MacDonald v. Grand Trunk Railway Co.

59 L.R.A. 448, 52 A. 982, 71 N.H. 448, 1902 N.H. LEXIS 58
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 3, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 59 L.R.A. 448 (MacDonald v. Grand Trunk Railway Co.) 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
MacDonald v. Grand Trunk Railway Co., 59 L.R.A. 448, 52 A. 982, 71 N.H. 448, 1902 N.H. LEXIS 58 (N.H. 1902).

Opinion

Parsons, J.

The plaintiffs prior to the commencement of this suit voluntarily submitted the claim which they now make against the defendants — their right to damages for the negligent destruction of their property while in the hands of the defendants as common carriers — to a judicial tribunal established by the government of which they were citizens and to whose decrees they owe obedience. The tribunal to which they appealed was a court of record of general jurisdiction; it had jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject-matter of the controversy. Both parties appeared and were heard; the plaintiffs had full opportunity to present such matters of fact and to argue such propositions of law as they deemed essential to their case. The judgment was upon the merits and against the plaintiffs. It is not claimed that by any erroneous ruling of the court the plaintiffs were prevented from fully and fairly presenting their case, nor is it suggested that the court erred in its decision of the legal question which the parties considered decisive of their rights. No accident or mistake on the part of the plaintiffs in the presentation of their case is suggested. Fraud is not charged. It is apparent that if the plaintiffs’ claims luid been sustained in Canada, the defendants would have been bound by the result and would have been compelled to satisfy any judgment that might there have been obtained against them. Is there any reason why the plaintiffs, having compelled the defendants to litigate the claim made in this suit before a tribunal of the plaintiffs’ selection, and having suffered defeat without fraud, accident, or mistake, and after a fair hearing by the results of which the defendants were necessarily bound, should 'not also be everywhere bound by the judicial determination which they invoked, and be estopped from presenting before any other tribunal the claim once judicially decided against them ? The judgment in Canada, was final and is not reversed. It is conclusive against the plaintiffs in their own country. As an expression of the will of the sovereign to whom their allegiance is due, they owe obedience thereto, abroad as well as at home. Upon every ground of natural right and justice, it would seem that they should be debarred from invading the courts of another country to retry a controversy settled against them at home.

*450 Against the binding effect upon the plaintiffs here of the judgment in Canada, it is urged that in this court that judgment is a foreign judgment. “ It is universally agreed that the laws of a state have, ex proprio vigore, no extra-territorial force.” Crippen v. Laighton, 69 N. H. 540, 549; Smith v. Godfrey, 28 N. H. 379, 381, 382. But the courts of the state are open to others besides our own citizens (P. S., c. 216, s. 1); and the controversies our. courts are called upon to determine are not limited to those which arise within this sovereignty or under its laws. The substance and effect of foreign laws are, therefore, subjects of frequent consideration. “There is, perhaps, no general principle o'f law better established than that the validity of a contract is to be decided by the law of the place where the (contract is made. If valid there, it is valid elsewhere; but if void or illegal by the law of the place where made, it is void everywhere. . . But there are some exceptions to this rule, and among them is this: that no nation is bound to recognize or enforce any contracts which are injurious to its own interests or to those of its own citizens, or which are in fraud of its laws.” Smith v. Godfrey, 28 N. H. 379, 381. That the law of the country where a contract is made or to be executed is to be examined to ascertain what the agreement was which the parties made, is elementary. Limerick Nat'l Bank v. Howard, ante, p. 13; New York Life Ins. Co. v. McKellar, 68 N. H. 326, 328. “If there is a conflict between the lex loci and the lex fori, the former governs in torts the same as in contracts, in respect to the legal effect and incidents of acts.” Beacham v. Portsmouth Bridge, 68 N. H. 382. If there is no ground of action in the sovereignty where the tort is alleged to have occurred, there is none anywhere. Wilson v. Rich, 5 N. H. 455; Leazotte v. Railroad, 70 N. H. 5, 6. To ascertain the rights resulting from acts done or omitted, attention must be paid to the circumstances under which the events took place; and one of the governing circumstances is the law of the place which characterizes- the act. It is sometimes said that in such circumstances the courts of one country out of comity give effect to the laws of another (Smith v. Godfrey, supra), but a more exact view has been taken. “ When the courts of one country consider the laws of another in which any contract has been made, ... in construing its meaning, or ascertaining its existence, they can hardly be said to act from courtesy, ex comitate ; for it is of the essence of the subject-matter to ascertain the meaning of the parties, and that they did solemnly bind, themselves; and it is clear that you must presume them to have intended what the law of the country sanctions or supposes; it is equally clear that their adopting the forms and solemnities *451 which that law prescribes shows their intention to bind themselves, nay more, it is the only safe criterion of their having entertained such an intention. Therefore the courts of the country where the question arises resort to the law of the country where the contract was made, not ex comitate, but ex debito justitice ; and in order to explicate their own jurisdiction by discovering that which they are in quest of, and which alone they are in quest of, the meaning and intent of the parties.” Warrender v. Warrender, 2 C. & F. 488, 530. In like manner, when a right is claimed upon acts occurring in another country, courts look to the law of that country, not to extend the binding force of a foreign law beyond the territorial limits of the sovereignty to which it belongs, but to ascertain whether the right claimed exists or not. It is not the foreign law, but the rights acquired under it, which are enforced by the courts of another country; and this is true whether the question be one of contract, tort, or statics. As the will of the sovereign expressed in general law can of itself have no exterritorial force, the same will expressed in concrete form in a judgment betweén two suitors can have no greater effect. A plaintiff cannot here have execution upon a foreign judgment, nor a successful defendant have execution for costs, in the absence of legislative direction to that effect. The question is not of the enforcement of the foreign judgment; but it is: What are the rights of the parties ? The particular law declared by the judgment is evidence of the rights now in controversy, as would be the general law if the dispute related to matters which had not passed into judgment.

The plaintiffs, MacDonald & Co., contracted with the Allan Steamship Company for the transportation of certain goods from Glasgow, Scotland, to Toronto, Canada.

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Bluebook (online)
59 L.R.A. 448, 52 A. 982, 71 N.H. 448, 1902 N.H. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdonald-v-grand-trunk-railway-co-nh-1902.