27 Mich. 159 | Mich. | 1873
The plaintiff in error brought an action of replevin in the circuit court for the. county of St. Clair, against the defendant in error, for a promissory note, or due bill;' made by Cyrus Miles, payable to John Atkinson or bearer, for one thousand four hundred and thirty-eight dollars, dated February 22d, 1871.
The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that John Atkinson, in February, 1871, as the agent and attorney of one Comer Potter Edwards, received in this state from said Edwards certain promissory notes executed in Canada and by parties residing in Canada, all of which, except one, to some other party than Edwards, and none of which (except possibly one) was then due; that all were payable to bearer; that Edwards instructed him to sell the notes for cash or for a good note of some party in Michigan ; that the notes amounted to one thousand four hundred and eighty-eight dollars besides interest, and were payable in Canada currency; that he sold said notes to said Cyrus
The plaintiff introduced one William Grace as a witness, whose evidence tended to show that he was the clerk of the county court of the county of Victoria, province of Ontario, dominion of Canada; that he was familiar with the statutes of Canada, and that a copy entitled “ Laws of Canada, 38 and 39, Viet.” (so stated in the record, probably 28 and 29 Viet.), being the authorized and public law, was given as the authentic laws and printed under the authority of the dominion parliament; and the act contained in said statutes entitled “Insolvent Act,” was the insolvent act of the dominion of Canada. But neither this act nor any other law of Canada is set out or made part of the bill of exceptions.
This witness also produced the original record of the county court of the county of Victoria, and gave evidence tending to prove that they were the original and all of, the records of a proceeding in said court, in a case entitled “Insolvent Act of 1869, — In the matter of Gomer Potter Edwards, an insolvent;” that he was the clerk of said eourt, and as such had the custody of said records.
Under this proof and a stipulation that this record should be received as the records of such court (being a court of
I have thus set forth from the bill of exceptions all that the evidence tended to show, and for any awkwardness in the statement, the bill of exceptions is responsible.
All the above evidence was admitted against the objection of the defendant.
It is unnecessary to notice the several requests to charge,
It sufficiently appears from the record of the proceedings in insolvency, that the insolvent was, on the 22d of April, 1810, in Detroit, in this state, and not in Canada, when the order was made for serving upon his wife, and sending copies by mail to him at Detroit; and there is no evidence- in the case tending to show that he was in Canada, or that he submitted to the jurisdiction of that court, until May, 1871.
It appears that in February, 1811, he had the notes with him in this state, by the sale of which the Miles note was obtained, and that this sale was made in February, 1871. There is no evidence tending to show at what time he obtained them, or that they were within the Canadian jurisdiction at the time of the insolvency proceedings, or while they were pending; and it is clear enough the notes were not found there and taken upon the attachment issued in those proceedings; and there is no eyidence tending to show that the insolvent, either voluntarily or .by the direction of the court, ever made an assignment of these notes or of the Miles note- or any of his property, to Wood, the plaintiff) who was by the court appointed his assignee. As we have not before us, as a part of the case, the Canadian statute referred to, and cannot take judicial notice of it, we cannot determine what would have been the effect of those pro-proceedings upon the property of the insolvent in Canada, or upon the insolvent himself, when within that jurisdiction.
Nor can it alter the case that the insolvent himself .returned to Canada and submitted to the jurisdiction of that court after the purchase of the Miles note in question and before the institution of this suit; so long as it does not appear that this note was brought within that jurisdiction, or that he had assigned or conveyed it to the assignee. The judgment or decree of that court could not affect his property in this state nor his right here to dispose of it.
These conclusions seem to result from the universally admitted principle that the laws enacted by one sovereignty •can have no force or effect, as laws, within the territories of another sovereignty, and that the courts of one sovereignty cannot subject persons or property in another to the direct effect of its judgments, orders or decrees.
Had the insolvent in this case, with or without the intervention or order of the court, made an assignment of this property to Wood, the plaintiff, we see no reason to •doubt that such assignment would have operated as a conveyance of the title to any property of the insolvent here, except possibly in some cases, as against the claims of •creditors here. — See Graydon v. Church, 7 Mich., 36.
We see no mode in which a different result can be reached in the present case, without giving to the orders ■and decrees of the Canadian court the same direct force and •effect in this state as we give to those of our own state •courts.
Certainly neither the English nor the American courts
The result is that there was no evidence tending to establish the title of the plaintiff to the property replevied, and the court properly took the case from the jury.
The judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed, with costs.