82 Va. 890 | Va. | 1886
delivered the opinion of the court.
The question in this case is one of importance, but of little intrinsic difficulty. It is this: Has a court in Virginia, when the defendants have appeared and answered, jurisdiction to partition lands, the maior part of which lies within another State?
Now, it is a fundamental maxim of international jurisprudence that every State or nation possesses an exclusive sovereignty and jurisdiction within its own territory, and the “direct consequence of this j;ule is,” says a learned author, “that the laws of every State affect and bind directly all property, whether real or personal, within its territory.” Story’s Conflict of Laws, 5, 18. Another consequence of this maxim is, that no State can, by its laws, and no court, which is but a creature of the State, can, by its judgments or decrees, directly bind or affect property beyond the limits of that State; and hence it is axiomatic that no writ of sequestration, or execution, or any order, judgment or decree of a foreign court, can be directly enforced against real estate situate without the limits of the foreign State.
Id. section 20, “such,” says Chief Justice Parker, in Blanchard V. Russell, 13 Mass. 4, “is the necessary result of the independence of distinct sovereignties, and it is absolutely incompatible with the equality and exclusiveness of the sovereignty of different States or nations that any one nation should be at liberty to exercise dominion over property within the territory of another
For these reasons the decree of the circuit colirt of Highland county must be reversed, and the bill be dismissed.
. / Decree reversed.