DEUTSCHE BANK FILIALE NURNBERG v. HUMPHREY
No. 224
Supreme Court of the United States
November 23, 1926
272 U.S. 517
Syllabus.
Sioux City Bridge v. Dakota County, 260 U.S. 441, 445; Taylor v. L. & N. R. R., 88 Fed. 350; L. & N. R. R. v. Bosworth, 209 Fed. 380, 452; Washington Water Power Co. v. Kootenai County, 270 Fed. 369, 374.
One argument urged against our conclusion is that the relation of a foreign insurance company to the State which permits it to do business within its limits, is contractual, and that, by coming into the State and engaging in business on the conditions imposed, it waives all constitutional restrictions, and can not object to a condition or law regulating its obligations, even though, as a statute operating in invitum, it may be in conflict with constitutional limitations. This argument can not prevail in view of the decisions of this Court in well considered cases. Insurance Co. v. Morse, 20 Wall. 445; Western Union Telegraph Company v. Kansas, 216 U.S. 1; Terral v. Burke Construction Co., 257 U.S. 529; Fidelity & Deposit Company v. Tafoya, 270 U.S. 426; Frost v. Railroad Commission, 271 U.S. 583.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Illinois must be reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
CERTIORARI TO THE CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT.
No. 224. Submitted October 12, 1926. — Decided November 23, 1926.
- An obligation in terms of the currency of a country takes the risk of currency fluctuations and whether creditor or debtor profits by the change the law takes no account of it. P. 519.
- In an action brought here on a debt arising from a deposit made in Germany and payable there on demand, in marks, it is erroneous to translate the amount due into dollars at the rate of exchange
existing when demand was made, the mark having depreciated thereafter. P. 519.
7 F. (2d) 330, reversed.
CERTIORARI (269 U.S. 547) to a judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals which affirmed a judgment of the District Court in a suit brought by Humphrey against the Deutsche Bank, under the
Mr. Amos J. Peaslee for the petitioner, submitted.
Messrs. William Grant, William P. Hubbard, and John B. Zimdars for the respondent, submitted.
Solicitor General Mitchell filed a brief on behalf of the Alien Property Custodian and the Treasurer of the United States.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit to reach and apply to a debt due from the Deutsche Bank Filiale to Humphrey money seized by the Alien Property Custodian and paid into the Treasury of the United States. Humphrey, an American citizen, deposited money, payable on demand, in a German Bank in Germany, and demanded it, as the Courts have found, on or about June 12, 1915. The money was not paid, and this suit was begun on July 9, 1921, under the
In this case, unlike Hicks v. Guinness, 269 U.S. 71, at the date of the demand the German Bank owed no duty
There has been so little discussion of what we regard as the principles that ought to govern this question that
Decree reversed.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND, dissenting.
It is well settled, I think, that, where the cause of action for a tort or breach of contract to deliver goods accrues in a foreign country and is sued on here, the time for fixing the value of foreign money in dollars is the date when the wrong was committed or the breach occurred. This Court has recently applied the same rule to the case of a simple debt payable in this country, Hicks v. Guinness, 269 U.S. 71, and to the settlement of partnership accounts, where the partnership funds were partly here and partly abroad, Sutherland v. Mayer, 271 U.S. 272. The majority opinion rests upon the distinction that
It is said that when the bank failed to pay on demand, its liability was fixed by German law at a certain number of German marks, and in marks only; that it continued to be a liability in marks only and was open to satisfaction by the payment of that number of marks at any time, however much the mark might have fallen in value as compared with other things; citing Société des Hôtels le Touquet Paris-Plage v. Cummings, [1922] 1 K. B. 451. And that, of course, is true if the payment be made in Germany, where marks remain legal tender at all times irrespective of their fluctuating value when measured by their purchasing power or by the money of other countries. And this is all that is held in Société des Hôtels, etc. v. Cummings, supra. See pp. 458, 461, 464. It, likewise, may be assumed that if suit had been brought in Germany, a judgment at any time for the number of marks called for by the obligation would have satisfied the requirements of German law, since there marks were not only the things to be delivered but the lawful money with which to satisfy a breach of an obligation to deliver them. But if suit be brought in a court of this country, where marks are not money but things only, the judgment must be in dollars and cannot be in marks any more than it could be in wheat if the broken contract related to that commodity.
The view that the judgment date should govern puts undue emphasis upon the character of the thing to be delivered and ignores completely the all-important element of the time when the delivery should have been made. In respect of that element, I see no good reason for making a distinction between marks and wheat. In either case, if suit be brought in Germany, the injured
But in an action brought here to recover upon a failure to deliver marks in Germany, the question of time becomes material; for here a mark is not money, but a commodity; and if plaintiff is to be compensated in dollars for his loss, we must inquire, When did the loss occur? just as we must make that inquiry in order to fix in dollars the value of wheat in a suit to recover for the non-delivery of that commodity. To me it seems clear that, in the one case as in the other, the basis of recovery must be the value in dollars of the thing lost at the time of the loss. In this respect, a simple debt payable in marks and an obligation to deliver goods in Germany stand upon the same footing. In either case, the injured party is entitled to have in the money of this country the value of what he would have obtained if the contract had been performed at the stipulated time. Lord Eldon, in Cash v. Kennion, 11 Ves. 314, 316, expressed the applicable principle when he said: “I cannot bring myself to doubt, that, where a man agrees to pay £100 in London upon the 1st of January, he ought to have that sum there upon that day. If he fails in that contract, wherever the creditor sues him, the law of that country ought to give him just as much as he would have had, if the contract had been performed.”
The date for conversion adopted by this Court after the Civil War in respect of obligations payable in
To take the date of judgment for determining the value is to adopt for the measurement of a loss a test resting upon the fluctuating chances of a court calendar instead of upon an event already fixed, — that is, to put aside certainty for uncertainty. The date of the breach, whether of a contract to deliver goods or to pay money, marks the essential event which gives rise to the cause of action and bears a necessary relation to the wrong sought to be redressed; while the date of the rendition of judgment bears no relation whatever to the wrong complained of and has nothing to do with the cause of action. The cases are not agreed; but an examination of them convinces me that the conclusion I have indicated by the foregoing is supported by the great weight of authority. See for example, Page v. Levenson, 281 Fed. 555, 558; Dante v. Miniggio, 298 Fed. 845; Wichita Mill & E. Co. v. Naamlooze, etc., Industrie, 3 F. (2d) 931; Hoppe v. Russo-Asiatic Bank, 235 N. Y. 37, 39, affirming 200 App. Div. 460, 465; Simonoff v. Granite City Nat. Bank, 279 Ill. 248, 254; Grunwald v. Freese, (Cal.) 34 Pac. 73, 76; Manners v. Pearson & Son, [1898] 1 Ch. 581, 587-588, 592-593; Société des Hôtels v. Cummings, [1921] 3 K. B. 459, 461 (reversed on another point, [1922] 1 K. B. 451, 455, 463, 465), Uliendahl v. Pankhurst Wright & Co., 39 Times L. R. 628; Peyrae v. Wilkinson, [1924] 2 K. B. 166; Barry v. Van den Hurk, [1920] 2 K. B. 709, 712; In re British American Continental Bank, [1922] 2 Ch. 589, 594-598.
The case last cited was a winding-up proceeding, and the question arose over the conversion into English money of the amount of a debt payable in Belgium in Belgian currency. The court adopted as the date for conversion into English money the date when the debt was payable in Belgium, saying (p. 595): “...this mode of computation and thus converting the one currency into the other is based upon damages for the breach of contract to deliver the commodity bargained for (i. e., the foreign currency) at the appointed time and place; consequently the date for conversion is the date of breach and not the date of the judgment.” After reviewing the prior cases, including both decisions in Société des Hôtels v. Cummings, supra, the court concluded that “the principle in no way depends either upon the nationality of the creditor or upon the fact that the place of payment is in the creditor‘s own country as distinguished from some other country, but applies, if at all, to every case where an action is brought in England for the recovery of a debt payable in some other currency than English money.”
The same principle is announced in Lebeaupin v. Crispin, [1920] 2 K. B. 714, 723, in an action for breach of contract to deliver salmon. The court said: “If the damages are fixed at the date of breach where the contract is wholly to be performed in England, such also, I think, should be the result where the breach is out of England. There should not be varying rules in such a case. If the damages are once crystallized at the date of breach, then a definite date is given for the ascertainment of exchange, and the amount found payable at the hearing is awarded without regard to the fluctuations of the possible date of trial.”
I am of opinion, therefore, that the judgment below should be affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE MCREYNOLDS, MR. JUSTICE BUTLER and MR. JUSTICE SANFORD concur in this opinion.
