Connecticut Valley Lumber Co. v. Maine Central Railroad

103 A. 263, 78 N.H. 553, 1918 N.H. LEXIS 57
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedFebruary 5, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 103 A. 263 (Connecticut Valley Lumber Co. v. Maine Central Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut Valley Lumber Co. v. Maine Central Railroad, 103 A. 263, 78 N.H. 553, 1918 N.H. LEXIS 57 (N.H. 1918).

Opinion

Walker, J.

It is admitted by the plaintiff that its cause of action, if prosecuted in the courts of Canada, is barred,' or may be barred by statutory limitation. The statute referred, to (c. 37, Rev. Stat. Can. 1906) provides in s. 298 for the recovery from a railroad of damages caused by a fire started by a locomotive used by the railroad, whether guilty of negligence or not; and in s. 306 that “All actions or suits for indemnity for any damages or injury sustained by reason of the construction or operation of the railway shall be commenced within one year next after the time when such supposed damage is sustained, or, if there is continuation of damage, within one year next after the doing or committing of such damage ceases, and not afterwards.” As to so much of the plaintiff’s bridge as was located within the territorial boundaries of Canada, it is not doubted that the statutes of that province would be applicable in an action there. Hence the question arises whether, since the statutory .period of limitation prescribed in s. 306 became complete long before this suit was begun, it constitutes a defence which may be relied upon in this state.

It is too well settled to require the citation of authorities that, ordinarily, remedial procedure is governed by the law of the place where the suit is brought, although it may differ materially from the remedy established in the state or jurisdiction within which the cause of action arose. Each state is entitled to adopt for the guidance of its courts such rules or laws pertaining to the methods of procedure for the vindication of rights and the promotion of justice as it may deem convenient and reasonable; and litigants who resort to its courts or are compelled to appear therein cannot insist upon the trial of their rights by some other or different rules of procedure which may prevail in the place where the cause of action arose. While the rights and liabilities of parties under a foreign contract are to be determined according to the foreign law, the remedies of the forum must be observed. And this is equally true with reference to actions of tort. Beacham v. Portsmouth Bridge, 68 N. H. 382; MacDonald v. Railway, 71 N. H. 448, 450.

Statutes of limitation of actions, which do not abolish rights which have become barred thereby, have been held, with few excep *555 tions, to relate to the procedure and not to the essential rights of the parties, and to have, therefore, no extra-territorial effect. The mere fact that no action can be maintained upon a contract or for a tort in the state where the parties have lived since a right of action accrued, which appears to be barred by the local statute of limitations, does not constitute a valid defence to the merits of the controversy in another state, nor can it be set up as a bar to the action. If merely the remedy upon the cause of action has ceased to exist, in consequence of the statute of limitations of the state where the obligations or duties involved arose, an action upon the merits may be maintained in another jurisdiction. The foreign limitation in such a case is designed to regulate or limit the use that may be made of local procedure, and not to apply to or modify the essential duties assumed by the parties or to regulate or limit their method of procedure in another forum. This is in effect a finding of legislative intention, which has been so often recognized and enforced by common law courts that it has assumed the form and force of positive law in most jurisdictions.

Nearly one hundred years ago Judge Story held in LeRoy v. Crowninshield, 2 Mason 151, that a plea of the statute of limitations of the state where a contract was made is no bar to a suit brought in a foreign tribunal to enforce the contract. This result was reached, notwithstanding his severe criticism of the doctrine which upon principle he believed was wrong, because, (p. 176): “The error, if any has been committed, is too strongly engrafted into the law, to be removed without the interposition of some superior authority.” See Story Gonfl. Laws, s. 576; Townsend v. Jemison, 9 How. 407; 1 Wood Lim’s, p. 36.

Although the parties had lived in the state under whose laws the liability was incurred until the statutory limitation of that state took effect, it has been held in accordance with the general rule that such limitation was of no avail*in the courts of another state. Perkins v. Guy, 55 Miss. 153; Bulger v. Roche, 11 Pick. 36; Townsend v. Jemison, supra; Thompson v. Reed, 75 Me. 404. And Wharton (2 Confl. Laws, s. 537), says: “This is undoubtedly the rule in the absence of a statute of the forum to the contrary.” See Wood Lim’s, p. 323; Angelí Lim’s, p. 62. In Paine v. Drew, 44 N. H. 306, 320, the general rule was stated as follows: “We believe that the authorities, both from the civil and the common law, concur in establishing the rule, that the nature, validity, construction and effect of contracts is to be determined by the law of the place where the *556 contract is made or is to be performed; lex loci contractus. But that all the remedies for enforcing such contracts are regulated by the law of the place where such remedies are pursued; lex fori; and that ordinarily the statute of limitations of a State does not in anyway attach itself to or affect the contract; it is no part of the lex loci, but affects and limits the remedy merely, and belongs purely to the lex fori; that it does not operate as a discharge of the contract, or as a defense against the contract itself, but is interposed as a bar to the maintenance of an action; it limits the time within which the remedy must be pursued or applied.” It was accordingly held that an action may be maintained in our courts, when not barred by our statute of limitations, upon a contract made in another state, though action thereon was barred by the statute of that state. Doubtless it would be competent for the legislature to provide that when a foreign statute of limitations has become a bar to the maintenance of a suit upon a cause of action which arose in such foreign jurisdiction, it may be pleaded in bar of such suit here. Wharton Confl. Laws, s. 537 a. But in the absence of such legislative provision, the remedial procedure of another state or country cannot be enforced by the courts of this state. This principle of construction, however, is not of unlimited application. It is usually confined to causes of action which aré recognized at common law and those which are not discharged under the foreign law by the statutory lapse of time. 1 Wood Lim’s, s. 8; Lamberton v. Grant, 94 Me. 508, 518, 519; Eingartner v. Company, 103 Wis. 373; Davis v. Mills, 194 U. S. 451, 454; The Harrisburg, 119 U. S. 199; Rodman v. Railway, 65 Kan. 645; Negaubauer v.

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Bluebook (online)
103 A. 263, 78 N.H. 553, 1918 N.H. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-valley-lumber-co-v-maine-central-railroad-nh-1918.