Ware v. Hylton 3 Dallas 199 (1796)

AuthorLeonard W. Levy
Pages2834

Page 2834

Ware established the fundamental principle of constitutional law that a state act may not violate a national treaty. An act of Virginia during the Revolution sequestered sterling debts owed by Virginians to British subjects and provided that such debts be discharged on payment (in depreciated currency) to the state. The Treaty of Paris of 1783 provided that creditors should meet with no lawful impediments to the recovery of full value in sterling, and Article VI of the Constitution made treaties of the United States the supreme law of the land. Ware, a British subject, brought an action in a federal court seeking such a recovery from Hylton, a Virginian. The prewar debts of Virginians to British creditors exceeded $2,000,000. Justice JAMES IREDELL, on circuit, ruled that the treaty did not revive any debt that had been discharged, and on the WRIT OF ERROR from the circuit court, JOHN MARSHALL, for Hylton, argued that a United States treaty could not annul a statute passed when the state was sovereign. He also denied the authority of the Supreme Court to question the validity of a state law, arguing that the Constitution had not expressly granted such an authority.

Iredell persisted in his opinion expressed below, but Justice SAMUEL CHASE, supported by the concurring opinions of the remainder of the Justices, declared that the SUPREMACY CLAUSE (Article VI), operating retroactively, nullified the state act, thereby reviving the sterling debt. Chase cloaked his opinion in sweeping nationalist doctrine...

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