by bdmarti » Mon 09 Oct 2006, 14:04:25
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GoIllini', '
')OK; why does the federal government then also have the power to "regulate the value of money?" More importantly, the federal government isn't charged with the power to "measure gold into 1-oz coins and regulate them like weights and measures"; it's charged with the power to make, or "coin" money.
Just so we all know that I don't just make things up, I'd like to quote from the supreme court case Hepburn v. Griswold of 1870.
This case said the "legal tender" law passed under Lincoln, and resulting in the inflated "greenbacks" was not legal, in that the government could not enforce "legal tender" for debts incurred prior to the passage of a legal tender law for a number of constitutional reasons.
Here's a quote from the opinion of the court:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')But can a power to impart these qualities to notes, or promises to pay money, when offered in discharge of pre-existing
debts, be derived from the coinage power, or from any other power expressly given?
It is certainly not the same power as the power to coin money. Nor is it in any reasonable or satisfactory sense an appropriate or plainly adapted means to the exercise of that power. Nor is there more reason for saying that it is implied in, or incidental to, the power to regulate the value of coined money of the United States, or of foreign coins.
This power of regulation is a power to determine the weight, purity, form, impression, and denomination of the several coins, and their relation to each other, and the relations of foreign coins to the monetary unit of the United States.Nor is the power to make notes a legal tender the same as the power to issue notes to be used as currency. The old Congress, under the Articles of Confederation, was clothed by express grant with the power to emit bills of credit, which are in fact notes for circulation as currency; and yet that Congress was not clothed with the power to make these bills a legal tender in payment. And this court has recently held that the Congress, under the Constitution, possesses, as incidental to other powers, the same power as the old Congress to emit bills or notes; but it was expressly declared at the same time that this decision concluded nothing on the question of legal tender. Indeed, we are not aware that it has ever been claimed that the power to issue bills or notes has any identity with the power to make them a legal tender. On the contrary, the whole history of the country refutes that notion. The States have always been held to possess the power to authorize and regulate the issue of bills for circulation by banks or individuals, subject, as has been lately determined, to the control of Congress, for the purpose of establishing and securing a National currency; and yet the States are expressly prohibited by the Constitution from making anything but gold and silver coin a legal tender. This seems decisive on the point that the power to issue notes and the power to make them a legal tender are not the same power, and that they have no necessary connection with each other.
....
We are obliged to conclude that an act making mere promises to pay dollars a legal tender in payment of debts previously contracted, is not a means appropriate, plainly adapted, really calculated to carry into effect any express power vested in Congress; that such an act is inconsistent with the spirit of the Constitution; and that it is prohibited by the Constitution.
a couple years after this case, two new "friendly" judges were appointed and this ruling was overturned, along with the first 100 years of precedent in the US in terms of currency laws.