19 La. 524 | La. | 1841
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action, which was commenced by attachment, the defendant being a resident of the State of Mississippi, is founded upon a judgment recovered in that State against the defendant and others in solido.
The defendant pleads, that the pretended judgment was recovered under a statute of the State of Mississippi, passed in 1837, of which a certified copy is produced. That it appears, that said judgment was founded upon a promissory note drawn by Archibald Clark, and endorsed by this defendant and others. He alleges, that he endorsed the note as surety and for the accommodation of Clark, and that according to the laws of that State, and particularly the statute thus set forth, the plaintiff is not entitled to enforce said judgment against him, unless upon the affidavit of some credible person, made and filed among the papers in the cause, in the court in which the judgment was
There was judgment for the defendant, and the plaintiffs have appealed. The plaintiff gave in evidence a record showing, that he had recovered' the judgment sued on.
It appears by a bill of exceptions taken by the plaintiffs, that the court admitted in- evidence, a document marked F., purporting to be an exemplification of a record' in- the high Court of Errors and Appeals for the State- of Mississippi, notwithstanding the objection, that it appeared upon its face to be defective and incomplete, and to contain a transcript of only a part of the proceedings had in the suit, in Madison county-, State- of Mississippi, and the certificate of the clerk as to the substance ot^er proceedings, without proof of a loss of any- part- of the record. We think the court erred. A mutilated record is clearly inadmissible, and1 we cannot take the certificate of the clerk as proof of the purport of papers-of record in his,office, much less such as may be missing. 1 Martin, N. S., 522; 18 La. Rep., 33.
It only remains to enquire, whether the plea of the defendant, that the plaintiffs cannot maintain this action on the ground that according to the laws of Mississippi, where the note was made and the original judgment rendered, the plaintiff was not authorized to enforce the judgment, recovered in that State, against him, unless upon affidavit, that the money could not be made out of the property of the principal- obligor, was properly sustained.
The act of the legislature of the State of Mississippi entitled “ an act to amend the laws respecting suits to be brought .against endorsers of- promissory notes,” upon which the de'
These are all the provisions of the act-, which it is necessary to recite, as having any relation to the present case. It is incontestable, that the extent of liability incurred by the defendant in endorsing the note Upon which judgment has been rendered in Mississippi, and the construction of the contract entered into by him, are to be ascertained and determined by the isx loci contractus. But the statute relates altogether to the remedy which the creditor may pursue in the courts of that State; and with respect to remedial statutes, it is equally well settled, that they have no -extra territorial operation. That the interpretation of contracts depends upon the foieign law, but the remedies by which the obligation resulting from contracts, are sought to be enforced, must be according to the forms and regulations of the place, where the remedy is sought, the lex fori. 11 Martin Rep., 730; 12 ditto, 475; 1 N. S., 202; Story’s Conflict of Laws; 5 N. S., 585; 6 La. Rep., 676.
The court therefore erred, in our opinion, in sustaining the pie a-and giving judgment for the defendant. ‘
It is therefore adjudged -and decreed that the judgment of