6 Binn. 241 | Pa. | 1814
This was ati action of covenant for the Recovery of a debt. The defendant pleaded that the plaintiff is an alien enemy, born out of the allegiance of the United States, and under the allegiance of the king of the'United. Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, between whom and the United Slates there is war; and that the plaintiff is not a citizen of the United Stales, nor resident within the same. To this plea there was a demurrer and joinder. The case must be determined upon the principles of the common law, not being affected by the treaty between the United States and Great Britain, which only provides against the confiscation or sequestration of private debts. The rigour of the ancient law has been softened by increased civilization, and the principle has gradually gained ground, that the contracts of individuals ought not to be affected by the quarrels of nations. Between some nations, it is stipulated by treaty, that a state of war shall not prevent the recovery of debts; but where no treaty exists, although it is against usage to confiscate, yet the utmost stretch of modern refinement has never gone to the extent of permitting the maintenance of an action by an alien enemy, except under particular circumstances. It has never been supposed that one, who was himself an enemy, and the subject of a sovereign at war
The plaintiff in this instance by his demurrer has confessed the truth of the facts set out in the defendant’s plea, provided those facts are well and sufficiently pleaded. The plea states that the plaintiff is an alien enemy, bom out of the allegiance of the United States of America, and within the allegiance of a foreign sovereign, to wit, the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and is not a citizen of the said United States of America, nor resident within the same; and that since the last continuance of the plea, a public war has been commenced and is now carried on between the King and government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and their dependencies, and the said United States of America and their territories. To this it is objected, that in such pleas as the present, it is indispensably necessary that every fact should be stated affirmatively, which may oust the plaintiff from his right of action; and that the commorancy of the plaintiff in the British Kingdom or its dependencies is essentially necessary for this purpose. This seems to be the modern English law as recognized by Kent Chief Justice, 10 Johns. 74, Clark v. Morey, founded on the case of Lebret v. Papillon, 4 East 502, and seems to have been adopted in New York in Bell v. Chapman, 10 Johns. 183.
But our decision herein must be governed by the state of the law as it existed amongst us prior to our municipal act of 28th January 1777. For by that statute, the common law, and such of the statute laws of England, as -had theretofore been in force amongst us, were declared to be binding on the inhabitants of this state.
The general principle laid down in the .books is, that an alien enemy cannot support a suit in a court of justice; his rights are suspended during the War. The ground of the
.Demurrer overruled, with liberty to reply.