Fishburne v. Kunhardt

29 S.C.L. 556
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 15, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 29 S.C.L. 556 (Fishburne v. Kunhardt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fishburne v. Kunhardt, 29 S.C.L. 556 (S.C. Ct. App. 1844).

Opinions

Curia, per

Frost, J.

The plaintiff claims the negroes* the subject of the suit, under a mortgage from Eliza Mc-Burney, dated 29th September4, 1838, and conditioned to pay three notes, of which the last Was payable in October, 1840. The mortgagor was resident in South Carolina, and the negroes mortgaged were also held in this State, at the time of the mortgage, and until the sale' under execution to the defendant, and the mortgage was executed Whilst the mortgagor Was on a visit to the plaintiff, who was resident in Alabama. A statute of Alabama provides, “that all deeds and conveyances of personal property, in trust to secure any debt or debts, shall be recorded in the office of the clerk of the county court of the county wherein the person making the deed resides, within thirty,days, or else the samé shall be void against creditors and subsequent purchasers without notice.” The mortgage deed was not recorded in the State of Alabama, nor in South Carolina* until a short time before the sale to the plaintiff. In Ja* [560]*560nuary, 1839, Eliza McBurney confessed a judgment to N. A. Cohen, and from time to time other .judgments were entered against her. In March, 1842, the sheriff sold the negroes to the defendant, the plaintiff attending the sale and giving notice of his mortgage.

The defendant can complain of no fraud in the mortgage against himself, but having purchased under an execution against the mortgagor, the judgment is part of his title, and he is invested with all the rights of the judgment creditor, to impeach the validity of any transfer which the mortgagor may have made of the property purchased, to hinder or defraud her creditors. Jones vs. Crawford, 1 McMullan, 376.

The first objection to the title of the plaintiff is, that the mortgage under which he claims was not recorded in the State of Alabama within thirty days, and is therefore void as to creditors. The law of South Carolina does not require mortgages of personal property to be recorded further than by providing that that mortgage or sale which shall be first recorded in the office of the Secretary of State, shall be adjudged and held to be the first mortgage, notwithstanding any former or other mortgage for the same property. So that, unless the plaintiff’s mortgage be void for not being recorded in the State of Alabama, pursuant to the statute recited, the plaintiff has a good title. Generally, it is not necessary to consider any other law than that of the jurisdiction having cognizance of the cause, in deciding questions of property. But since personal property has, in contemplation of law, no locality, the right of property and disposition attending the person of the owner, who may dispose of it in any country, conflicts sometimes arise between the different claimants, through a diversity of the law of the domicil of the party, of the country in which the contract may be made, and of the country where the property may be situated. In this collision the jurisdiction in which the property is situated, must be paramount. Every country has the right of regulating the transfer of property within its territory, since no right to such property can be enforced except through its officers and tribunals. But this absolute power the comity of nations has qualified, from considerations of mutual interest, [561]*561and an enlarged and liberal respect to the rights of property. When, however, foreign laws interfere with the laws of the country where the parties to the contract seek to enforce it, the domestic law is preferred. In deference to the power and authority possessed by the country in which the property may be situated, or the party contracting may be domiciled, the leading principles of conflicting jurisprudence are adopted. Thus, in Story’s Conflict of Laws, sec, 283, it is laid down that “ the law of the owner’s domicil' should in all cases determine the validity of eveiy transfer, alienation or disposition made by the owner, whether it be inter vivos or post mortem, and this is regularly true, unless there is some positive or customary law of the country where they are situated, providing for special cases, or from the nature of the property it has a necessary implied locality,” Section 284: “But it does not follow that a transfer made by the owner, according to the law of the place of the actual situs of the property, would not as completely divest the title.” Section 280: “Where the contract is either expressly or tacitly to be performed in any other place, then the general rule is, in conformity to the presumed intention of the parties, that the contract, as to its nature, validity, obligation and interpretation, is to be governed by the law of the place of performance,” These principles, derived principally from the civilians, and supported in the treatise on the conflict of laws by their authority, are sustained by common law adjudications, Thompson vs. Ketchum, 8 Johnson’s R. 146. The lex loci contractus is to govern, unless the parties, by the terms of the contract, had in view7 a different place. Powers vs. Lynch, 3 Mass. R. 80. “ It is a principle too well known and established, and founded on reasons too obvious, to require proof or illustration, that the rights and duties of the parties to a contract are to be defined and enforced according to the law of the country where made, provided it does not appear, from the nature of the contract, or from other facts, that in contemplation of the parties, the performance of the contract has relation to the laws of another country.” Randall vs. Renselaer, 1 Johnson’s R. 94, The action was on a note made in France, and void there for want of a stamp. By the court; “The payee of this [562]*562note, though it was made in France, resided, at the time, in this State, where it was to be paid. The parties never contemplated exacting payment of this note in that country, and this would form a sufficient excuse here for not adhering rigidly to a matter extrinsic and formal as to the contract, though it might be necessary in order to sustain an action in the courts of France.” Dixon's Executors vs. Ramsay's Executors, 3 Cra. 323. C. J. Marshall: “All rights to personal property are admitted to be regulated by the laws of the country in which the testator lived, but the suits for those rights must be governed by the laws of the country in which the tribunal is placed. No man can sue in the courts of any country, whatever his rights may be, unless in conformity with the rules prescribed by the laws of that country.” By the common law a sale of goods may be valid without delivery. By the law of Louisiana, delivery is necessary to complete the transfer. It has been firmly settled by adjudications, that the transfer of personal property in that State is not complete, so as to pass the title against creditors, unless a delivery is made in conformity to the laws of that State, though the transfer is made by the owner in his foreign domicil, and would be good without delivery by the laws of that domicil. Story’s Conflict of Laws, section 336, notes. These principles all concur in maintaining the validity of the plaintiff’s mortgage, according to the law of South Carolina, where the property was situated, the mortgagor domiciled, and where, of course, from these circumstances, the parties must have contemplated the execution of the contract.

The registry Act of a State can have no effect beyond its territory, except in determining the validity of transfers of property in that State, when that question arises in the courts of another State.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.C.L. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fishburne-v-kunhardt-scctapp-1844.