Le Roy v. Crowninshield

15 F. Cas. 362, 2 Mason C.C. 151
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedOctober 15, 1820
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 15 F. Cas. 362 (Le Roy v. Crowninshield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Le Roy v. Crowninshield, 15 F. Cas. 362, 2 Mason C.C. 151 (circtdma 1820).

Opinion

STOBY, Circuit Justice.

This cause was argued in the fullest manner at the last term, and has been held under advisement until the present time, principally from my desire to ascertain upon a review of all the authorities, whether the question raised at the argument was now open for discussion. I have examined all the authorities cited at the bar, (some of which are sufficiently obnoxious to critical commentaries), and if I thought there could be any utility in the task, I should not shrink from the labor of giving them a minute review. But after the ingenuity and learning of the profession have for a half century been exhausted upon the general subject, it would be rashness to expect to throw any new light upon it. In proof of the general principles, therefore, which I shall have occasion to state, I shall content myself with a general reference to the cases cited at the. bar, and to those, which on a former occasion it became my duty to examine and compare. Van Reimsdyk v. Kane [Case No. 16,871]. I shall comment- particularly on those only, which press directly on the point now in judgment

Some doctrines are so well established, that it would be a mere waste of time to attempt to defend them. It is, for instance, a principle of public law perfectly beyond the reach of judicial controversy, that personal contracts are to have the same validity, interpretation and obligatory force in every other country, which they have in the country where they are made, or are to be executed. The convenience, nay, the necessities of the civilized and commercial world, rendered it indispensable, that this principle should be adopted in the «earliest rational Intercourse; and it would not be easy to trace a period, when it was not tacitly adopted as a pledge of public as well as private confidence. An exception coeval with the rule itself, and resting on the same foundation, is, that no nation is bound to enforce or hold valid any contract, which is injurious to its own rights or those of its citizens, or which offends public morals, or violates the public faith.

Another rule equally well settled is, that remedies on contracts are to be regulated and [365]*365pursued according to the law of the place, where the action is instituted, and not by the law of the place, where the contract is made. The reason of this rule is extremely obvious. Courts of law are instituted by every nation for its own convenience and benefit, and the nature of the remedies, and the time and manner of the proceedings, are regulated by its own views of justice and propriety, and fashioned by its own wants and customs. It is not obliged to depart from its own notions of judicial order, from mere comity to any foreign nation. It is sufficient, if it gives to foreigners the same means to enforce their rights, as it does to its own citizens, in the emphatic language of Mr. Chancellor Kent, I may say, what shall be the course of its judicial proceedings and the limitations of its process, its prescriptions and its exceptions, are “questions of municipal convenience and public utility, which every government has not only a right to consult, but is bound in duty to promote.” Deconche v. Savetier, 3 Johns. Ch. 190, 218. There is no hardship or injustice in refusing to foreigners remedies, which do not belong to the genius of the government or its laws, or to repel proceedings or process from its courts, which it does not choose to entertain in cases of domestic litigation. There would be danger as well as inconvenience in a different course; and if it were to produce no other ill effect than the necessary consumption of time in attempting to learn a strange and novel jurisprudence, it would be a sufficient public mischief to justify the rejection of it. In many cases indeed the form of the remedy is perfectly immaterial. The same contract, which at Rome demanded a condictio indebiti or an actio certi, might well sustain an action of as-sumpsit or bill in equity in England, a suit by petition in Prance, or an action of debt in some parts of our own country; and each remedy might well be deemed a satisfactory redress. And even where the remedy is more intimately connected with the right, as in the process of execution, there is no absolute reason, why a nation should either by arrest of person or property give more prompt efficiency to a contract, than its own citizens can claim, or its general laws justify.

To another position (which is but a corollary, from what has been, already stated) 1 also unhesitatingly accede, and that is, that as the lex fori ought to regulate the remedy, so the party, who seeks that remedy, must bring himself within the prescription, that limits it, and if he does not, that the prescription is not merely a legal but a just bar to his suit. A question, may very naturally arise, whether the prescription, within the intent of the statute, applies to foreign contracts; because as Lord Kaimes justly observes, “many cases come under the words of a statute, that are not comprehended under its spirit and intendment.” But when this is undisputed, the conclusion, to which his lordship comes, seems irresistible, “that every case that comes under our law must be decided by that law, and not by the law of any other country.” Kaimes, Prin. Eq. p. 364, § 6; Ersk. Inst. bk. 3, p. 633, tit. 7, § 48. The earliest case to be found on this point in the English courts is Dupleix v. De Roven, 2 Vern. 540, where to a bill for a discovery of assets and satisfaction of the plaintiff's debt, which was contracted in Rome, the English statute of limitations was pleaded, and by the lord keeper was allowed as a good bar, and again upon a re-hearing the decree was confirmed. Id. 541; Raitbby’s NoteS. The doctrine recognized by this case has néver since been departed from in England; it has been recognized in the most solemn manner in the state and federal courts in the United States; arid though civilians have differed respecting it, it stands approved by the concurrent testimony of the ablest of foreign jurists and courts. Williams v. Jones, 13 East, 439; Nash v. Tupper, 1 Caines, 402; Hubbell v. Cowdrey, 5 Johns. 132; Pearsall v. Dwight, 2 Mass. 84; 1 Emerig. Ass. p. 120, c. 4, § 8; Huberus, De Conflictu Legum, tom. 2, lib. 1, p. 538, tit. 3; Voet ad Pand. lib. 44, p. 877, tit. 3, § 12, tom. 2; Casaregis, Disc. 129, § 58; Id. p. 130, § 33; Ersk. Inst. p. 633, § 48; Kaimes, Eq. p. 363, § 6. Nor was it the intention of the court in the remark cited at the bar from the case of Van Reimsdyk v. Kane [Case No. 16,871], to question the propriety of those decisions, so far as they gave effect to the law of prescription of the place, where the suit was instituted, but merely to state historically the point of debate, and to intimate a doubt, whether the repelling of the foreign prescription in such a case fell within the principle, on which the former was justly founded. This is the very point now in controversy, and to the consideration of it the attention of the court will now be directed.

It is agreed by the demurrer, that the original contract in this case was made, and the cause of action accrued, in New-York, between the parties to the suit, who were then citizens of that state, and that the statute of limitations of that state would be a good bar to the suit, if now brought in any court of that state. In the language of the civil law this temporal prescription would be a sufficient exception to repel the suit.

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15 F. Cas. 362, 2 Mason C.C. 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/le-roy-v-crowninshield-circtdma-1820.