Armstrong, Cator & Co. v. Best

17 S.E. 14, 112 N.C. 59
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 17 S.E. 14 (Armstrong, Cator & Co. v. Best) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong, Cator & Co. v. Best, 17 S.E. 14, 112 N.C. 59 (N.C. 1893).

Opinion

ShepheRD, C. J.:

If the contract, which is the subject of this action, was made in this State, it is well settled that it would be void by reason of the common law disability of the feme defendant to make any contract whatever upon which a personal judgment can be rendered against her, except in the cases provided by statute. Pippen v. Wesson, 74 N. C., 437; Dougherty v. Sprinkle, 88 N. C., 300; Baker v. Garris, 108 N. C., 218; Flaum v. Wallace, 103 N. C., 296; Farthing v. Shields, 106 N. C., 289.

The plaintiff's, however, insist that the contract was made in the city-of Baltimore, Maryland, their place of business, where'thej’' accepted the proposal of the defendant by shipping the goods according to her 'order. In this thej^ are correct, for if a contract is completed in another State “ it makes no difference in principle whether the citizen of this State goes in person or sends an agent or writes a letter across the' boundary line between the two States. ” Milliken v. Pratt, 125 Mass., 374. As was said by Lord Lynclhurst: “ If I, residing in England, send down my agent to Scotland, and he makes contracts for me there, it is the same as if Imyself went there and made them.” Pattison v. Mills, 1 Dow. & Cl., 342. So if one in New York orders goods from Boston, “either by a carrier whom he points out or in the usual course of trade, this would be a completion, a making of -the contract, and *61 it would be a Boston contract whether he gave no note or a note payable in Boston, or one without express place of payment.” 2 Parsons’ Con., 586.

The contract, then, being a Maryland contract, it is next insisted that it is one which a feme covert could haAre made in that State, and therefore enforceable in the Courts of North Carolina. We are by no means certain that the preseiit contract is a valid one according to the laws of Maryland, as the statute of that State seems to recognize the legal capacity of a married woman only to the extent of contracting with reference to property acquired by her “skill, industry or personal labor.” Assuming, however, that it is a valid contract in Maryland, we will proceed to the examination of the question whether it should be enforced by the Courts of this State.

It is well settled that the law of one State has proprio vigore no force or authority beyond the jurisdiction of its j own Courts, and that whatever effect is given to it by the j Courts of foreign countries or other States is the result of that international comity (more properly called private international law) which is the product of modern civilization. Hornthall v. Burwell, 109 N. C., 10. It is left to each State or nation to say how far it will recognize this comity and to 'what extent it will be permitted to control its own laws. It has, however, been very generally settled that all matters bearing upon the execution, the interpretation and the validity of a contract are to be determined by the law of the place where the contract is made, and if valid there it is valid everywhere. Taylor v. Sharp, 108 N. C., 377. An exception is maintained by some of the continental jurists as to the capacity of a contracting party, and they generally hold that the incapacity of the domicile attaches to and follows the person wherever he may go. We remarked in Taylor v. Sharp, supra, that this was not con- *62 siderod by Mr. Justice Stoby (Conflict Laws, 103, 104) as the doctrine of the common law, and we also stated the conclusion of Gbay, C. J., in Milliken v. Pratt, supra, that the general current of the English and American authorities is in favor of holding that a contract, which by the law of the place is recognized as lawfully made by a capable person, is valid everywhere, although the person would not under the law of the domicile be deemed capable of making it. The proposition, though denied by Dr. Wharton as to infants and femes covert (Conflict of Laws, 112, 118), seems to be generally accepted in this country in so far as it relates to the enforcement of contracts in courts other than those of the domicile. If, for example, the plaintiffs were suing upon the present contract in the Courts of Maryland, the defendant could not, it is thought, avail herself of the incapacity of her domicile, but the lex loci contractus would prevail. But quite a different question is presented when the action is brought in the forum of the domicile. In such a case a very important qualification of private international law is to be considered, and this is that no State or nation will enforce a foreign law which is contrary to its fixed and settled policy. In Bank of Augusta v. Earle, 13 Peters, 519, Chief Justice Tabby, speaking for the Coirrt, said: “The comity thus extended to other nations is no impeachment of sovereignty. It is the voluntary act of the nation by which it is offered, and is inadmissible when contrary to its policy or prejudicial to its interests.” To the same effect is the language of Stoby, that no State will enforce a foreign law if it be “repugnant to its policy or prejudicial to its interests.” Conflict of Laws, 37. That this qualifying principle is applicable to cases like the present is manifest, not only by reason and necessity, but also by the decisions of other Courts. Even in Milliken v. Pratt, supra, in which the lex loci contractus is pushed to the extreme limit, it is *63 suggested that where the incapacity of a married woman is the settled policy of the State “for the protection of its own citizens, it could not be held by the Courts of that State to yield to the law of another State in which she might undertake to contract.”

In Robertson v. Queen, 87 Tenn., 445, the contract was made by the feme defendant in Kentucky, where she resided and under whose laws she was capable of contracting. An action was brought in Tennessee,;and the Court held, as we did in the similar cases of Sharp v. Taylor, supra, and Wood v. Wheeler, 111 N. C., 231, that the plaintiff was entitled to recover. The Court, however, said: “If this were a suit against a married woman, a citizen of this State, on a contract made out of the State, there would be much force in the insistance of the defendant.”

In Johnson v. Gawtry, 11 Mo. App., 322, it was held that where a married woman, having a separate estate in land in Missouri, makes a contract in another State, her capacity to make the contract and its validity are to be determined by the law of Missouri, in a suit in a Missouri Court to enforce such contract.

In Bank v. Williams, 46 Miss., 618, the contract was made in Louisiana, where it would have been valid against the feme defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.E. 14, 112 N.C. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-cator-co-v-best-nc-1893.