Pritchard v. Norton

106 U.S. 124, 1 S. Ct. 102, 27 L. Ed. 104, 16 Otto 124, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1522
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 13, 1882
Docket42
StatusPublished
Cited by346 cases

This text of 106 U.S. 124 (Pritchard v. Norton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pritchard v. Norton, 106 U.S. 124, 1 S. Ct. 102, 27 L. Ed. 104, 16 Otto 124, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1522 (1882).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matthews,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

It is claimed on behalf of the plaintiff that by the law of Louisiana the pre-existing liability of Pritchard as surety for the railroad company would be a valid consideration to support the promise of indemnity, notwithstanding his liability had been incurred without any previous request from the defendant. This claim is not controverted, and is fully supported b.y the citations from the Civil Code of Louisiana of 1870, art) 1893-1960, and the decisions of the Supreme Court of that State. Flood v. Thomas, 5 Mart. n. s. (La.) 560; N. O. Gas Co. v. Paulding, 12 Rob. (La.) 378; N. O. & Carrollton Railroad Co. v. Chapman, 8 La. Ann. 97; Keane v. Goldsmith, Haber, & Co., 12 id. 560. In the case last mentioned it is said that “ the contract is, in its nature, one of personal warranty, recognized by articles 378 and 379 of the Code of Practice.” And it was there held that a right of action upon the bond of indemnity accrued to the obligee, when his liability became fixed as surety by a final judgment, without payment on his part, it being the obligation of the. defendants upon the bond of indemnity to jpay the judgment rendered against him, or to furnish him the money with which to pay it.

The single question presented by the record, therefore, is whether the law of New York or that of Louisiana defines and fixes the rights and .obligations of the parties. If the former applies^ the judgment of the court below is correct; if the latter, it is erroneous.

The argument in support of the judgment is simple, and may be briefly stated. It is, that New York is the place of the contract, both because it was executed and delivered there, and because no other place of pei’formance being either designated or necessarily implied, it was to be performed there; wherefore the law of New York, as the lex loci contractus, in both senses, being lex loci celebrationis and. lex loci solutionis, *129 must apply to determine not only the form of the contract, but also its validity.

On the other hand, the application of the law of Louisiana may be considered in two aspects: as t.he lex fori, the suit having been brought in a court exercising jurisdiction within its territory and administering its laws; and as the lex loei solur tionis, the obligation of the bond of indemnity being to place the fund for payment in the hands of the surety, or to repay him the amount of his advance, in the place where he was .bound'to discharge his own liability.

It will be convenient to consider the applicability of the law of Louisiana, first, as the lex fori, and then as the lex loei solutionis.

1. The lex fori.

The court below, in a cause like the present, in which its jurisdiction depends on the citizenship of the parties, adjudicates their rights precisely as should a tribunal of the State of Louisiana according to her laws; so that, in that sense, there is no question as to what law must be administered. But, in case of contract, the foreign law may, by the act and will of the parties, have become part of their agreement; and, in enforcing this, the law of the forum may find it necessary to give effect to a foreign law, which, without such adoption, would have no force beyond its own territory.

This, upon the principle of comity, for the purpose of promoting and facilitating international intercourse, ánd within limits fixed by its own public policy, a civilized State is accustomed and considers itself bound to do; but, in doing so, nevertheless adheres to its own system of formal judicial procedure and remedies. And thus the distinction is at once established between the law of the contract, which may be foreign, and the law of the procedure and remedy, which must be domestic and local. In respect to the latter the foreign law is rejected; but hów and where to draw the line of precise classification it is not always easy to' determine.

The principle is, that whatever relates merely to the remedy and constitutes part bf the procedure is determined by the law of the forum, for matters of process must be uniform in the courts of the same country; but whatever goes to the sub *130 stance of the obligation and affects the rights of the parties, as growing out of the contract itself, or inhering in it or attaching to it, is governed by the law of the contract.

The rule deduced by Mr. Wharton, in his Conflict of Laws, as best harmonizing the authorities and effecting the most judicious result, and which was cited approvingly by Mr. Justice Hunt in Scudder v. Union National Bank, 91 U. S. 406, is, that “ Obligations in respect to the mode of their solemnization are subject to the rule locus- regit actum; in respect to their interpretation, to the lex loci contractus; in respect to the mode of their performance, to the law of - the place of their performance. But the lex fori determines when and how such laws, when foreign, are to be adopted, and, in all cases not specified above, supplies the applicatory law.’.’ This, it will be observed, extends the operation ■ of the lex fori beyond the process and remedy, so as to embrace the whole of that residuum which cannot be referred to other laws. And this conclusion is obviously just; for whatever cannot,.from the nature of the case, be referred to any other law, must be d'etermined by the tribunal having jurisdiction of the litigation, according to the law of its awn locality.

Whether an assignee of a chose in action shall sue in his own. name or that of his assignor is a technical question of mere process, and determinable by the law of the forum; but whether the foreign assignment, on which the plaintiff claims is valid at all, or whether it is valid against the defendant, goes to the merits and must be decided by the law in which' the case has its legal seat. Wharton, Conflict of Laws,, sects. 785, 736. Upon that point Judge Kent, in Lodge v. Phelps, 1 Johns. (N. Y.) Cas. 139, said: “ If the defendant has any defence authorized by, the law of Connecticut, let him show it, and he will be heard in one form of action as well as in the other.”

It is to be noted, however, as an important circumstance, that the same claim may sometimes' be a mere matter of process, and so determinable by the law of the forum, and sometimes a matter of substance going to the merits, and therefore determinable by the law of the contract. That is illustrated in the application of the defence arising upon the Statute of Limitations. In the courts of England and America, ■ that *131 defence is governed by the law of the forum, as' being a matter of mere procedure; while in continental Europe the defence of prescription is regarded as going to the substance of the contract, and therefore as governed by the law of the seat of' the obligation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 U.S. 124, 1 S. Ct. 102, 27 L. Ed. 104, 16 Otto 124, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchard-v-norton-scotus-1882.