment to be made in gold and silver coin of the United States, whether the judgment be entered, in terms, for coin or not; and, in my view, this conclusion is fully sustained by the decisions of this Court to which I have referred. If a judgment, in a criminal action, that the defendant do pay to the people of the State of California a certain sum of money, by way of punishment for his offense, is a “ due,” as was held in Ex parte Whipple, then, by parity of reason, a *157judgment in this case that the defendants do pay to the County of Mendocino the sum therein specified, on account of public money converted to his own use by a defaulting Treas-, urer, is also a “ due ” to the public treasury of the plaintiff, and can be satisfied only, as Whipple was made to satisfy his fine, by payment in gold and silver coin of the United States.
That the two cases to which I have referred are sound I have no doubt. There might be much said in addition to what has been said in those cases, and other cases, involving questions of currency decided by this Court in support of the validity of the legislation of this State and of the soundness of the doctrine announced in those cases, and for which I am now contending; but the question does not possess the interest which it once did, and I forbear further discussion. It is sufficient to say that where there are two or' more kinds of money, either of which is equally lawful and a legal tender for the payment of debts or the discharge of legal claims of any kind, it cannot, in the nature of things, be unlawful for individuals or States to elect in which kind they will transact their business or make and discharge their obligations; and, having elected, there cannot, in the nature of things, be any valid reason why they should not be held to their election ; to hold to a contrary rule would be to offer a premium for Punic faith and give countenance to moral dishonesty. The mere fact that two kinds of money exist in which parties may lawfully perform their promises, of different values in fact, if not in law, necessitates a choice between them, for the minds of contracting parties cannot meet intelligently until a common standard of value in fact has been agreed upon, and no amount of legislation can obviate such necessity. If it is lawful to pay gold it must of necessity be lawful to agree to pay it, and if both be lawful, the Courts may not only lawfully enforce the promise, but a refusal on their part to do so would outrage justice and shock the moral sense of mankind. This is truth crystalized, and no amount of blind patriotism, partisan clamor or legal sophistry can resolve it.
If, as this Court has repeatedly held, the Specific Contract *158Act is not repugnant to the Legal Tender Act, then by parity of reason the legislation of this State requiring all public dues to be paid in coin is not; for they both rest upon the same foundation—the right to elect between two mediums of payment, each of which is equally lawful—a right which the Federal Government has never found it necessary to deny and has not denied to itself or anybody else, but has itself exercised and still does. If it is lawful for the Federal Government to collect its customs in gold, it is lawful for the State of California to collect its taxes and other public dues in gold, and that, too, independent of the question whether her sove reign power of taxation does not carry with it the minor power to determine in what currency her taxes shall be paid. If it is constitutional for -the Legislature of this State—and this Court has repeatedly decided that it is—to require the principal upon the bond in suit to pay the money in suit in gold coin, then for the same reason it is constitutional for the Legislature to require his sureties to do it. If the Legislature has required the former to do it by the passage of the Specific Contract Act, then it has required both him and his sureties to do it by the passage of the Acts to which I have referred.
But, as already stated, I do not propose to discuss this question. My present purpose has no further scope than to show that the claim in suit is a “public due” which cannot be paid, under the laws of this State and the former decisions of this Court, except in coin; that the collection and payment of “ public dues ” stand precisely where they stood before the passage of the Legal Tender Act—precisely where they would have stood had that Act never been passed, and that if it is possible for the Legislature to so declare, it has done so in language not to be misunderstood.
I am of the opinion that the judgment in this case, so far as it involves the question in hand, should be affirmed.
Mr. Chief Justice Cubeey did not express any opinion.