3 Abb. Pr. 23 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1856
If the plaintiff is driven to the statute laws of the States of Ohio and Michigan, to maintain this action, and bound to show that by the statutes of those States the trusts which he seeks to enforce are valid, he should have set out, at least substantially, the statutes upon which he relies. The laws themselves are to be averred and proved in the same manner as other facts, and their existence is to be proved by copies of the statutes properly exemplified, as other documents
The statutes being the fact to be established, should be averred and proved, and the court can then pronounce the appropriate judgment. It would certainly be bad pleading to aver that by a certain judgment recovered in the courts of this or any other State, or by reason of a certain bond executed by the defendant, he was indebted to the plaintiff in a given sum, or owed any other duty; so, the allegation that, by the laws of the States named, the trust described in the complaint is a valid trust or power in trust, which courts of equity will enforce, without setting out the statutes at least in substance, is bad. Unless therefore the complaint can be sustained, and the trusts upheld without the aid of the local laws of Michigan and Ohio, the judgment of the justice at special term must be reversed.
The questions then will be:—1st. In the absence of any proper averment of the statutes of the States of Michigan and Ohio affecting the rights of the parties and the subject matter of the litigation, what laws are presumed to prevail in those States; the common law, or the statutes of this State when they differ from the common law ? 2d. Are the trusts valid by that law which shall be found to prevail upon this presumption ?
1. Do the statutes of this State, or does the common law, as it existed in the absence of any legislation, or at the time of the separation of this country from England, prevail in other States of the Union by presumption of law ?
There is a want of precision in the language of some of the cases which would lead us to suppose, upon a cursory examination, that our courts have intended to decide that in the absence of any evidence of what the laws of other States are, it will be presumed that they are the same as the laws of this State, without distinguishing whether the common law or a statute of the State should give the rule. It will be conceded that our statutes have no extra territorial force, and as they
In Legg v. Legg, (8 Mass., 99,) the law of Vermont was presumed to be the same as that in Massachusetts upon a question as to which the common law prevailed in the latter State. Thompson v. Ketcham, (8 J. R., 190), decided that as the disabilities of infancy depended upon municipal regulations, he
(1 Cow., 103,) but what is said by the learned judge as to the presumption of the law in Massachusetts is not very clear, and is entirely obiter, as the case passed off on another point which rendered that question immaterial. In Holmes v. Broughton,
(10 Wend., 75), a very reasonable rule was held, to wit, that | this court cannot take judicial cognizance of any of the laws 1 of our sister States, at variance with the common law, but that upon a common law question the legal presumption is that the t common law of a sister State is similar to that of our own i which doctrine, if followed out, clearly negatives the idea of a ¡ presumption that other States have dealt with the common law ¡ upon any question as we may have done. The same was held substantially in Starr v. Peck, (1 Hill, 270.) Cowen, J., after-stating a legal proposition applicable to the case, says, “ Such is the common law, which we must presume was the law of Connecticut at the time, in the absence of proof to the contrary.”
In Leavenworth v. Brockway, (2 Hill, 201), the question was as to the rate of interest in Ohio, which is entirely regulated by statute; and the court, in the absence of proof, presumed the rate to be the same as with us; and the case is sustained by the authorities cited in the reporter’s note to the case, which appear to recognize, without naming it, a distinction between the laws of sister States and foreign countries in this particular; that as to the former, on matters of merely statutory regulations, the courts will entertain a presumption that they are similar to our own; while as to the foreign countries, as in Thompson v. Ketcham, no such presumption will prevail. The commercial law, as it prevails in this country, was presumed to exist in France, as to commercial paper, in Dolfus v. Fasch, (1 Denio, 367). Abell v. Douglas, (4 Denio,. 305), is very much in point; and it was there held, that contracts- and conveyances between citizens of this State respecting lands in another State are governed by the laws of such other State,.
2d. By the common law are the trusts sought to be established, valid and capable of being enforced in equity ?
I do not deem it important to inquire, in the views I take of the instrument set out in the complaint, and which is relied upon as a declaration of trust, whether the statute of 29 Charles 2d, requiring all trusts to be' declared or evidenced by some writing, must be taken as forming a part of the law of the several States of the Union, without a re-enactmeut by the legislatures thereof. My impression is that statutory restrictions upon the conveyance of property, or any interest therein, and regulating the mode of acquiring title to, or interest in, such property, or prescribing the forms of contract and the manner ■of solemnizing them, in order to their validity, in force as English statutes at the time of our separation from that government, were not adopted by the States, except as expressly declared by the legislature; and that in the absence of any express legislation on the subject, title to property may be transferred .and interest therein acquired, and contracts in regard thereto made, in any form to which the parties may assent, and which would have been upheld at common law. But be this as it
The judgment at special term must be affirmed; but with leave to answer to the usual terms.