Veytia v. Alvarez

247 P. 117, 30 Ariz. 316, 49 A.L.R. 994, 1926 Ariz. LEXIS 238
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1926
DocketCivil No. 2444.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 247 P. 117 (Veytia v. Alvarez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Veytia v. Alvarez, 247 P. 117, 30 Ariz. 316, 49 A.L.R. 994, 1926 Ariz. LEXIS 238 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

JONES, Superior Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment for the defendant upon an order sustaining a demurrer to the plaintiff’s complaint, alleging that plaintiff, a resident of Mexico, sold and delivered in Mexico to the defendant, a resident of Arizona, a quantity of intoxicating liquor for which the defendant failed to pay, and prayed judgment for the price of the liquor. That neither of the parties contemplated the violation of any law of the United States or the state of Arizona and that the contract was valid in Mexico was admitted.

Beeognizing the general rule that contracts, valid where made, are on principles of comity upheld elsewhere, the defendant (appellee) contends that he may escape payment because, he says, judicial compulsion would be in contravention of the public policy of this country and state as expressed by the Eighteenth Amendment, the Volstead Act (U. S. Comp. Stats. Ann. Supp. 1923, §1013814 et seq.), and the state constitutional and statutory provisions against the sale, manufacture, etc., of intoxicating liquors.

In reaching our conclusion, we have put aside as inapposite cases in which the contract by its terms contemplated part performance at or pursuant to the laws of the locus fori, or where the parties *318 planned the circumvention of the laws of the forum, and confined our consideration of the authorities to the determination of the proper limitations upon the general rule where a sale j.s made under the circumstances just related.^/'Our conclusion is that there is no~public policy that will justify the refusal of a court to extend comity under such a state of facts, unless the transaction involved is regarded in the exercise of a judicial discretion as inherently vicious, wicked or immoral, or (what is probably the same thing) where the judicial enforcement of such contract would present to our people an example pernicious and detestable — shocking to the prevailing moral sense, to use the language of Other courts.

We have discovered very few authorities involving sales, but such limitations are the only ones recognized in a variety of situations.

A translated extract from Huberus, an early European writer, found in a note on page 642 of 1 L. Ed., reads as follows:

“What we have said with respect to wills applies equally to conveyances to take effect during the life of the grantor: Provided a contract is made according to the law of the place, in which it is entered into, throughout, in court, and out of court, even in those places where such a mode of contracting is not allowed, it will be supported. For example: In a certain place particular kinds of merchandise are prohibited, if sold there the contract is void — but, if the same merchandise were sold elsewhere, in a place where there was not any prohibition, and a suit is brought in a place where they were prohibited, the purchaser will be condemned, and the suit maintained, because the contract was good in its origin, where made. ’ ’

In Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Bassford, 6 Hill (N. Y.), 526, the state of Kentucky sought to enforce in the courts of New York a bond given by the defendants in Kentucky upon the purchase of a lottery *319 there validly conducted. Lotteries were prohibited by the laws of New York. Said the court:

“True, as foreign laws are of no efficacy here ex proprio vigore, but by comity only, our courts may and ought to determine in each case how far that comity shall extend. If the law sanction what is plainly contrary to morality, the public rights, etc., the courts of this state will not aid in administering it. Story on Conflict of Laws, 213, § 258. But I do not regard the one in question as falling within this class of excepted cases, any more than a foreign law allowing interest on money beyond the rate established by our own statute. Andrews v. Pond, 13 Peters (U. S.), 65, 10 L. Ed. 61 (see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes). Indeed, the policy of raising money by lottery for public purposes, such as for literary and benevolent institutions, continued to prevail in this state until 1833 (Session Laws of 1833, p. 484), though before prohibited as unwise and inexpedient in the Constitution of 1821, so far as respected the future power of the Legislature. Const, of N. Y. art. 7, § 11. It would be rather ungracious for our courts, under these circumstances, to refuse to uphold the contract in question, within the rule of comity, on the ground that it was founded in moral turpitude.”

A New Jersey court, however, refused to take jurisdiction of a bill for accounting of a partnership which had lawfully conducted lotteries in other states. It was pointed out that for more than seventy years lotteries had been prohibited from operating in New Jersey by a statute that condemned them “wherever situated,” and they were characterized as “judicially, if not abstractly in ethics, mala in se,” and thus condemned by the maxim ex turpi causa non oritur actio. Watson v. Murray, 23 N. J. Eq. 257.

In Greenwood v. Curtis, 6 Mass. 358, 4 Am. Dec. 145, plaintiff shipped a cargo of goods from South Carolina to Africa to be exchanged for slaves. Curtis accepted in Africa the cargo, delivered Greenwood some slaves, acknowledged a balance due Greenwood, *320 and for such balance also executed a promissory note payable in slaves and money. Greenwood sued Curtis in Massachusetts in assumpsit on the note and in another form of action on the acknowledged balance due. Accordingly, each count sought the recovery of the same debt.

The court declared that there were two exceptions to the general rule that a contract valid by the lex loci contractus should be enforced regardless of the lex fori, where “the commonwealth or its citizens may be injured by giving legal effect to the contract by a judgment in our courts,” and “when the giving of legal effect to the contract would exhibit to the citizens of the state an example pernicious and detestable.” After pointing out that the sale of slaves was valid in South Carolina and Africa, the court declared that the principle of comity enjoined upon it the duty of enforcing the note and stated account, unless they came within one of the two exceptions. In concluding that the action of assumpsit did not fall within the first exception, the court said:

“To maintain action, if it be not within the exceptions, is enjoined on us by the comity we owe another state. And to entitle the defendant to retain in his hands the debt which he justly owes, as between the parties, he ought clearly to show some principle, by which he may defend himself in dishonestly retaining this property. We do not perceive any injury that could arise to the rights or interests of this state or its citizens, if either of the contracts had been faithfully executed agreeably to the terms of it. It was made abroad, by persons not citizens of this commonwealth, and to be executed abroad, having no relation in its consequences to our laws.

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Bluebook (online)
247 P. 117, 30 Ariz. 316, 49 A.L.R. 994, 1926 Ariz. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veytia-v-alvarez-ariz-1926.