37 Mo. 350 | Mo. | 1866
delivered the opinion of the court.
The decision of this case rests on one single point. By the statute of Kentucky, of 1845-6, entitled “An act to further protect the rights of married women,” it was provided that the slave or slaves of a married woman should, after the passage of the act in that commonwealth, be held and taken to be real estate, in so far that no slave or slaves, or the increase thereof, which such married woman should have at the time of her marriage, or which should come, descend, or be devised to her during her coverture, should be liable for the debts of the husband, or be attached,levied on and sold for his debts or liabilities of any sort or kind, nor should the husband’s life estate in the slaves of the wife, the wife living, be levied on and sold to pay such debts and liabilities.
By our law, slaves were personal property, and slaves belonging to the wife became the absolute property of the 1ms-. band, and were liable to be levied on and sold under execution, in like manner as other personal property, for his debts. The question is, whether slaves which were held by a married woman in Kentucky, under the operation of the law of 1845-6, and which were invested with the character of real estate by local law, and ^exempt from levy and sale for the husband’s debts, are to be considered as held in the same manner, and with like conditions and exemptions, when brought by their owner to this State ? In other words, after they are transferred to our jurisdiction by the voluntary act of the owner, is their status to be determined by the laws of Kentucky or Missouri ?
It may be stated as a general rule, that laws have no force by their own proper vigor beyond the Territory or State by which they are made; excepting, for some purposes, the high seas or lands over which no State claims jurisdiction. Beyond or outside of this limit they can claim no sanction ;
But, by the universal practice of civilized countries, by the comity of nations, the la,ws of one will be recognized and executed in another, where the rights of individuals are concerned. It is so with cases of contracts made in foreign countries ; and courts of justice always expound and execute them according to the laws of the place in which they were made, provided they do not contravene the express municipal regulations, or are not repugnant to the policy of their own country. (Bank of Augusta v. Earle, 13 Pet. 519, 589, Taney, C. J.)
This comity is the purely voluntary act of the nation or State, and is totally inadmissible when contrary to its policy, or prejudicial to its interests. In Olivier v. Townes (14 Mart. 93-102), a contest arose in regard to the sale and transfer of a ship by a resident of Virginia, the ship at the time of the sale being locally in New Orleans; and before there was any delivery, she was attached by the creditors of the vendor.
A testator, having his domicil in the State of Mississippi, died possessed of slaves there, and directed in his will that if either of his two sons, to whom he bequeathed his property, should die “ without a lawful heir,” his part, real and personal, should go to the survivor. Each son received his portion, and one removed with his slaves into Louisiana, and died “ without a lawful heir.” It was determined that, alalthough by the law of the testator’s domicil, the survivor might have had a title to such slaves, yet, as by the law of Louisiana testamentary substitutions were prohibited, the survivor’s claim could not be enforced in the latter State. (Harper v. Stanbrough, 2 La. 377; Harper v. Lee, id. 382.) And in Mahorner v. Howe (9 Sm. & M. 247), a person
The principle is so well established that it will hardly be questioned by any one, that personal or movable property is governed by the law of the domicil of the owner, wherever it may be situated, and -this law of course changes with his change of domicil. To say that the slaves were real estate here, is to import the law of Kentucky into this State, and make it operate ex propria vigore in opposition to the well settled rules of our own law. The case does not come within the meaning of the terms or the principles where the lex loci contractus governs. It is an attempt to bring property within our jurisdiction, and hold it by virtue of a foreign law, in a manner and by a tenure different from what is recognized by our own rules and regulations.
It is competent for a State, by legislative enactment, to declare that carriages, or other personal property, shall be deemed to be of the nature of real estate, and so held, and shall be devised and descend in the same way. But if that property was brought from such State into our territory, would our courts be bound, or even warranted, in making a distinction between that and other property of alike kind, to the detriment of the interests of our citizens ?
It is believed the comity of nations has never been carried to There is nothing to distinguish the law by whi$h property in slaves was formerly owned in this country frppSfifia't which was applicable to other property. Slaves b,ejng_ regarded by our law as merely personal property, as só'bn'ia^fhey were brought here, they were remitted to that
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.