294 F. 255 | 9th Cir. | 1923
Maxwell brought this action upon two promissory notes executed and delivered by Eva L. Ricks to one Moore at San Erancisco. The debt was secured by a mortgage to Moore made in California by Eva E. Ricks upon certain real estate in California. Moore, payee of the notes, before maturity indorsed and
In Tennessee Coal Co. v. George, 233 U. S. 354, 34 Sup. Ct. 587, 58 L. Ed. 997, L. R. A. 1916D, 685, George, an engineer of the coal company, employed in Alabama, was injured. He brought suit by attachment in Georgia, founding his action upon a section of the Alabama Code (3910) which makes the master liable to the employe when the injury is caused by any defect in or condition of the ways, works, machinery, or plant connected with the business of the master or employer. By plea in abatement the coal company set out that under section 6115 the Alabama Code provided that an action brought under section 3910 must be brought in a court of competent jurisdiction within the state of Alabama and not elsewhere. The argument was that to continue the case on the statutory cause of action given by the statutes of Alabama and restricted by the statutes of' that state to the courts of Alabama would be a denial, so far as the rights of the coal company were concerned, of full faith and credit to the public acts of the state of Alabama in the state of Georgia, contrary toi the provisions of article 4, § 1, of the Constitution of the United States. The court in considering the single question whether, under the constitutional clause referred to, the courts of Georgia were prohibited from enforcing a cause of action given by the Alabama Code, when another section of the saíne Code provided that suits to enforce such a liability must be brought in a court of competent jurisdiction within Alabama dand not elsewhere,” held that the cause of action was transitory, and like any other transitory action could be enforced in any court of competent jurisdiction within the state of Alabama, but that, while the courts of the sister state would be bound to give full faith and credit to all those substantial provisions of the statute which inhered in the cause of action, or which name conditions on which the right to sue depends, yet that venue is no part of the right, and that a state—
■“cannot create a transitory cause of action and at the same time destroy the right to sue on that transitory cause of action in any court having jurisdiction. That jurisdiction is to be determined by the law of the court’s creation and cannot be defeated by the extraterritorial operation of a statute of another state, even though it created the right of action.”
Plaintiff, having a right to sue on the debt in the federal court in Washington, could waive the security and enforce the obligation by means of any remedy given by the law of the forum (Simon v. Southern R. Co., 236 U. S. 115, 35 Sup. Ct. 255, 59 L. Ed. 492), and there is nothing in the statute of California which indicates an attempt to impair the obligation of the debt or the transitory character thereof, or to impinge upon the right of the owner and holder of the note to proceed in any court to which he might .resort under the laws of the United States. Railway Co. v. Whitton, 80 U. S. (13 Wall.) 270, 286, 20 L. Ed. 571.
. We must therefore reverse the judgment and remand the case, with directions - to proceed in accordance with the views herein indicated. So ordered.
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