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The plaintiffs in all cases received paper money, instead of gold, despite the contracts' terms. The contracts and the bonds were written precisely to avoid currency debasement by requiring payment in gold coin. The paper money which was redeemable in gold was instead irredeemable based on Nortz v. United States, 294 U.S. 317 (1935).
The Series of 1882 was the first series that was uniformly payable to the bearer; it was transferable and anyone could redeem it for the equivalent in gold. This was the case with all gold certificate series from that point on, with the exception of 1888, 1900, and 1934. The series of 1888 and 1900 were issued to specific payees as before.
The Demand Notes' printed promise of payment "On Demand" was removed and the statement "This Note is a Legal Tender" was added. Legal tender status guaranteed that creditors would have to accept the notes despite the fact that they were not backed by gold, bank deposits, or government reserves, and had no interest.
Treasury holdings of gold in the US tripled from 6,358 in 1930 to 8,998 in 1935 (after the Act) then to 19,543 metric tonnes of fine gold by 1940. [3] The revaluation of gold referenced was an active policy decision made by the Roosevelt administration in order to devalue the dollar. [4]
Gold prices were set to end a record-breaking year on a positive note on Tuesday as robust central bank buying, geopolitical uncertainties and monetary policy easing fuelled the safe-haven metal's ...
FarmVille introduced a new Pot of Gold mini-game in honor of St. Patrick's Day 2010. After collecting gold pieces from generous FarmVille friends, they can then be redeemed for limited edition ...
It required the Secretary of the Treasury to redeem greenbacks in specie on demand on or after 1 January 1879. [9] The Act, however, did not provide for a specific mechanism for redemption. The Act, though, did allow the Secretary of Treasury to acquire gold reserves either via any federal surpluses or the issuance of government bonds.
The gold card also has a new dining cap, meaning that cardholders can only earn four points per dollar on restaurants up to $50,000; after that, it drops to only one point per dollar.