Page:Economic History of Virginia Vol 2.djvu/382

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

to issue immediately upon the failure to pay at the appointed time.[1] In older to collect the debts which the planters in the Colony owed them, whether secured by a conditional deed or not, it seems to have been the custom of the English traders to send to Virginia agents who had, under powers of attorney carefully placed on record, the authority to represent their principals in suits if it was found necessary to have recourse to law to recover what was due. These men, like the ordinary factor who accompanied a cargo of goods, represented very frequently more than one trader. Merchants engaged in widely different branches of business seemed to have thus employed the same person.

By the provisions of a law passed at the session of 1657-58, the creditor was deprived of all right to require the settlement of a debt on demand, if made payable in tobacco, except in the interval between October 10th and

  1. Records of York County, vol. 1638-1648, p. 296, Va. State Library. See also Records of General Court, p. 171. In December, 1647, Robert Vaulx, merchant, purchased from Ralph Wormeley, forty hogsheads of tobacco for £200, and conveyed a large estate to secure the payment, the property, however, to go back to him on condition that he delivered the £200 on the Royal Exchange, London, within forty days after the arrival of the Desire at that port, or upon the first day of the following May, whichever should come about first. Records of York County, vol. 1638-1648, p. 302, Va. State Library.