102 Misc. 320 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1918
Plaintiff sues alleging breach of contract and defendant moves for án order dismissing the complaint on the ground that plaintiff is an alien enemy, or staying proceedings until the end of the war. Defendant argues, among other things, that plaintiff as an opera singer is a trader and an alien enemy; that she has procured no license, and therefore she is prohibited from doing business here or suing the person or corporation with which she trades for" breach of contract. Plaintiff argues, among other things, that plaintiff is not an enemy alien; that she is an employee and not a trader; that an employee does not need a license either to carry a hod or to sing in opera, and that plaintiff is protected in her enterprises by the treaties existing between the United States and the Kingdom of Prussia. For the purpose of this motion I do not deem it necessary to follow the able and exhaustive arguments submitted, nor to decide whether plaintiff is an “ alien enemy,” nor whether the Prussian treaties, as defendant insists, have been reduced to scraps of paper. Subdivision C of the second section of the 11 Trading With the Enemy Act” provides that a citizen of Prussia like plaintiff may be declared an “enemy” by proclamation of the president. In his proclamation of April 6, 1917, the president declared that all German male. subjects over fourteen years of age resident here, which obviously does not include this plaintiff, are “alien enemies.” But he also declared that, “so long as they shall conduct themselves in accordance with the law, they shall be undisturbed in the peaceful
Motion denied.