Northwestern Brewers Supply Co. v. Vorhees

203 S.W.2d 422, 356 Mo. 699, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 614
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 9, 1947
DocketNo. 40249.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 203 S.W.2d 422 (Northwestern Brewers Supply Co. v. Vorhees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwestern Brewers Supply Co. v. Vorhees, 203 S.W.2d 422, 356 Mo. 699, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 614 (Mo. 1947).

Opinion

DOUGLAS, P. J.

In January, 1946 plaintiff filed this suit on a Wisconsin judgment rendered on October 31, 1932. Defendant pleaded the Missouri Statute barring suits on judgments after ten years. Plaintiff, in a motion for judgment on the pleadings, alleged that the statute of limitations in Wisconsin, where the judgment was obtained, ran for a period of twenty years, and therefore under the Constitution of the United States the Wisconsin judgment was entitled to full faith and credit for such term, and the Missouri ten-year statute could not be applied. Defendánt also filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings based on the ten-year statute. Plaintiff’s motion was overruled, defendant’s motion was sustained, and the court entered judgment dismissing the petition. Plaintiff appealed.

Plaintiff’s position is that full faith and credit means full faith and credit for the full term of the duration of the judgment under the law of the place where the judgment was obtained, and that the statute of Missouri, where suit was brought on the judgment, prescribing a shorter term violated the full faith and credit clause of the Federal Constitution, and was therefore unconstitutional. We are unable to agree with plaintiff’s position and find that a similar contention has been overruled in a number of cases. Anno. 52 A. L. R. 566. See also 11 Am. Jur. Conflict of Laws) see. 192, 34 C. J. Judgments, sec. 1577.

The plea based on a statute limiting an action on a foreign judgment is one to the remedy, and it is the general rule that the law of the forum will govern rather than that of the place where the judgment was rendered.

It was settled in M’Elmoyle v. Cohen (1839), 38 U. S. 312, that this rule did not violate the full faith and credit clause, The court *702 interpreted full faith and credit to mean that “if a judgment is conclusive in the state where it is pronounced, it is equally conclusive, everywhere, in thé states of the Union. If re-examinable there, it is open to the' same inquiries in every other state. . . . Such being the faith, credit, and effect, • to be given to a judgment of one state in another, by the Constitution and the act of Congress, the point under consideration will be determined by settling what is the nature of a plea of the statute of limitations. Is it a plea that settles the right of a party on a contract or judgment, or one that bars the remedy? Whatever diversity of opinion there may be among jurists upon this point, we think it is well settled to be a plea to the remedy; and consequently that the lex fori must prevail. ...”

The court continued: “Prescription is a thing of policy, growing out of the experience of its necessitjr; and the time after which suits or actions shall be barred, has been, from a remote antiquity, fixed by every nation, in virtue of that sovereignty by which it exercises its legislation for all persons and property within its jurisdiction. This being the foundation of the right to pass statutes of prescription or limitation, may not our states, under our system, exercise this right in virtue of their sovereignty? or is it to be conceded to them in every other particular, "thati that of barring the remedy upon judgments of other states by the lapse of time? The states use this right upon judgments rendered in their own Courts; and the common law raises the presumption of the payment of a judgment after the lapse of twenty years. May they not then limit the time for remedies upon the judgments of other states, and alter the common law by statute, fixing a less or larger time for such presumption, and altogether barring suits upon such judgments, if they shall not be brought within the time stated in; the statute? . . . But the point might have been shortly dismissed with this sage declaration, that there is no direct constitutional inhibition upon the states, nor any clause in the Constitution from which it can be even plausibly inferred, that the states may not legislate upon the remedy in suits upon the judgments of other states, exclusive of all interference with their merits. It being settled that the statute of limitations may bar ‘recoveries upon foreign judgments; that the effect intended to be given under our Constitution to judgments, is, that they are conclusive only as regards the merits; the common law principle then applies to ■suits upon them, that they must be brought within the period prescribed by the .local law, the lex fori, or the suit will be barred. ’ ’

In Bacon v. Howard, 61 U. S. 22, the above decision was approved. We find: “But rules of prescription remain, as before, in the full power of every state. There is no clause in the Constitution which restrains this right in each state to legislate upon *703 the remedy in suits on judgments of other states, exclusive of all interference with their merits. The case of M’Elmoyle v. Cohen (13 Peters, 312) leaves nothing further to be said on the -subject.”

This court has followed the M’Elmoyle case as to the meaning and effect of the full faith and credit clause. Cook’s Estate v. Brown, 346 Mo. 281, 140 S. W. (2d) 42, The case of Berkley v. Tootle, 163 Mo. 584, 63 S. W. 681 is not in point as it considered a statute of Kansas', where the judgment was rendered, which affected the very life of the judgment rather than the remedy. The statute of limitations of this State was not involved.

Cases cited' by plaintiff do not sustain its position. Roche v. McDonald, 275 U. S. 449, holds that a foreign judgment may not be impeached upon an alleged error of law made by the court rendering the original judgment. Nor does the quotation from Williams v. North Carolina, 317 U. S. 287 help plaintiff. In discussing the full faith and credit clause the court said in that case: 1 ‘ Thus even though the cause of action could- not be entertained in the state of the forum, either because it had been barred by the local statute of limitations or contravened local policy, the judgment thereon obtained in a sister *state is entitled to full faith and credit.” By this statement the court was emphasizing the extent of the faith and credit which must be given a jtidgment of a sister state, as distinguished from the treatment which would -have been accorded the original cause of action upon which the judgment was.rendered had the second suit been brought on the original cause of action instead of on the judgment. Morris v. Jones, 329 U. S. 545, 67 S. Ct. 451 is in similar vein and again for- emphasis states that Illinois, where a judgment of Missouri was the basis of a claim, must give effect to the judgment even though the cause of action upon which the judgment was based could not have been maintained in Illinois or that the statute of limitations might have barred the cause of action there. No defense of limitations was raised against .the claim which was filed in Illinois on the judgment. Neither did Titus v. Wallick, 306 U. S. 282 involve a statute of limitations.

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203 S.W.2d 422, 356 Mo. 699, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-brewers-supply-co-v-vorhees-mo-1947.