28 Mass. 36 | Mass. | 1831
delivered the opinion of the Court. The facts upon which the question arises in the present case, are presented upon the pleadings ; and the general question is, whether a plaintiff, a subject of a foreign state, can maintain an action against a defendant, who is a subject of the same foreign state, upon a cause of action barred by a statute of limitations of the state, of which they were respectively subjects when the cause of action accrued. Several preliminary questions were raised upon the sufficiency of the pleadings, as whether the rejoinder is not bad as a departure, and whether the laws of Nova Scotia are pleaded with sufficient fulness and precision. But in the view which the Court take of the cause, these questions are unimportant, as they are satisfied, that the facts pleaded, as well those set forth in the bar, t s those stated in the rejoinder, would not constitute a legal .'efience, in whatever form they might be pleaded.
The facts, so far as they are material, are these; that the cause of action accrued in 1821, more than six years before the commencement of this action, that the plaintiff and defendant were both domiciled at Halifax in Nova Scotia, and were subjects of the king of Great Britain, and that by the law of that country, an action of assumpsit is barred in six years. It is stated in the replication, and admitted by the rejoinder, that the plaintiff came into this commonwealth, for the first time, in 1829, and that the action was commenced within six years from that time.
That the law of limitation of a foreign country, cannot of itself be pleaded as a bar to an action in this Commonwealth, seems conceded ; and is indeed too well settled by authority to be drawn in question. Byrne v. Crowninshield, 17 Mass. R. 55. The authorities both from the civil and the common law concur in fixing the rule, that the nature, validity, and construction of contracts, is to be determined by the law of the place where the contract is made; and that all remedies for enforcing such contracts, are regulated by the law of the place where such remedies are pursued. Whether a law of prescription, or statute of limitation, which take away every legal mode of recovering a debt, shall be considered as affecting the contract, like payment, release, or judgment, which in
The same conclusion results from the reason upon which these cases proceed, which is, that statutes of limitation affect only the time, within which a legal remedy must be pursued.
But though it is not much insisted that the foreign statute can itself be .pleaded as a substantive bar, still it is contended that it avoids the exception within which the plaintiff has attempted to bring himself by his replication.
The statute itself provides that it shall not he understood to bar any person, beyond sea, without any of the United States, from bringing such action within the term limited, reckoning from the time that such impediment shall be removed. This proviso in terms excludes the operation of the statute in all cases, where the plaintiff is out of the Commonwealth at the time the cause of action accrues, without distinguishing whether the plaintiff be a citizen, or one who has formerly resided in the State and who is casually absent, or a foreigner who has never been within it. And so it has been decided. Wilson v. Appleton, 17 Mass. R. 180.
This proviso also excludes the operation of the statute^ when the defendant is out of the State and until six years after he shall return. The construction of this clause also has been, notwithstanding the use of the word “ return,” that it applies as well to foreigners coming into the State originally, as to citizens who have been absent. Dwight v. Clark, 7 Mass. R. 515. But as these are entirely separate and independent exceptions to the operation of the statute, the existence of either of them is sufficient to take the case out of it. Here the plaintiff relies upon the first. He alleges, that his action was commenced within six years after he first came into this State, after tiie cause of action accrued. The statute declares that the limitation created by it shall not extend to such a case. How does the matter set forth in the rejoinder avoid it ? The fact that they were both foreigners has no such effect. Our law, conforming to the comity of all civilized states, gives effect to foreign contracts and obligations, which follow the persons respectively when the contracts are not immoral or injurious.
How does the existence of a foreign law of the like kind, which would merely affect the remedy within its own jurisdiction, control or affect the statute of limitations which regulates the remedy here ? The statute itself makes no such distinction, and none can be implied either from its letter or spirit.
On tire whole the Court are of opinion, that the plaintiff is within the terms and spirit of the exception to the statute of limitations, and that his action therefore is not bar-red by it. The rejoinder is adjudged bad and insufficient, and judgment must be rendered on tire verdict.
See Story on Confl. of Laws, § 582 b.; Huber v. Steiner, 2 Bingh. N. R. 211; S. C. 4 Moore & Scott, 328; Don v. Lippman, 5 Clark & Fin. 1; Sissons v. Bicknell, 6 N. H. R. 557; Dunning v. Chamberlin, 6 Vermont R. 127; Goodman v. Munks, 8 Porter’s (Ala.) R. 84; Shelby v. Guy, 11 Wheaton, 361; Little v. Blunt, 16 Pick. 359; Whitney v. Goddard, 20 Pick. 310.