Crippen v. Laighton

44 A. 538, 69 N.H. 540
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 5, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 44 A. 538 (Crippen v. Laighton) 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
Crippen v. Laighton, 44 A. 538, 69 N.H. 540 (N.H. 1899).

Opinion

Blodgett, C. J.

The question submitted is whether the plaintiffs’ bill (or action at law, if they are permitted to amend) can *547 be maintained; or, in other words, whether a cause of action unknown to the common law, and which exists only by reason of a local law of the state of Kansas, can, or ought to be, enforced in this jurisdiction.

The several states of the Union do not stand in their relations to each other altogether like foreign countries. They are all subject in many respects to a superior sovereignty, and to numerous laws common to all of them. They are in various ways mutually dependent upon each other. To a large extent their interests are common. Their personal and commercial intercourse is constant and without restriction. Their political and business relations are equally intimate. Many of their relative rights and duties are declared by a “ carefully prepared instrument” which controls them all. They are not several or forr eign, but United States.

Nevertheless, each state is a sovereign state, except only as it is subject to the federal constitution, under which, for all purposes embraced in it, “ the states and the citizens thereof are one, united under the same sovereign authority and governed by the same laws. In all other respects, the states are necessarily foreign to and independent of each other, their constitutions and forms of government being, although republican, altogether different, as are their laws and institutions ” (Bank of Augusta v. Earle, 13 Pet. 519), “ and their acts have, consequently, no extra-territorial authority.” Sedg. Stat. Law 60; Blanchard v. Russell, 13 Mass. 1.

Such being the relation and position of the states in regard to each other, a uniformity of state laws is universally recognized as desirable, but has hitherto been found impracticable. There is no reasonable probability of such uniformity in the immediate future through the action of the states. It is in fact apparent that, by reason of their location, the peculiarities of their soil and climate, the character of their people, their business and commercial interests, and a multitude of other conditions and circumstances, a law beneficial in one state might be injurious in another. To make a law of Massachusetts equally valid and enforceable in Oregon might, and probably would, do injustice to the citizens of both states, or to make the laws of both identical.

The federal constitution declares that “ full faith and credit shall be given in each state to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other state. And the congress may, by general laws, prescribe the manner in which such acts, records, and proceedings shall be proved, and the effect thereof.” Const. U. S.,art. 4, s. 1. Under this provision, the congress has enacted that “the acts of the legislature of any state or territory, or of any country subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, *548 shall be authenticated by having the seals of such state, territory, or country affixed thereto. The records and judicial proceedings of the courts of any state . . . shall be proved or admitted in any other court within the United States by the attestation of the clerk and the seal of the court annexed, . . . together with a certificate of the judge, chief justice, or presiding magistrate that the said attestation is in due form. And the said records and judicial proceedings, so authenticated, shall have such faith and credit given to them in every court within the United States as they have by law or usage in the courts of the state from which they are taken.” U. S. E. S., s. 905.

By this statute the mode of authentication of both state statutes and of the judgments of state courts, and the effect of such judgments in other states, are determined. Mills v. Duryee, 7 Cranch 481; Booth v. Clark, 17 How. 322. But nothing is said as to the effect of ^ state’s “ public acts ”; nor, so far as we have been able to ascertain, is there a word to be found touching their meaning, or relating to the power of congress to prescribe their effect, in any judgment of the United States supreme court. Presumably, however, the words “ public acts ” mean “ public statutes”; and the inference is strengthened by the first clause of the statute above cited.

Does the second clause of the first section of article 4 confer upon congress the power to prescribe the “ effect ” the statutes of one state shall have in another ? Story says: “ Some learned judges have thought that the word ‘thereof’ had reference to the proof or authentication, so as to read, ‘ and to prescribe the effect of such proof or authentication’; but that the sounder interpretation is, that it refers to the antecedent words, ‘ acts, records, and proceedings,’ so as to read, ‘ and to prescribe the effect of such acts, records, and proceedings.’” 3 Sto. Const.,. ss. 1306, 1307.

That this is the correct view in respect to judgments is established. Hanley v. Donoghue, 116 U. S. 1; Renaud v. Abbott, 116 U. S. 277. “But congress has never acted on the power in the constitution as to the public acts or laws of the states any further than to declare that they shall be authenticated by having the seals of the respective states affixed thereto.” Sedg. Stat. Law 63.

If it is an evil that the laws, or any particular class of laws, of one state cannot be directly enforced in another, the mischief can be easily cured by congress. It can, for example, provide by general law that the statutes of any state, making stockholders of a corporation in any manner or form liable for the debts of the corporation, shall have the same force and effect in any other state; or, more generally, that every statutory cause of action that may accrue to one person against another in one *549 state, including or excluding penal actions, shall be enforceable in every other state; or, any obligation not penal, accruing to one person from another under the law of any state, shall be equally obligatory upon and enforceable against the obligor in any state where he may be found. And, in the absence of such action by congress, the legislature of this state might provide that all causes of action arising in other jurisdictions should be enforced here by the same method of procedure as there provided,— as, e. g., it has done in regard to wills. P. S., c. 186, s. 5.

If the remedy would be worse than the disease,— if any federal statute on the subject in the power of congress to enact, or any statute within the authority of our legislature to adopt, would create more evils than it would cure (2 Kent 117, 118),—■ it affords a sufficient and, as we think, a decisive reason against the policy, if not the power, of enforcing such obligations without a statute.

It is universally agreed that the laws of a state have, ex proprio vigore,

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Bluebook (online)
44 A. 538, 69 N.H. 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crippen-v-laighton-nh-1899.