John BOURNIAS, Libelant-Appellant,
v.
ATLANTIC MARITIME CO., Ltd., Navegacion Maritime Panama S.A.
and the S.S. Atlantic Ocean, her engines, tackle,
boilers, etc., Respondents-Appellees.
No. 39, Docket 23124.
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
Argued Dec. 10, 1954.
Decided Feb. 10, 1955.
Lebovici & Safir, New York City, (Herbert Lebovici, New York City, of counsel), for libelant-appellant.
McNutt & Nash, New York City (James E. Freehill and Donald B. Allen, New York City, of counsel), for respondents-appellees.
Before CLARK, Chief Judge, MEDINA and HARLAN, Circuit Judges.
HARLAN, Circuit Judge.
Libelant, a seaman, was employed on respondents' vessel at the time she was changed from Panamanian to Honduran registry. As originally filed the libel contained two causes of action. The first was based on several Articles of the Panama Labor Code, under which the libelant claimed an extra three-months' wages payable to seaman upon change of registry, and other amounts for vacation, overtime and holiday pay. The second was for penalties under 46 U.S.C.A. § 596 for failure to pay these amounts promptly.
The respondents filed exceptive allegations asserting, inter alia, that the action was barred by the one-year statute of limitations contained in Article 623 of the Panama Labor Code. After an argument on respondents' motion to sustain such allegations, the libelant was permitted to amend his libel to include a third cause of action to recover the amount of advances made to him and deducted from his pay in alleged violation of 46 U.S.C.A. § 599; the exceptive allegations were deemed amended to plead laches to this new claim; and the question of whether the action was barred by lapse of time was set down for a separate hearing.
At this hearing the Court held that the defense of lachеs, which was treated by Court and counsel as going only to the claim for advances, had not been substantiated, but that the Panama statute of limitations did bar the claims under the Panama Labor Code, and that in consequence the claim for penalties must also fail pro tanto. Although the respondents appear to argue that we are free on this appeal tо hold the claim for wages barred by laches, if not by limitation, we regard the correctness of the lower Court's decision on the applicability of the Panama statute of limitations as the only issue before us.
Article 623 of the Labor Code of Panama, applicable to Articles 127, 154, 166 and 170 of the Code, upon which the libelant based his first cause of action, reads:
'Actions аnd rights arising from labor contracts not enumerated in Article 621 shall prescribe (i.e., shall be barred by the Statute of Limitations) in a year from the happening of the events from which arise or are derived the said actions and rights.'1
The libelant's employment terminated on December 27, 1950, and since his libel was not filed until December 29, 1952, his first cause of action would be barred by Article 623 if it is controlling in this аction.
In actions where the rights of the parties are grounded upon the law of jurisdictions other than the forum, it is a well-settled conflict-of-laws rule that the forum will apply the foreign substantive law, but will follow its own rules of procedure. Restatement of Conflict of Laws § 585; Beale, Conflict of Laws § 584.1 (1935); Stumberg, Conflict of Laws 134 et seq. (2d Ed. 1951). While it might be desirable, in order to eliminate 'forum-shopping,' for the forum to apply the entire foreign law, substantive and procedural-- or at least as much of the procedural law as might significantly affect the choice of forum, it has been recognized that to do so involves an unreasonable burden on the judicial machinery of the forum, see Restatement of Conflict of Laws, Introductory Note to Chapter 12, and perhaps more significantly, on the local lawyers involved, see Ailes, Substance and Procedure in the Conflict of Laws, 39 Mich.L.Rev. 392, 416 (1941). Consequently, for at least some questions the law applied is that of the forum, with which the lawyers and judges are more familiar, and which can be administered more conveniently. In Levinson v. Deupree, 1953,
The general rule appears established that for the purpose of deciding whether to apрly local law or foreign law, statutes of limitations are classified as 'procedural.' Stumberg, Conflict of Laws 147 (1951); Lorenzen, Statutes of Limitation and the Conflict of Laws, 28 Yale L.J. 492 (1919). Hence the law of the forum controls. See Order of United Commercial Travelers v. Wolfe, 1947,
But as might be expected, some legislatures and courts, perhaps recognizing that in light of the rationale of the underlying conflict-of-laws doctrine it is anomalous to classify across-the-board statutes of limitation as 'procedural,' have created exceptions to the rule so categorizing such statutes. A legislative example are the so-called 'borrowing statues' which require the courts of the forum to apply the statute of limitations of another jurisdiction, often that where the causе of action arose, when the forum's statute has been tolled. See Note, Legislation Governing the Applicability of Foreign Statutes of Limitation, 35 Col.L.Rev. 762 (1935). A court-made exception, and the one with which we are concerned here, is that where the foreign statute of limitations is regarded as barring the foreign right sued upon, and not merely the remedy, it will be treated as conditiоning that right and will be enforced by our courts as part of the foreign 'substantive' law. See Beale, Conflict of Laws §§ 604.3, 605.1 (1935). Such exceptions operate pro tanto to give the result which commentators have advocated.
It is not always easy to determine whether a foreign statute of limitations should be regarded as 'substantive' or 'procedural,' for the tests applied by thе courts are far from precise. In The Harrisburg, 1886,
Two other approaches to the problem were suggested in our opinion in Wood & Selick, Inc., v. Compagnie Generale Transatlantique, 2 Cir., 1930,
Which, then, of these various tests should be applied here? It appears to us that it should be the one which Davis v. Mills, 1904,
Even though the limitation period here is contained in the same statute as enacts the right sought to be enforced, The Harrisburg, supra, still, as noted later, because of the breadth of the Panama Labor Code, as contrasted with the limited scope of the statute involved in The Harrisburg, the limitation period should not automatically be regarded as 'substantive.' Nor would it be appropriate to make this case turn on the fact that the right sued upon was unknown at common law (Zellmer and other cases cited, supra) when we are dealing with the statutes of a country where the common law does not exist. And we do not think that it should matter whether the foreign court has interpreted its statute as being 'procedural' or 'substantive' for some other purpose, which may have happened in Goodwin, supra, or whether the foreign practice requires that limitation be pleaded, Wood & Selick, supra. 'The tendency to assume that a word which appears in two or more legal rules, and so in connection with more than one purpose, has and should have precisely the same scope in all of them, runs all through legal discussions. It has all the tenacity of original sin and must constantly be guarded against.' Cook, Substance and Procedure in the Conflict of Laws, 42 Yale L.J. 333, 337 (1933). No more should it matter whether the foreign right is extinguished altogether by the mere passage of time, or is instead only repressed into а dormant state, subject to 'revival' if the defense of limitation is waived or renounced, Wood & Selick, supra. Such a distinction would generally be difficult to apply, and might also lead to results out of the pattern of the precedents; that is, if the defense could be waived under foreign law, a limitation period might be considered 'procedural' even though it was contained in a specific statute giving a remedy for wrongful death. Such limitations, however, are almost invariably held 'substantive.' Restatement of Conflict of Laws § 397. And whether the wording of the limitation period seems more like 'procedural' or 'substantive' language, Goodwin, supra, does not appear to have been generally considered important.
It is true that the test we prefer leavеs much to be desired. It permits the existence of a substantial gray area between the black and the white. But it at least furnishes a practical means of mitigating what is at best an artificial rule in the conflict of laws, without exposing us to the pitfalls inherent in prolonged excursions into foreign law; and it permits us to avoid the short-comings discussed above. We conclude, thereforе, that the 'specificity' test is the proper one to be applied in a case of this type, without deciding, of course, whether the same test would also be controlling in cases involving domestic or other kinds of foreign statutes of limitations.
Applying that test here it appears to us that the libelant is entitled to succeed, for the respondents have failed to satisfy us that thе Panamanian period of limitation in question was specifically aimed against the particular rights which the libelant seeks to enforce. The Panama Labor Code is a statute having broad objectives, viz.: 'The present Code regulates the relations between capital and labor, placing them on a basis of social justice, so that, without injuring any of the parties, there may be guaranteed for labor the necessary conditions for a normal life and to capital an equitable return for its investment.' In pursuance of these objectives the Code gives laborers various rights against their employers. Article 623 establishes the period of limitation for all such rights, except certain ones which are enumerated in Article 621. And there is nothing in the rеcord to indicate that the Panamanian legislature gave special consideration to the impact of Article 623 upon the particular rights sought to be enforced here, as distinguished from the other rights to which that Article is also applicable. Were we confronted with the question of whether the limitation period of Article 621 (which carves out particular rights to bе governed by a shorter limitation period) is to be regarded as 'substantive' or 'procedural' under the rule of 'specificity' we might have a different case; but here on the surface of things we appear to be dealing with a 'broad,' and not a 'specific,' statute of limitations. And this being a case brought on the admiralty said of the federal court, we are of course limited tо considering the foreign law material before us, and we may not take judicial notice of anything beyond that. Black Diamond S.S. Corp. v. Robert Stewart & Sons, 1949,
We therefore conclude that under the proper test the respondents have not made out their defense. In so holding we reach the same result as we did in the similar situation involved in Wood & Selick, 1930,
For reasons already discussed, we think this сonclusion is not affected, on the one hand, by the testimony of the respondents' expert to the effect that in his opinion Article 623 would be regarded under Panamanian law as a 'substantive' limitation upon the libelant's rights under the Panama Labor Code, or, on the other hand, by the libelant's showing that under Panamanian law this statute of limitations has some of the same attributes as such statutеs do under our law, and that the libelant's rights under the Panama Labor Code may not be altogether extinguished by the passage of the period of limitation. And we consider quite inconclusive the argument that the prescription period of Article 623 is addressed to both 'Actions and rights.' Nor in reaching our conclusion have we been influenced by the lower Court's statement that it felt justified in regаrding Article 623 as 'procedural.' Even treating this as a finding, despite the Court's view, which we discuss in a moment, that the respondents should prevail whether Article 623 be regarded as 'substantive' or as 'procedural,' we would not consider ourselves bound by it. For that conclusion seems to have been reached without the Court having addressed itself to the 'specificity' rule, so that the finding would rest on a wrong legal premise and should therefore be disregarded.
In conclusion, the Trial Judge, in finding for the respondents, held that when an admiralty court enforces a foreign created right, it must also enforce the foreign statute of limitations, whether that statute be denominated 'substantive' or 'procedural.' The court's decision was based on Rose v. United States, D.C.E.D.N.Y.1947,
Reversed.
Notes
This translation, including the interpolation, is as given by the respondents' expert, and seems not to be questioned by libelant
