84 N.Y. 367 | NY | 1881
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *370
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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *372
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *373 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *375 The plaintiff is a corporation created under an act of Congress of the United States providing for the organization of banking associations. "The Mechanics and Traders' Bank" was also a banking corporation created under the laws of Louisiana, and each corporation had its place of business in the city of New Orleans. On the 17th day of March, 1879, the plaintiff purchased for value of the "Mechanics and Traders' Bank" a check made by them on that day, addressed to "M. Morgan's Sons," bankers in the city of "New York," whereby they directed that firm to pay to the order of the plaintiff $10,000. On the 26th of March, 1879, the check was duly presented to the payees for payment. It was refused. The check was duly protested and notice thereof given to the drawer. On the 27th day of March, 1879, this action was commenced against the "Mechanics and Traders' Bank" as drawer, and an attachment issued thereon was served on M. Morgan's Sons, who had funds of the drawer in their hands. Prior to that day, but after the delivery of the check to the plaintiff, the "Mechanics and Traders' Bank" was placed in liquidation under the laws of the State of Louisiana, and certain persons were by the court in that State appointed commissioners to take possession of and administer its assets. They were afterward made defendants in this action, and set up in defense their appointment under the circumstances above mentioned, their title through it to all the property of the bank, and also that the Supreme Court of this State had no jurisdiction to issue the attachment herein or entertain the action. The plaintiff has had judgment, and the defendants insist upon these objections among others as grounds for reversing it:
First, as to the jurisdiction of the court: At the time the action was commenced, the Code of Procedure was in force, and section 427 provided, among other things, that an action against a foreign corporation might be brought in the Supreme Court by a plaintiff not a resident of this State, "where the cause of action shall have arisen within the State." For this purpose a foreign corporation is to be regarded as a non-resident. What does the statute mean? We have learned from Coke that "an *376
action is the lawful demand of one's right," and from the Code that complaint therein "must contain a statement of the facts constituting a cause of action." In any given case, then, the cause of action must arise upon the facts, and these appearing, we have only to inquire where they occurred. The complaint in this case sets out the check, shows the performance of those things which the law merchant prescribes as necessary to be done to change the conditional liability of the drawer into an absolute one, and that the proper steps were taken to change it. There are thus placed before us two classes of facts: first, the contract and its obligations; second, the things done in pursuance of the contract. The argument for the appellants assumes that the first constitutes the cause of action, and, as the contract was made in Louisiana, therefore, excludes jurisdiction from our courts. Authorities are not needed to show that in general every contract is to be expounded and enforced by the law of the place where it is made. But the curious will find the ancient ones collected by Wedderburn, of counsel inRobinson v. Bland (1 Wm. Blackstone, 256), and more modern ones in Story's Conflict of Laws (infra). Thus, if a bill is drawn in France, and then indorsed in a way which is sufficient here but insufficient there, the indorsement would be held void. (Trimbey v. Vignier, 1 Bing. N.C. 151.) But this general rule admits of an exception, as where the parties at the time of making the contract had a view to a different kingdom. MANSFIELD, C.J., in Robinson v. Bland (ante), or as put by Mr. Justice THOMPSON in Smith v. Smith (2 Johns. 241), "unless the parties had a view to its being executed elsewhere, in which case it is to be considered according to the laws of the place where the contract is to be executed." Therefore, the English court held, in Robinson v. Bland, that a bill of exchange drawn in France by John Bland upon himself in England, payable to the order of the plaintiff, was invalid because given for a consideration void by English law, saying: "The bill is made payable in England and is, therefore, an English transaction and to be governed by the local law." And conversely, in Rouquette
v. Overmann, etc. (L.R., 10 Q.B. 525), where the *377
subject under consideration was the liability of certain persons who, as drawers residing in London, had there made a draft upon certain French bankers in Paris, payable to the drawers' own order, but indorsed by them to the plaintiff. The drawers having been charged as drawers under the French law were sued by the plaintiff in London, and it being objected that the contract of the drawer was to be construed according to the laws of England, where he resided and where he made the bill, the court were of a different mind, saying: "It is unnecessary to consider how far this position may hold good as to matter of form, or stamp objections, or illegality of consideration, or the like. We cannot concur in it, as applicable to the substance of the contract, so far as presentment for payment is concerned, still less to a formality required on non-payment to enable the holder to have recourse to an antecedent party on the bill. Applied to these incidents of the contract, this reasoning appears to us altogether to overlook the true nature of the contract, which a party transferring for value the property in a bill of exchange makes with the transferee." * * * "He engages as surety for the due performance by the acceptor of the obligations which the latter takes on himself by the acceptance. His liability, therefore, is to be measured by that of the acceptor, whose surety he is; and as the obligations of the acceptor are to be determined by the lex loci of performance, so also must be those of the surety;" and thus shows that the drawer contracted in view of the laws of the country where the bill was to be paid, and to such an extent that he was held to be affected by changes in the local law, viz.: the law of France. In that case, also,Allen v. Kimble, cited here by the appellants, is criticised and found to have "nothing to do with the law relating to bills of exchange;" and it is said that in deciding Gibbs v.Fremont, also cited by the appellants, Allen v. Kimble was followed, and the court withholds "any opinion as to the soundness of the decision." Gibbs v. Fremont (9 Ex. 25) decided that a bill of exchange drawn in California on Washington, in the District of Columbia, bore interest at California rate. But this is not only questioned *378
by the later English cases (supra); it is contrary to the doctrine of earlier English cases, and to those of this State, some of which are collected in the note to page 32, vol. 9, Exchequer Reports, and to the principle upon which Dickinson v.Edwards (
The only object of the parties, payee as well as drawers, in entering upon it was to have the money paid in New York. This only was in contemplation of the parties. As is said in 2 Daniels' Negotiable Instruments, page 685: "He, the drawer, has contracted that the amount shall be there paid by the hand of B.," the drawee. Any other construction would render the contract meaningless, and productive only of mischief. The plaintiff, in New Orleans, wants money in New York. Defendant promises it shall be there for him, and, relying on that, the plaintiff pays in New Orleans the agreed amount. It is obvious that it cannot be ascertained whether the promise is kept until it is taken to New York, and then, upon the theory of the appellant, if it is not performed, the promise is to be returned to the drawer in New Orleans, and then, in New Orleans, the money is to be repaid. And thus, after delay, the plaintiff is restored to his original *381
desire, and must find some other method of transferring his money to New York. There is before us a single undertaking. It could be performed only in New York, and the general law above referred to shows that the rights of the parties are to be governed by its laws as the lex loci. Nor is the question a new one. In this court it has been declared as "too well established to require a reference to books." (Everett v. Vendryes,
The remaining question relates to the claim made by Messrs. Lacombe and others, commissioner appointed by the court in Louisiana. Neither the law nor the adjudication under which they were appointed can have any operation here. They are strictly local and effect nothing more than they can reach. For the rule, as we conceive, is well settled that an assignment by virtue of or under a foreign law does not operate upon a debt, or right of action, as against a person in this *385
State. The plaintiff as we have seen, although a foreign creditor, is rightfully in our courts pursuing a remedy given by our statutes. It may enforce that remedy to the same extent and in the same manner and with the same priority as a citizen. Any other construction would make the permission of the statute a form without benefit; a formality, and not matter of substance; a mere delusion. Once properly in court and accepted as a suitor, neither the law, nor court administering the law, will admit any distinction between the citizen of its own State and that of another. Before the law and in its tribunals there can be no preference of one over the other. (Abraham v. Plestoro, 3 Wend. 548; Johnson v. Hunt, 23 id. 91; Hoyt v. Thompson,
All concur, except RAPALLO, J., absent.
Judgment affirmed.