Holzer v. Gesellschaft

159 Misc. 830, 290 N.Y.S. 181, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1280
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 159 Misc. 830 (Holzer v. Gesellschaft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holzer v. Gesellschaft, 159 Misc. 830, 290 N.Y.S. 181, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1280 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1936).

Opinion

Collins, J.

This challenge by the plaintiff to the legal sufficiency of the separate defenses poses, inter alia, the vastly arresting and significant question concerning the recognition and respect by our courts of the confessed discrimination against the Jews practiced by the German government.

Though that policy be repugnant to our concept of elementary justice, does the law of comity compel us to honor it, or may we inquire into the morality of the policy, and, finding it immoral, refuse to accord it faith and credit? May the light of our public policy be shed on the law of a foreign jurisdiction, or are we forced to embrace the latter law blindly? Where the law clashes with the humanities, which shall prevail? These are a few of the salient questions which this motion propounds and which we are called upon to resolve.

The suit is by a German Jew against the corporate owners of the German forwarding, transportation and warehousing system known as Schenker & Co., one of the defendants. The complaint alleges that this system is owned or controlled, directly or indirectly, by the other defendants, one of them Deutsche Reichsbahn [832]*832Gesellschaft, hereinafter referred to as Reichsbahn, and whose separate defenses are here assailed. The Schenker system operates in approximately two hundred cities in Europe, Asia and America. The complaint contains two causes of action. The suit is for breach of an employment contract, the plaintiff averring that prior to 1933 the defendants employed him as general executive manager of their entire system for three years beginning January 7, 1932, at a minimum salary of 72,000 marks per annum, plus a bonus graduated by the annual turnover of the enterprise. The agreement provided that “ in the event the plaintiff should die or become unable, without fault on his part, to serve during the period of the contract the defendants would pay to him or to his heirs the sum of 120,000 marks, in discharge of their obligation under the hiring.” The complaint asserts that “ on or about the 21st day of June, 1933, the defendants discharged the plaintiff as of October 31st, 1933, upon the sole ground that the plaintiff is a Jew.” Due performance on plaintiff’s part is affirmed and damages in the sum of upwards of $50,000 demanded.

The second cause contains the same preliminary allegations as the first and charges that “ In the month of April, 1933, after the coming into power of the present German Government, the plaintiff was seized by the agents of that Government and unlawfully incarcerated in prison and in a concentration camp where he was held, without indictment, and without trial, for about six months.” This imprisonment, so it is claimed, stemmed from the policy of the German government banishing Jews from certain positions. Because of the enforcement of that policy the plaintiff, and without any fault of his own, was prevented from continuing his services to the defendants, which situation, it is alleged, entitled the plaintiff to the 120,000 marks provided for in case of -his inability to perform without fault on his part.

Jurisdiction of defendant Schenker was acquired by attaching its property in this forum. Schenker’s motion to vacate the attachment was denied by Mr. Justice McLaughlin on February 4, 1936, and such denial was affirmed (247 App. Div. 786). Thereupon defendant Reichsbahn moved to vacate the attachment and to dismiss the complaint and that motion was denied by Mr. Justice McCook (N. Y. L. J. April 11, 1936, p. 1839). An appeal from the latter decision is pending.

The answer of Reichsbahn admits the employment, and admits the discharge and internment because the plaintiff is a Jew. The answer then advances three affirmative defenses.

The first defense contends that this court “ has no jurisdiction of said defendant or of any property thereof or of the plaintiff’s [833]*833alleged cause of action because (if 17): Said defendant and all the property thereof have the status of State property of the Government of Germany and with respect thereto said Government is entitled in this action to all the rights, privileges and immunities of sovereignty since said Government is a recognized independent sovereign power at peace with the United States of America.”

This defense then asserts that such sovereign immunity is recognized by our government and by the treaty between the United States and Germany, restoring friendly relations, proclaimed November 14, 1921, which by article II thereof, incorporated therein article 281 of part X of chapter V of the treaty of Yersailes, and which treaty excepts sovereign immunity only (f 18) “ If the German Government engages in international trade, it shall not in respect thereof have or be deemed to have any rights, privileges or immunities of sovereignty.”

The defense proceeds to allege that Reichsbahn is not within the limitation of said treaty, and that (if 19) said defendant and all of its property are entitled to complete immunity from suit and process in this action under said Treaty, since said defendant is not a trading company or commercial enterprise and neither said defendant nor any of the property thereof is or was engaged, used or employed in international trade or in any business between the territories of Germany and the United States or any part thereof.”

The first defense concludes (if 20): Said defendant is a corporation duly and specially created by the Government of Germany and organized and existing under and by virtue of certain special statutes of Germany known as the Reichsbahngesetz of August 30, 1924, as amended March 13, 1930, as an instrumentality of said Government, for the purpose of operating, and is operating the Governmental railroad system of the German Government in Germany in behalf of that Government and said Government is the sole owner of said defendant and of all of the common stock of said defendant and said defendant and all property thereof are State property of the Government of Germany, devoted to public use, and are owned, controlled, administered, managed and'operated under the direction and control of said Government.”

The second affirmative defense avers that the contract sued on was made and was to be performed in Germany and was terminated in Germany, and was and is governed by the laws of Germany.” It then undertakes to plead the law of Germany by alleging (if 24): “ Said laws, decrees and orders required, among [834]*834other things, the retirement of various classes of officials and employees, including certain classes of persons of non-Aryan descent, from the service of the German states, municipalities, municipal associations, bodies corporate under public law, and from institutions and enterprises and corporations of like rank, including said defendant, and prescribed the amounts that could lawfully be paid to such persons upon and after such retirement.”

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Related

Lederkremer v. Lederkremer
173 Misc. 587 (New York Supreme Court, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 Misc. 830, 290 N.Y.S. 181, 1936 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holzer-v-gesellschaft-nysupct-1936.