Roundtree v. Baker

52 Ill. 241
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 52 Ill. 241 (Roundtree v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roundtree v. Baker, 52 Ill. 241 (Ill. 1869).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action of debt, brought by plaintiff in error, in the Knox circuit court, against defendant in error, on a writing obligatory, entered into in the State of Kentucky, by Turner R. Roundtree to Dudley Roundtree, given for the price of a negro girl sold by the latter to the former. It appears, the instrument sued on bears date the tenth of October, 1833; is for four hundred dollars, payable in equal annual installments of twenty dollars each, the first payable on the last day of December, 1834. It was stipulated that plaintiff in error is the administrator of Dudley Roundtree, deceased; that the girl, Eliza, named in the writing obligatory, was a slave in the State of Kentucky, owned by Dudley Roundtree, and that, as such, by the laws of Kentucky, she was liable to sale at the time the instrument was executed. That she was sold and delivered in the State of Kentucky by Dudley Roundtree to Turner Roundtree, who resided in this State, on the tenth of October, 1833, and the writing obligatory was given in Kentucky on the purchase of the girl. Defendant below filed a plea of nil debet upon which there was an issue to the country; next, a plea of the statute of limitations; third, that the instrument was given for the purchase of a negro girl, and hence the consideration had failed; fourth, that the writing obligatory was given for the balance of the price of a negro girl, who was free and was sold as stated in the instrument sued upon, and the consideration had therefore failed. To the second plea, plaintiff replied that the cause of action had accrued within sixteen years. Plaintiff below interposed a demurrer to the third and fourth pleas, which was overruled by the court. He then replied to the third plea that, by the laws of Kentucky, the girl was a slave, and liable to be sold as such, and the consideration had not failed; and to the fourth, that the girl was not free, and was under the laws of Kentucky liable to sale, she being a slave. Issues were joined upon these replications.

At the February term, 1869, the cause was tried before the court, without the intervention of a jury, by consent of the parties, when the court found for defendant; a motion for a new trial was overruled, and a judgment was entered in favor of the defendant for costs. The record is brought to this court on error, and we are asked to reverse the judgment of the court below because it is against the law.

It is a general rule, that we look to the law of the place where the contract is entered into, and not where it is to be enforced, to ascertain its validity; and not only so, but in expounding its terms and conditions. Bradshaw v. Newman, Breese, 133; Stacy v. Baker, 1 Scam. 417; Phinney v. Baldwin, 16 Ill. 108, In the case of Adams v. Robertson, 31 Ill. 45, the rule was announced, that the laws of every country allow parties to enter into obligations with reference to the laws of the country where such obligations are to be performed, and although such obligations may not be in accordance with the laws of the country where they are entered into, as regards agreements to be performed where they are made, they may b.e strictly in conformity with the laws of the country where they are to be performed. But there is a limitation on this law of comity which requires that the contract, when entered into, must conform to the laws of the country where made, or else to the laws of the country where it is to be performed. The rights enforced by courts, where the contract is made in one country, to be performed in another, are those given by the laws of the country where the contract was made, and such rights are enforced in the country. where the contract is to be performed, not as a matter of strict right, but as a matter of comity extended toward the country in which the contract was made. It was again said, in the case of Lewis v. Headly, 36 Ill. 433, that it is a presumption of law, where there is no agreement to the contrary, that a contract is to be performed in the country where it is made.

There is to this general rule a further limitation which is, that the courts of one country will not, under this comity, ever execute the criminal or penal laws of another country. Sherman v. Gassett, 4 Gilm. 521. The general rule has been recognized in the cases of Forsythe v. Baxter 2 Scam. 12; Holbrook v. Vibbard, ib. 465; Chenot v. Lefevre, 3 Gilm. 642 ; Strawbridge v. Robinson, 5 Gilm. 410; Schuttler v. Piatt, 12 Ill. 419; Crouch v. Hall, 15 Ill. 264, and the case of Sherman v. Gassett, 4 Gilm. 521, referred to above. These cases, determined in our own court, all concurring, fix and establish the rule so firmly that nothing short of legislative enactment should overturn or disturb it. A different rule would work manifest injury to commerce, trade, and the various pursuits of life. If our courts could refuse to enforce contracts made and entered into in other countries and states, because the laws governing them where made are different from or repugnant to our laws, a vast amount of injustice would ensue, as the laws of no two countries coincide in every particular in but a few cases. The exigencies of commerce and the general trade of the world have compelled the adoption and enforcement of this rule.

If we refer to the adjudged cases in other courts, whether of Great Britain or the various States of the Union, we find that the rule has been adopted that the laws of one State, entering into and forming a part of the contract, will be enforced in the courts of another State; and it is recognized to be on the principle of comity—not the comity of the courts, but the comity of the nation—which is administered and ascertained in the same way, and guided by the same reasoning by which principles of the municipal law are ascertained and guided. Story’s Conflict of Laws, sec. 38 ; United States Bank of Augusta v. Earle, 13 Peters, 519. The rule stated by Huberus and approved by Story, is this: “ That the rules of every empire, from comity, admit that the laws of every people, in force within its own limits, ought to have the same force everywhere, so far as they do not prejudice the powers or rights of other governments, or their citizens.” Story Conf. Laws, sec. 29.

In France, the State, as it was organized before the revolution, was divided into a large number of provinces governed by different laws and customs, and was at an early period obliged to sanction such authority through its courts, in order to provide for the constantly occurring claims of its own subjects, living and owning property in different provinces, in a conflict between the different provincial laws. Ib. sec. 24. If the attainment of justice required the application of the rule in France, the peculiar frame of our government certainly imperatively demands its application and enforcement between the different States of the Union. And we have seen that it was fully recognized by the supreme court of the United States. In the absence of any positive statutory rule affirming or denying, or restraining such operation of foreign laws, courts of justice presume the tacit adoption of them by their own government, unless they are repugnant to its policy or prejudicial to its interests. Ibid. sec. 38.

Our legislature having declared no rule on the subject, our courts, like others, have adopted the rule, with the limitation that they will never enforce the criminal or penal laws of another country..

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Bluebook (online)
52 Ill. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roundtree-v-baker-ill-1869.