14 Conn. 555 | Conn. | 1842
This assignment is found to be valid according to the laws of the state of Ohio, within which it was executed, and the assignees resided; and it is concluded by the plaintiffs, that it is valid, also, according to the laws of this
en(lu'ry dieii arises, whether there exists such a con"flict between the law of this state and of Ohio, as is claimed by the plaintiffs; and this depends on the question, whether, by the true construction of the act which has been mentioned, it embraces assignments of debts due by our own citizens to those of other states,
'Although the statute speaks generally of all conveyances and assignments of any lands, goods, chattels, or choses in action, yet, considering the character of its several provisions, and the objects it was designed to effect, it is evident, that it was not the intention of the legislature to subject to its operation any property, excepting that which may be properly said to be within this state ; by which is meant, that which is corporeal, and therefore capable of location, and actually situated within the state ; and also that which is incorporeal, and therefore not susceptible of actual location, but which, from its peculiar character, has a locality ascribed or attributed to it, by our laws, and is, consequently, considered and treated as being situated here. Debts due by our citizens to those of other states, do not fall within either of these descriptions. The first class would comprise real estate, and ordinary tangible, corporeal personal property, situated here ; and the other, debts due to our own citizens, (which are deemed to be attached to the person of the creditor) and local stocks, or funds of an incorporeal nature, such as the stocks of banks, insurance, turnpike, canal and bridge, companies, and other corporations, including manufacturing establishments, which are created and regulated by our laws, and therefore located, and having an existence only, within this state, and the stock of which is declared to be personal estate, subjected to our ordinary process of attachment and execution, and made, capable of being disposed of like other personal estate. Stat# 44. 65. 89. (ed. 1838.) 13 Peters’Rep. 521. 14 Conn. Rep. 301. This is the only rational construction of the language of
The counsel for the plaintiffs do not, indeed, controvert these general views, nor claim, in terms, that the provisions of the act in question apply to any property, excepting such as is either actually or constructively located in this state; but they insist, that the debt in question comes within the latter description. In order to sustain this claim, it is necessary to shew, that all debts due by our citizens to those abroad are of this character, or that there is something pe
As to generally, there is no colour for the idea that they are impliedly located in the state where the debtor re-On the contrary, they are now universally treated as having no situs or locality, (which is in precise accordance with their nature, tiiey being incorporeal, and therefore not susceptible of local position,) and are deemed, in contemplation of law, to be attached to, and to follow, the person of the creditor. This is the well established doctrine, both of the civil and common law. Story’s Confl. §362. §399. Livermore’s Dissert. 162. 16 Pick. 340. A debt belongs to that species of personal property, termed dioses in action, which are described by Blackstone, to be, where one hath not the occupation of, but merely a bare right to occupy, something* the possession whereof may be recovered by a suit or action at law. 2 Bla. Com. 397. In the language of Judge Story, “ a debt is not a corpus, capable of local position, but purely a jus incorpórale.” Conjl. §399. In this respect, it differs essentially from the other species of personal property, which is in possession, and has a visible, corporeal existence and locality ; although even the latter, for purposes of voluntary alienation and succession, is generally considered as being destitute of locality, and as being governed by the law of the place of the owner’s domicil. A debt, therefore, having in truth, as well as in contemplation of law, no situs, and not being susceptible of actual position or locality, ought not to have an artificial locality attached to it, so as to bring it within the operation of a statute like the one in question, unless the legislature has, as it undoubtedly might have done, clearly evinced such intention, or the spirit of the act manifestly requires it; neither of which is the case in the present instance.
In this view of the subject, the debt in question, as the property of Butler and Gore, being, in no legal sense, situated in this state, the transfer of it by them, is no more affected by that statute, than would be a transfer by them of any other of their property situated elsewhere.
The plaintiffs, however, insist, that a debt due from the defendants, which is a corporation created by our laws, differs in its nature, and is to be governed by a different rule,
Although it may not be practicable to subject the corporation to a suit against its person in a foreign state, on the ground that it has no existence out of the limits of the state by which it was created, (14 Conn. Rep. 301.) in every other respect, debts against it stand on the same footing, and may be enforced in the same manner, as those against natural persons. The fixedness of their location may constitute a good reason why the stock of such corporations should be deemed of a local character, but has no such application to the debts due by them as to make them also local. This point did not escape the attention of Erskine, who, in his Institutes, after stating that the shares of the trading companies, or of the public stocks of any country, for example, the banks of Scotland, England and Holland, the South Sea Company, &c., must be exempted from the general rule as to the transfer and succession of personal property; and that these are, “ without doubt, descendible according to the law of the state where such stocks are fixed,” adds, “ but the bonds or notes of such companies make no exception from the general rule.” Book 3. tit. 9. §4. As, therefore, the debt in question is not the subject of any positive regulation, by our laws, as to the mode of its transfer, the act on which the plaintiffs rely, not requiring the assignment of it to be lodged for record as claimed, there is no conflict between the laws of Ohio and Connecticut on the subject; and the*transfer of it, being according to the laws of both, it is, of course, perfect.
The case of The Richmondville Manufacturing Company v. Prall & al. 9 Conn. Rep. 487., has been very strongly urged, by the plaintiffs’ counsel, as decisive of the present, which was determined by the court below, on the authority of the general expressions contained in the opinion of the court, as given in that case. It was there held, that the act
There is no authority for applying the same rule to debts due abroad, whether by natural or artificial persons.
For these reasons, a new trial is advised.
New trial to be granted.
Commentaries on Colonial and Foreign Law generally, in their conflict with each other, and with the Laws of England,. By William Burge. 4 vols. royal 8vo. Edition, London, 1838.
The first section of the act on which the gestión arises in this case, is recited in the case of The Richmondville Company v. Trail & al. 9 Conn. Rep. 487.