Valarino v. . Thompson

7 N.Y. 576, 7 N.Y.3d 576
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 7 N.Y. 576 (Valarino v. . Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valarino v. . Thompson, 7 N.Y. 576, 7 N.Y.3d 576 (N.Y. 1853).

Opinion

Euggles, C. J.

The power of the supreme court to reverse the judgment rendered in the superior court of the city of New York, for error in fact, was not disputed on the argument of this case. Nor was it denied, that the United States courts have exclusive jurisdiction in suits against consuls of foreign states residing here. But it was insisted, that the defendant’s exemption, as a consul, from liability to be sued in the state court, was his personal privilege; and that he waived it, by pleading to the merits, and going to trial, without raising the objection in the court below. It was also further contended, that the United States courts have no jurisdiction, in a case like the present, *where the ^ *573 consul was sued together with another person on a joint contract, and, therefore, that the suit was rightly brought in the state court. The points thus raised present questions for the consideration of this court, which, if decided against the defendant, are conclusive in favor of affirming the judgment of the supreme court, and render the examination of the other questions raised on the argument unnecessary.

The exemption of an ambassador, or other diplomatic minister, from liability to be sued or prosecuted in the courts of the country to which he is accredited, is the privilege of his sovereign or government; it is accorded to the office and not to the individual. (Barbuit’s Case, Talbot’s Cases 831.) It is founded on the law of nations, and does not depend on the law of the country in which the functions of the minister are to be exercised. The *578 extent of the immunities to which a consul is entitled, under the law of nations, does not appear to be very clearly defined by writers on public law. According to Vattel, a consul is not entitled to the privileges of a public minister; yet, bearing his sovereign’s commission, and being, in this quality, received by the government of the country in which he resides, he is, in a certain degree, entitled to the protection of the law of nations. The sovereign, by the very act of receiving him, tacitly engages to allow him all the liberty and safety necessary to the proper discharge of his functions, without which the admission would be nugatory and delusive. (Vattel, book 2, ch. 2, § 34.) The same writer further says, that the functions of a consul seem to require that he should be independent of the ordinary criminal justice of the place where he resides, so as not to be molested or imprisoned, unless he himself violate the law of nations by some enormous crime; and that in such case, the respect due to his master requires that he should be sent home to be punished; and that such is the mode pursued by states that are inclined to preserve a good understanding with each other.

Other writers, however, regard a consul as amenable, like a private individual, to the civil and criminal law of the country *to which he is accredited. (2 -* Brown, Civ. and Adm. Law, 506; Wicquefort on “The Ambassador,” book 1, § 5.) In 1793, the Genoese consul was indicted in the circuit court of the United States for the district of Pennsylvania for a misdemeanor, and tried and convicted. In this case the privilege was disallowed or disregarded, but the consul was afterwards pardoned, upon condition that he surrendered his commission and exequatur. (United States v. Ravara, 2 Dallas 297.)

The privileges of a consul, however, do not always depend on the law of nations. They are frequently regulated by treaty; and by the treaty between the *579 United States and the republic of Ecuador (Art. 29), the consuls of that republic are entitled to all the rights, prerogatives and immunities of the consuls of the most favored nations. The defendant, therefore, in his consular office, must be regarded as entitled to some rights, prerogatives and immunities, under this treaty, if not under the law of nations, and they are of the same nature and character as those to which a public minister is entitled.

An ambassador cannot renounce a privilege accorded to his office by the law of nations, because it is the privilege of his government, and not personally his own. (Barbuit’s Case, Talbot’s Cases 281.) The immunities of these public agents are secured to them by public law, in order that they may not be embarrassed in the exercise of their functions, by the action of the government of the country where they reside, or of any individual within it. The privileges of the consular office, whether derived from the law of nations or from treaty, stand on the same footing, and for the same reason they cannot be renounced by the officer.

It belongs to the United States courts, and not to the courts of this state, to determine what privileges and immunities a foreign minister or consul is entitled to. The states, by adopting the federal constitution, transferred to the general government the. right to exercise a portion of the judicial power which had previously belonged to the several states. The intention was to make the judicial authority of the ^federal gov- ^ ^ ^ ernment co-extensive with its political powers. *- Its judicial powers, therefore, embrace “all cases in law and equity, arising under the constitution, the laws of the United States, and all treaties made or which shall be made under their authority.” (Constitution, art. iii, § 2.) The federal government has charge exclusively of the foreign relations of the country, of the regulation of commerce with foreign nations, and of all political *580 intercourse between this country and others. The federal power of the United States is, therefore, made to extend “to all cases affecting ambassadors, or other public ministers and consuls.” (Art. iii., § 2.) The judiciary act of 1789 (1 U. S. Stat. 73), establishes district courts and defines their authority. (§§ 2, 3, 9.) The latter section gives them jurisdiction “exclusively of the courts of the several states, of all suits against consuls and vice-consuls,” with an exception not affecting the present case.

The defendant, therefore, is exempted, as a consul, from liability to be sued in the state courts. But this exemption is neither his personal privilege, nor the privilege of the state by which he was commissioned. It is not founded on the law of nations, nor on any treaty between his government and that of this country. If it can be regarded as a privilege belonging to him or to his office, it is only because it secures to him the protection of the national government, which is responsible to his own for any violation of his rights derived under the law of nations or from treaty. But it does not exempt him from liability to respond to his creditors, or to answer for his misconduct; nobody denies the liability of a consul to-be sued in a civil action; the act of congress concedes it, and provides for it. It prescribes the tribunal in which a consul in this country is to be called on to answer, and excludes the state courts from jurisdiction. The object of this exclusion was, to keep within the control of the federal government, and subject to the authority of its courts, all cases and controversies which might in any degree affect our foreign relations. The United States government has an interest in maintaining this exclusive jurisdiction, for the pur- * 5811 -ting it from being involved *in -* controversies with foreign powers, without its consent, and for acts not its own.

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Valarino v. Thompson
1 Seld. Notes 41 (New York Court of Appeals, 1853)

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.Y. 576, 7 N.Y.3d 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valarino-v-thompson-ny-1853.