McGrath Atty. Gen. v. Cities Service Co.

189 F.2d 744, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 3231
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 13, 1951
Docket21925_1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 189 F.2d 744 (McGrath Atty. Gen. v. Cities Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGrath Atty. Gen. v. Cities Service Co., 189 F.2d 744, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 3231 (2d Cir. 1951).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment summarily dismissing the complaint of the Attorney-General as substituted owner of three negotiable bonds, payable to bearer, against the Cities Service Company, the obligor, and the Chase National Bank of New York, the “indenture trustee.” The plaintiff claimed to have become the obli-gee of the bonds by virtue of a “vesting” order, issued by him as Alien Property Custodian under § 7(c) and § 5(b) of the Trading with the Enemy Act; 1 and the only issue is whether upon the conceded facts he is right. Of the original three bonds one had been paid before the “vesting order” was made, and of the remaining two, one has come into the hands of brokers in New York who are holding it for an American insurance company, and the whereabouts of the other is wholly unknown. At some undisclosed time a German citizen became the owner of all three bonds, from whom “the occupying authorities” of the “Russian Sector of Berlin” had seized them before March 11, 1949, the day of the “vesting order.” Each party moved for summary judgment, and the judge held that the order did not “vest” the bonds in the plaintiff because, since bonds were outside the United States when “vested,” they were as much beyond the power of the Alien Property Custodian as chattels situated in Germany. That is also the defendants’ argument on this appeal; they say that the Act is limited to property within the United States and that as the actual instruments were not in this country, and were not mere evidences of the debt, but the very debt itself, they were not “within the United States,” and subject to seizure. Further, they argue that, if we hold that the Act covered such debts, they will not be adequately protected from future suits by possible bona fide holders, which place them in a position of very grave doubt constitutionally.

As to the defendants’ first objection, we have no doubt that the Act applies to bonds issued by a citizen of the United States and held by an alien outside the country. That it meant to cover debts or obligations owed to aliens — including bonds — appears in several places. Thus § 7(c) says that: “If the President shall so require any money or other property including * * * choses in action, and rights and claims-of every character and description owing or *746 belonging to * * * an enemy * * * shall be * * * paid over to the Alien Property Custodian, or * * * may be seized” by him. Again, § 7(e) declares that “in case of payment to the alien property custodian of any debt or obligation owed to an enemy”, he shall have power to execute a valid discharge and shall “deliver up any notes, bonds, or other evidences of indebtedness or obligation * * that may have come into” his “possession.” Finally, § 9(n) declares that: “In the case of property consisting * * * of bonded or other indebtedness * * * evidenced * * * by bonds * * * where the right, title, and interest in the property (but not the actual * * * bond * *) was conveyed, transferred, assigned, delivered, or paid to the Alien Property Custodian, or seized by him,” the true owner may be indemnified, as provided in § 9(b), 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 9(n, b).

As we understand the defendants’ objection it is further that, even though the intent of the Act was to make all debts and choses in action, including bonds, subject to seizure, it was brutmn fulmén as to bonds which are outside the United States at the time of “vesting,” just as it is as to chattels so situated. 2 It is the bond, the document itself, which constitutes the debt, and whose location determines its “situs,” regardless of the residence of the obligor and the power over him of the state where that residence may be. It is true that for centuries it was the English law that sealed instruments of any kind — bonds among them — could not be sued on without “proferí” of the original. The obligor was entitled to “crave oyer,” and judgment for the obligee was conditional upon his compliance. It followed that, if the obligee lost the instrument, or if it were mutilated, he could not sue. Equity soon intervened and in 1804 Lord Elden was able to say: “The jurisdiction of this Court upon lost bonds is very ancient: founded upon a notion, acknowledged until a very late period, that there was no remedy at law upon a lost bond, as you could not make Profert.” 3 The courts of law had already followed suit, though not until 1789 ; 4 but equity still retained its jurisdiction; 5 and the equitable remedy certainly became a part of the general law of this country. 6 Whether this archaic doctrine depended upon some mythical identification of the legal relation between the parties with the document is not important, even were we compelled to recognize it; the intervention of equity has dispelled it as a precedent, and in any event it is too patently a confusion of the legal rights and duties involved to constitute a bar to the constitutional powers of any state. Of itself a document — whether a deed, a bond, or any other sealed instrument — obviously is, and can be, nothing more than a piece of parchment or paper. Even though it were only when equipped with the document, that the obligee could invoke against the obligor the sanctions which the law provided, the obligation always consisted, and could only consist of the power the law gave him to invoke those sanctions to coerce the obligor, and that was equally true even while possession of the document was a condition upon that power. Moreover, even if that had not been true, as soon as equity dispensed with that condition there remained no difference between a bond and any other “chose in action,” which could affect the constitutional power of a state over the obligor. Blackstone v. Miller, 188 U.S. 189, 205, 206, 23 5. Ct. 277, 278, 47 L.Ed. 439, remains, though after a somewhat checkered history, 7 the simplest statement of the situation:

“What gives the debt validity? Nothing but the fact that the law of the place where *747 the debtor is will make him pay. It does not matter that the law would not need to be invoked in the particular case. * * *

“Power over the person of the debtor confers jurisdiction, we repeat.” It is true that Holmes, J., did then go on to distinguish “State Tax on Foreign-held Bonds,” 15 Wall. 300, 21 L.Ed. 179, on the ground that bonds had there been involved and that in such cases “The debt is inseparable from the paper which declares and constitutes it, by a tradition which comes down from more archaic conditions”, 188 U.S. at page 206, 23 S.Ct. at page 279. We agree that that gives color to the defendants’ position; yet with deference we read that language as no more than a way of avoiding a precedent which the court had decided to overrule. Furthermore, the distinction was altogether gratuitous, for in “State Tax on Foreign-held Bonds,” supra, the court did not even intimate that it was a reason for the result; on the contrary it repeatedly spoke in language which would have held the tax invalid had it been imposed upon any kind of chose in action.

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Related

Cities Service Co. v. McGrath
342 U.S. 330 (Supreme Court, 1952)
United States v. Fisk Building
99 F. Supp. 592 (S.D. New York, 1951)
In re Central States Power & Light Corp.
99 F. Supp. 157 (D. Delaware, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
189 F.2d 744, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 3231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgrath-atty-gen-v-cities-service-co-ca2-1951.