Green v. Sarmiento

10 F. Cas. 1117, 3 Wash. C. C. 17
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 15, 1810
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 10 F. Cas. 1117 (Green v. Sarmiento) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Sarmiento, 10 F. Cas. 1117, 3 Wash. C. C. 17 (circtdpa 1810).

Opinion

WASHINGTON, Circuit Justice

(charging jury). I shall consider the validity of the plea of bankruptcy, and discharge at Tene-riffe, first, in relation to the original debt, independent of the judgment on which this-action is founded; and secondly, as it may affect that judgment.

First, the rule is, that the law of the. country where a contract is made, is the law of the contract, wherever performance is demanded; and the same law which creates the charge, will be regarded, if it operate a discharge of the contract. The laws of one-country, can have in themselves no extraterritorial force, except so far as the comity of other nations may extend to give them effect; and where is the nation that will, or ought to acknowledge the validity of foreign laws, legislating over persons not within the jurisdiction of such foreign country, and affecting contracts entered into elsewhere, and with a view to other laws? It is said, that France acknowledges the binding force of foreign bankrupt laws, to discharge the foreign debtor, from all his contracts, wherever-made. If this be so. I can only say, that the comity of that nation, is marked by a whimsical, and I think an irrational opposition, to that which obtains in most other countries. She disregards the decisions of foreign prize courts, so far as they affect the subjects of France; although they are courts of the law of nations, and although all the world are-nominally parties to the causes they decide.. and the captor and captured, are, in reality, the immediate parties; and yet she submits to foreign municipal laws, affecting the interests of French subjects, upon the ground of a mere fiction, which in reality favours, only the subjects of the country, where the law operates to the unjust exclusion of her own subjects. It is said, that the rale observed in the state of Pennsylvania, is different from that which is approved by the court as the general rule: and to prove this, the case of Millar v. Hall, 1 Dall. [1 U. S.] 229. has boon cited and relied upon. In the case of Banks v. Greenleaf [Case No. 959). decided [1118]*1118ten or twelve years ago in the circuit court of Virginia, upon the ground that a contract made in Virginia, was not discharged by the insolvent lawr of Maryland, Millar v. Hall was cited. It was then, and continues to be my opinion, that that case is consistent with the rule before laid down; the debt having accrued at Baltimore, where the goods w'ere sold, and the money received. If then the general rule be correctly stated, it is essential to the support of the defendant’s de-fence, set up in this cause, in relation to the original contract, to prove, that it was made at Teneriffe, or in some place governed by Spanish laws. No direct proof of this fact has been given, and certainly the circumstance of the defendant, having generally resided at Tene-riffe, from the year 1790 to the year 1810, furnishes a very slender ground for presuming it. Occasional absences have been admitted, at which times the contract in question, might have been made at Madeira; or it may have accrued there, although the defendant had never left the island of Teneriffe; since it does not appear where Mahony, the other partner, lived; and since the debt might have been contracted, in a variety of ways at Madeira, though both partners had always resided at Teneriffe. If then this debt was not contracted at Teneriffe. the cause is against the defendant, independent of any change produced by the judgment; but as it is possible the jury may not view the evidence in the light it is seen by the court, it may be necessary to consider the second point; which is, did the judgment so far alter the nature of the original contract, that it could not be discharged by the proceedings it Teneriffe, on the bankruptcy of Sarmiento?

It is contended by the counsel for the plaintiff, that the original contract is so completely extinguished by the judgment, that it cannot be noticed in reference to any question, to w'hich it might previously have given rise; and therefore, that the debt must be considered as having accrued under the judgment, in the state of New York. This is certainly true, where the judgment is conclusive and not subject to examination in a court of coordinate jurisdiction; nor does the court mean to intimate that the rule would not be the same, in a case w’here the judgment is only prima facie evidence of a debt. But, since this latter point has not been considered, and the court is prepared to give an opinion upon the great question, which has been discussed, of the conclusiveness of a judgment,of a state court, in every other state of the Union; it is thought best to decide it now, that the point may be put at rest in this court, as well as elsewhere, in case it should be deemed proper tp take the opinion of the supreme court upon it. We never expect to hear the question more ably argued.

The first section of the fourth article of the constitution of the Unite 1 States, 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 that congress may, by general laws, prescribe the manner in which such acts, records and proceedings shall be proved, and the effect thereof.” This section has three distinct objects: First, to declare, that full faith and credit shall be given in each state, to the records, &c. of every other state; secondly, the manner of authenticating such records, &c.; and thirdly, their effect when so authenticated. The first is declared and established by the constitution itself, and was to receive no aid, nor was it susceptible of any qualification, by the legislature of the United States. The second and third objects of the section, were expressly referred to the legislature of the Union, to carry them into effect in such manner, as to that body might seem right; and it will presently be seen how very correct this reference was. That the intention of the constitution, to invest congress with the power to declare the judgments of the courts of one state, conclusive in every other, and even to clothe them with a still more extended force and effect, corresponded with the strong and unambiguous expressions used in this article, will appear from the following considerations. First, it is presumable, that the enlightened framers of that instrument knew, that by the general comity of nations, and by the long established rules of that country, whose decisions were once of binding authority in the United States, and to a certain period, were still observed and adopted; a foreign judgment might be made the foundation of an action here, and was prima facie evidence of its own correctness. It is highly probable, therefore, that the constitution intended something more, than.merely to recognize an established rule of law. which without such a declaration, would allow in each state, at least as much faith and credit to the judgments of a sister state, as to those of a country foreign to the United States. If nothing more was meant, the provision was certainly unnecessary. It would on the contrary seem more natural that the constitution, which was intended to “form a more perfect union,” and a more close and intimate connexion of the states, than had existed under the confederation; would consider the judgments of the several states, in relation to each other, as domestic rather than foreign judgments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 1117, 3 Wash. C. C. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-sarmiento-circtdpa-1810.