17 F.2d 533 | 2d Cir. | 1927
(after stating the facts as above). We shall assume arguendo that the stipulation in the contract between Lizrodt and Donner that Lizrodt should pay in marks and in Hamburg was not solely for Donner’s benefit, but that Lizrodt might also have insisted upon it. If so, had Donner in New York demanded dollars, or for that matter marks, Lizrodt could lawfully have refused payment. The plaintiff agrees that the Alien Property Custodian was substituted in Donner’s place by the seizure, but insists that his rights were not thereby enlarged. While, therefore, the Custodian by his demand matured the debt, he could not exact dollars from Lizrodt in New York. On the contrary, Lizrodt was entitled to wait until the first moment when he could lawfully pay marks in Hamburg, at which time they had fallen to 8 cents. The Custodian’s exaction of payment in another currency and at another place was therefore unlawful.
We might find difficulties in the Custodian’s position, if he was limited to the very letter of Lizrodt’s obligation, but we think because of the statute that he was not. Section 7 (e) of the Trading with the Enemy Act (Comp. St. §• 3115%d) provides that on the President’s order a citizen must pay any money “owing” to an enemy. The purpose of the act was to reduce to possession all accessible enemy property, not only to cripple Germany, but to prosecute the war. Debts owed Germans would prima facie be payable in Germany. That this is true in the ease of contracts made there, is we think universally admitted. In the case of those made here, the federal rule (Pennsylvania, etc., Ins. Co. v. Meyer, 197 U. S. 407, 25 S. Ct. 483, 49 L. Ed. 810) seems to differ from the usual law (Hale v. Patton, 60 N. Y. 236, 19 Am. Rep. 168; Weyand v. Park Terrace Co., 202 N. Y. 231, 95 N. E. 723, 36 L. R. A. [N. S.] 308, Ann. Cas. 1912D, 1010). The question necessarily depends upon the particular intent disclosed in the contract, and the
We recognize that the Custodian eould not mature debts at his will; that would be a substantial increase in their burden. Indeed, it may be true that there are possible circumstances which would make a change in currency and place of payment an increased burden. Nothing of the sort was here alleged, and we are entitled to assume that Lizrodt’s case was the usual one. An American called upon to pay marks in Germany must ordinarily first buy them with dollars. Even if he is entitled to stand upon the letter of his promise as against the promisee, it is no hardship upon him to demand the dollars before he has converted them, and it was in our judgment quite within the powers of Congress in the exercise of its war power so far to change the form of his obligation.
Indeed, Lizrodt must assert that he has an interest in the interdiction upon his payment during the war, and in the consequent vagaries of the rate of exchange. That interdiction depended upon purposes which did not in the least comprehend him or his fate. It is true that he would in this instance have profited by its accident, but that possibility was not a right, and he may not complain that he lost it, whether in the end Donner will profit, or the United States.
The ease does not involve the question so much discussed at the bar; that is, at what time the rate of exchange must be taken in case of the breach of a contract to pay money. The point in dispute is whether there was a breach at all. Die Deutsche Bank Filiale v. Humphrey, 47 S. Ct. 166; 71 L. Ed.-, November 23, 1926, has nothing to do with that.
Decree affirmed.