We listened with pleasure to the argument of Mr. Teates. He was candid, and seems to have investigated the subject with much diligence; but we cannot concur in his conclusions.
He says, the bond is void for want of a consideration. The reply is: 1st. A bond needs no consideration. The solemn act of sealing and delivering is a deed, a thing done, which, by the rule of the common law, has full force and effect, without *457any consideration. Nudum pactum applies only-to simple contracts — deeds need no consideration, except such as take effect under the doctrine of uses, or such as are made void' by the statutes of Elizabeth as against creditors and purchasers for valuable consideration, but are valid, as at common law, between the parties.
This is a misapprehension of the law into which many of the profession seem to haye fallen by reason of inaccuracy-in ' Blackstone’s Commentaries, who, we take occasion to say, is a popular, and not an accurate text writer, like Coke or Eearne. For instance, Blackstone adopts the definition given by Coke of a deed — “ an instrument of writing, on parchment or paper, sealed and delivered ” — and yet he afterwards goes on to say, “ a deed must be supported by a sufficient consideration.” His remark is evidently to be understood, as having reference to deeds taking effect under the doctrine of uses, and to the statutes of Elizabeth. Eor, beyond all question, a deed is binding between the parties without any consideration. 2nd. There was, in oúr case, a valuable consideration. The slave bargained for, was delivered to the defendant at the-date of sale in September 1864, and he had his services until 1865; and upon the supposition that the thing sold, to-wit: the negro, was in fact a freeman, and not the subject of' sale from and after the proclamation of Jan. 1, 1868, the defendant had notice of this fact, as well as the plaintiff, and according to the rule of law and of equity, and of justice in its ordinary sense, “ he who is to have the gain should bear the loss,” as is said, Buie v. Parker, ante 131. The matter depended upon future contingencies, and. the defendant'gave his bond for the price, and took the chances.
The reference made by Mr. Yeates to the law authorizing an inquiry in regard to contracts 'payable expressly or impliedly in currency, and allowing a jury to fix the value thereof, has no application to our case, for it turns not on the value, but on the validity of the obligation sued upon.
. In the second place, Mr. Yeates took the position that the bond was void as against the policy of the law, in this: By the proclamation of the President, of January 1st, 1863, all slaves *458are set free from and after that date. So that at the time of ■ the sale, the person sold was not a slave, but a free man.
Admitting the premises, we do not sée how the conclusion follows. Say, according to the view of President Lincoln, the person sold was a free man at the time of the sale, how could it obstruct his policy, that the supposed title to the person as a slave was afterwards transferred from A to B. Certainly it could mate no difference in legal effect, whether the-individual was held as a slave by the one or the other, provided, under the existing state of things, the individual was. to be held as a slave in the same locality.
But we do not admit the premises, to-wit: that by force of the proclamation of the President, all slaves are set free from and after January 1st, 1863.
By the act of Congress of July, 1862, “The slaves of persons who shall hereafter give aid to the rebellion, taking refuge within the lines of the army,” and “ all slaves captured from such persons, or deserted by them, and coming under the control of the government of the United States,” and “all slaves of such persons, found or being within any place, occupied by rebel forces, and afterwards occupied by the forces of the United States, shall be deemed captives of war, and shall be forever free of their servitude, and not again held as slaves.”
. This act of the legislative branch of the government of the United States is, by its terms, confined to slaves personally, and applies only to such individuals as may come under the control of the government. It recognizes the existence of slavery, and cannot, in any point of view, have the effect of abolishing and making unlawful the institution of slavery in the States where the institution then existed and was recognized by law.
The proclamation of the President is simply a war measure of the executive branch of the government, called for in order to announce what States were in rebellion, and to what localities the act of 1862 was applicable. It does not, perhaps, and indeed the President, without the concurrence of the legislative branch of the government, could not arrogate to him*459self the power, as a war measure, to abolish and' make unlawful the institution of slavery in the States declared by him t@ be in rebellion. So far from assuming power to do so, the proclamation is, by its terms, confined to slaves personally, and in its practical effect it was limited to such slaves individually as should come under the control of the armies of the United States. So the institution of slavery was not abolished or made unlawful, either by the act of 1862, or by the proclamation of the President. See “Whitingon the War Powers of the President,” 5-6.
In like manner the military Order of Gen. Schofield, after the Surrender, simply had the effect of announcing, that the whole State was then under the control of the army of the United States, and that by force of the act of 1862, and the proclamation of the President, and the order of Gen. Scho-field, as military commander, all persons then held as slaves in the State of North Carolina were free and should be se» treated. This operated upon persons then held as slaves in the State of North Carolina. But surely a military order could» not have effect of abolishing or making unlawful the institution of slavery. That was left as an act that could only be-done by the government of the United States, or by an ordinance of a convention of the people of the State. Apart from the action of the government of the United States, and the convention of the State, there could have been, in legal contemplation, no more wrong in procuring other slaves to supply the place of those taken from us by the results of the war, than in buying other property to put in the place of that taken from us by the armies of the United States and of the Confederate States.
So our case comes back to this point; in April, 1864, the plaintiff, as administrator, in the county of Hertford, which was not within the lines or under the control of the army of the United States, offers for sale, according to the laws of the State, and does sell at auction, a negro man slave. The defendant becomes the purchaser, pays a part of the price, takes the slave, and executes his bond for the balance of the price. In what point of view can this transaction be considered *460against public policy, or as so violating good -morals as to .authorize a court of justice to refuse-to enforce the contract ? As is said Phillips v. Hooker, Phil. Eq. 193 “ the. transaction was one in the ordinary course of business, done without any reference to the operations of the government of'the United States, or of the Confederate States, without any criminal intent to aid the rebellion) and to hold the contract void, Will simply have the effect to encourage dishonesty.”
It was not against the public policy of the State of North Carolina, according to the laws then existing and recognized both by the wrongful government then in power, and the rightful government which Was, for the time, deprived of its power. It was not against the policy of the act of Congress of 1862, nor of the proclamation, of the President; for, as wehave seen,it could not affect that policy, in localities .not under the control of the armies of the United States, whether a person was held as a slave by A or B,- provided, under-the circumstances, he was to be the slave of some person. So far as good morals are involved, the matter is not to be viewed, as we conceive, from a standpoint, whore the institution of slavery is deemed wicked and in violation of the laws of God and of the rights .of man, but from a standpoint where the institution was considered as established and made lawful by the laws of the State, and. recognized and protected by the Constitution.of the United States, and had been handed down and acted.upon from father to- son among our people, from the .first settlement of the colony of Carolina.
The Court is unable to see any ground, either on the score •of public policy or of good morals, upon which it shouldrefuse to enforce this contract, and allow the defendant to escape the payment of a just debt.
Woodfin v. Sluder, Phil. 200, is in point. Time, the question was not made, but that proves that it had not entered into the head of any one to conceive that the act of hiring a slave or of .selling a slave in North-Carolina outside of the lines of the United States Army, was against public policy, or against good morals.
The idea, that the subsequent action of Congress and the *461•ordinance of our Convention, can have tbe effect by relation, or by post-liminy, to enlarge tbe operation of tbe act of 1862 and of tbe proclamation, so as to give to those measures tbe effect of abolishing slavery, and making the institution unlawful at tbe date of this transaction, and consequently, making tbe -act of tbe parties wicked and against good morals, has, in our ■opinion, nothing sound to rest on, either in law, ethics, or good sense. “ Coming events cast their shadows before,” and “ events accomplished ” do not cast a shade behind, so as to-make unlawful that which, at the time it was done, was not against law. This would violate the immutable principle of justice adopted in our Constitution, by which ex post facto laws are fobidden.
Per Curiam. Judgment affirmed.