Where the cause of action accrued in the State of Mississippi
and suit was brought upon it in the State of Alabama, a plea of the
statute of limitations of Mississippi was not a good plea, but the
same was demurrable, and the court sustained the demurrer.
The rule is that the statute of limitations of the country in
which the suit is brought may be pleaded to bar a recovery upon a
contract made out of its political jurisdiction, and that the
statute of
lex loci contractus cannot.
The obligations of a contract upon the parties to it, except in
well known cases, are to be expounded by the
lex loci
contractus, but suits brought to enforce contracts either in
the state where they were made or in the courts of other states are
subject to the remedies of the forum in which the suit is,
including that of statutes of limitation.
The cases of
Leroy v. Crowninshield, 2 Mason 351, and
McElmoyle v.
Cohen, 13 Pet. 312, examined and commented on.
Townsend was a citizen of the State of Mississippi and Jemison
of Alabama.
In September, 1844, Jemison brought a suit in the District Court
of the United States for the Middle district of Alabama against
Townsend, who was in Alabama.
The nature of the suit is explained in the following short
specification of claim filed by the counsel for the plaintiff.
"This action is brought to recover damages for the
nonperformance of an agreement made by the defendant with the
plaintiff that if the plaintiff would procure, take up, and obtain
a note made by Robert Weir, A. F. Young, and the said defendant,
and Henry Buchanan, for $4,000, dated Columbus, April 12, 1839,
payable nine months after 24 April, 1839, to the Mississippi Union
Bank, at their banking house in Jackson, bearing ten percent
interest after maturity, if not punctually paid, but upon which
note the said A. F. Young was to pay the said bank $1,000, and
would also procure, take up, and obtain a note, made by the said
defendant and A. F. Young, Andrew Weir, and Henry Buchanan, dated
Columbus, April 12, 1839, for $4,000, payable nine months after 24
April, 1839, to the Mississippi Union Bank at its banking house in
Jackson, to bear ten percent interest after maturity if not
punctually paid, but upon which note A. F. Young was to pay $1,000,
that he, the defendant, would take up, procure, and obtain a note,
made by John B. Jones, Thomas Townsend the said defendant, Eli
Abbott, and Samuel D. Lauderdale, dated Columbus, Mississippi, May
24,
Page 50 U. S. 408
1839, for $9,806.50, payable six months after date to the
Commercial Bank of Columbus or order, at their bank, which
agreement the defendant wholly failed to perform, although the
plaintiff, upon his part, fully performed the said agreement. Other
counts will be added in the declaration."
"Attest: CRABB & COCHRAN,
Plaintiff's
Attorneys"
The declaration set forth the transaction with more
particularity, and also contained the common money counts and an
account stated.
To the first count the plaintiff in error pleaded in bar first,
that the promise was unwritten, made in Mississippi, and to be
performed there, and was made more than three years before this
suit, and that, by the statute of limitations of Mississippi, the
right of action is barred upon such a promise after three years.
Secondly, the same matter, with an averment that the cause of
action accrued in Mississippi more than three years before this
suit. To these pleas there was a demurrer. To this first count the
plaintiff in error further pleaded, as to parcel thereof,
nonassumpsit, and as to the residue a former action brought and
judgment recovered by the defendant in error against him. The
defendant in error joined issue on the parts of this plea
respectively, to the court and to the country.
To the whole declaration the plaintiff in error pleaded
nonassumpsit, on which issue was joined, and also that the causes
of action accrued more than three years before suit, averring
himself to have been a citizen of Mississippi, and that the
promises were there made and there to be performed, and to this
plea the defendant in error demurred.
In this state of the pleadings, the cause came on for trial on 7
December, 1846, when the following proceedings were had.
"This day came said parties, by their attorneys, and the
demurrer to the first three pleas of the said defendant, by him
above pleaded, coming on to be heard and having been fully argued
by counsel and understood by the court, it is adjudged by the court
that the said first three pleas by the defendant above pleaded, and
the matters therein alleged, are insufficient in law to bar the
said plaintiff from having or maintaining his said action against
said defendant, and the court doth accordingly sustain the said
demurrer. And as to so much of the said fourth plea by the said
defendant, by him above pleaded, as alleged a former recovery of
three thousand four hundred and
Page 50 U. S. 409
fifty-one dollars and eighty-eight cents, in the District Court
of the United States for the Northern District of Mississippi, on
account of the undertaking of the said defendant"
"to pay three thousand dollars, or any other part or parcel of
the said note, made by the said John B. Jones, Thomas Townsend, Eli
Abbott, and Samuel D. Lauderdale, in consideration that the said
plaintiff would pay three thousand dollars, or any other part or
parcel of the note made by Thomas Townsend, A. F. Young, Andrew
Weir, and Henry Buchanan,"
"and set out at large in said count, on which issue was joined
to the court, the record therein referred to being seen and
inspected by the court, and the same being fully considered, the
court adjudged that there in such a record, as alleged in said
plea, of a recovery on the promise of the said Thomas Townsend to
pay on the note of the said John B. Jones, Thomas Townsend, Eli
Abbott, and Samuel D. Lauderdale, as mentioned in said plea, the
like amount that should be paid by plaintiff on the note of the
said Thomas Townsend, A. F. Young, Andrew Weir, and Henry Buchanan.
And as to the residue of said fourth plea, and the fifth plea, upon
which issue was taken to the country, thereupon came a jury of good
and lawful men, to-wit, Amos Briggs, and eleven others, who, being
empanelled, tried, and sworn the truth to say upon the issues
joined, upon their oaths do say, they find the issues in favor of
the plaintiff, and assess his damages at four thousand six hundred
and forty-five dollars. It is therefore considered by the court
that the plaintiff recover of said defendant said sum of four
thousand six hundred and forty-five dollars, the damages by the
jury assessed as aforesaid, in manner and form aforesaid, together
with the costs in this behalf expended."
Townsend sued out a writ of error, and brought the case up to
this Court.
Page 50 U. S. 413
MR. JUSTICE WAYNE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendant in the court below, appellant here, besides other
pleas, pleaded that the cause of action accrued in Mississippi more
than three years before the suit was brought, and that the
Mississippi statute of limitations barred a recovery in the
district court of Alabama. The plaintiff demurred to the plea. The
court sustained the demurrer.
We do not think it necessary to do more than to decide this
point in the case.
The rule in the courts of the United States in respect to pleas
of the statutes of limitation has always been that they strictly
affect the remedy, and not the merits. In the case of
McElmoyle v.
Cohen, 13 Pet. 312, this point was raised and so
decided. All of the judges were present and assented. The fullest
examination was then made of all the authorities upon the subject,
in connection with the diversities of opinion among jurists about
it and of all those considerations which have induced legislatures
to interfere and place a limitation upon the bringing of
actions.
We thought then and still think that it has become a formulary
in international jurisprudence that all suits must be brought
within the period prescribed by the local law of the country where
the suit is brought -- the
lex fori; otherwise the suit
would be barred unless the plaintiff can bring himself within one
of the exceptions of the statute, if that is pleaded by the
defendant. This rule is as fully recognized in foreign
jurisprudence as it is in the common law. We then referred to
authorities in the common law, and to a summary of them in foreign
jurisprudence. Burge's Com. on Col. and For. Laws. They were
subsequently cited, with others besides, in the second edition of
the Conflict of Laws 483. Among them will be found the case of
Leroy v. Crowninshield, 2 Mason 151, so much relied upon
by the counsel in this case.
Neither the learned examination made in that case of the
reasoning of jurists nor the final conclusion of the judge, in
Page 50 U. S. 414
opposition to his own inclinations, escaped our attention.
Indeed, he was here to review them, with those of us now in the
Court who had the happiness and benefit of being associated with
him. He did so with the same sense of judicial obligation for the
maxim
stare decisis et non quieta movere which marked his
official career. His language in the case in Mason fully
illustrates it:
"But I do not sit here to consider what in theory ought to be
the true doctrines of the law, following them out upon principles
of philosophy and juridical reasoning. My humbler and safer duty is
to administer the law as I find it and to follow in the path of
authority, where it is clearly defined, even though that path may
have been explored by guides in whose judgment the most implicit
confidence might not have been originally reposed."
Then follows this declaration: "It does appear to me that the
question now before the Court has been settled, so far as it could
be, by authorities which the Court is bound to respect." The error,
if any has been committed, is too strongly engrafted into the law
to be removed without the interposition of some superior authority.
Then, in support of this declaration, he cites Huberus, Voet,
Pothier, and Lord Kames, and adjudications from English and
American courts to show that whatever may have been the differences
of opinion among jurists, the uniform administration of the law has
been that the
lex loci contractus expounds the obligations
of contracts, and that statutes of limitation prescribing a time
after which a plaintiff shall not recover, unless he can bring
himself within its exceptions, appertain
ad tempus et modum
actionis instituendae and not
ad valorem contractus.
Williams v. Jones, 13 East 439;
Nash v. Tupper, 1
Caines 402;
Ruggles v. Keeler, 3 Johns. 263;
Pearsall
v. Dwight, 2 Mass. 84;
Decouche v. Savetier, 3
Johns.Ch. 190, 218;
McCluny v.
Silliman, 3 Pet. 276;
Hawkins v.
Barney, 5 Pet. 457;
Bank of
the United States v. Donnally, 8 Pet. 361;
McElmoyle v.
Cohen, 13 Pet. 312.
There is nothing in
Shelby v. Guy,
11 Wheat. 361, in conflict with what this Court decided in the four
last-mentioned cases. Its action upon the point has been uniform
and decisive. In cases before and since decided in England, it will
be found there has been no fluctuation in the rule in the courts
there. The rule is that the statute of limitations of the country
in which the suit is brought may be pleaded to bar a recovery upon
a contract made out of its political jurisdiction, and that the
limitation of the
lex loci contractus cannot be. 2 Bingham
New Cases 202, 211;
Don v. Lippmann, 5 Clark & Fin. 1,
16, 17. It has become, as we have already said, a fixed rule of
the
Page 50 U. S. 415
jus gentium privatum, unalterable, in our opinion,
either in England or in the states of the United States except by
legislative enactment.
We will not enter at large into the learning and philosophy of
the question. We remember the caution given by Lord Stair in the
supplement to his Institutes, p. 852, about citing as authorities
the works and publications of foreign jurists. It is appropriate to
the occasion, having been written to correct a mistake of Lord
Tenterden, to whom no praise could be given which would not be
deserved by his equally distinguished contemporary, Judge Story.
Lord Stair says:
"There is in Abbott's Law of Shipping, 5th edition, 365, a
singular mistake, and, considering the justly eminent character of
the learned author for extensive, sound, and practical knowledge of
the English law, one which ought to operate as a lesson on this
side of the Tweed as well as on the other, to be a little cautious
in citing the works and publications of foreign jurists, since, to
comprehend their bearings, such a knowledge of the foreign law as
is scarcely attainable is absolutely requisite. It is magnificent
to array authorities, but somewhat humiliating to be detected in
errors concerning them; yet how can errors be avoided in such a
case when every day's experience warns us of the prodigious study
necessary to the attainment of proficiency in our own law? My
object in adverting to the mistake in the work referred to is not
to depreciate the author, for whom I entertain unfeigned respect,
but to show that since even so justly distinguished a lawyer fails
when he travels beyond the limits of his own code, the attempt must
be infinitely hazardous with others."
We will now venture to suggest the causes which misled the
learned judge in
Leroy v. Crowninshield into a conclusion
that, if the question before him had been entirely new, his
inclination would strongly lead him to declare that where all
remedies are barred or discharged by the
lex loci
contractus and have operated upon the case, then the bar may
be pleaded in a foreign tribunal to repel any suit brought to
enforce the debt.
We remark first that only a few of the civilians who have
written upon the point differ from the rule that statutes of
limitation relate to the remedy, and not to the contract. If there
is any case, either in our own or the English courts, in which the
point is more discussed than it is in
Leroy v.
Crowninshield, we are not acquainted with it. In every case
but one, either in England or in the United States, in which the
point has since been made, that case has been mentioned, and it has
carried some of our own judges to a result which Judge Story
himself did not venture to support.
Page 50 U. S. 416
We do not find him pressing his argument in
Leroy v.
Crowninshield in the Conflict of Laws in which it might have
been appropriately done, if his doubts, for so he calls them, had
not been removed. Twenty years had then passed between them. In all
that time, when so much had been added to his learning, really
great before, that by common consent he was estimated in
jurisprudence
par summis, we find him, in the Conflict of
Laws stating the law upon the point, in opposition to his former
doubts, not in deference to authority alone, but from declared
conviction.
The point had been examined by him in
Leroy v.
Crowninshield without any consideration of other admitted
maxims of international jurisprudence, having a direct bearing upon
the subject. Among others, that the obligation of every law is
confined to the state in which it is established, that it can only
attach upon those who are its subjects and upon others who are
within the territorial jurisdiction of the state; that debtors can
only be sued in the courts of the jurisdiction where they are; that
all courts must judge in respect to remedies from their own laws,
except when conventionally, or from the decisions of courts, a
comity has been established between states to enforce in the courts
of each a particular law or principle. When there is no positive
rule affirming, denying, or restraining the operation of foreign
laws, courts establish a comity for such as are not repugnant to
the policy or in conflict with the laws of the state from which
they derive their organization. We are not aware, except as it has
been brought to our notice by two cases cited in the argument of
this cause, that it has ever been done, either to give or to take
away remedies from suitors, when there is a law of the state where
the suit is brought which regulates remedies. But for the
foundation of comity, the manner of its exercise, and the extent to
which courts can allowably carry it, we refer to the case of
Bank of Augusta v.
Earle, 13 Pet. 519,
38 U. S. 589;
Conflict of Laws,
Comity.
From what has just been said it must be seen, when it is claimed
that statutes of limitation operate to extinguish a contract, and
for that reason the statute of the state in which the contract was
made may be pleaded in a foreign court, that it is a point not
standing alone, disconnected from other received maxims of
international jurisprudence. And it may well be asked, before it is
determined otherwise, whether contracts by force of the different
statutes of limitation in states are not exceptions from the
general rule of the
lex loci contractus. There are such
exceptions for dissolving and discharging contracts out
Page 50 U. S. 417
of the jurisdiction in which they were made. The limitations of
remedies and the forms and modes of suit make such an exception.
Confl. of Laws 271 and 524 to 527. We may then infer that the
doubts expressed in
Leroy v. Crowninshield would have been
withheld if the point had been considered in the connection we have
mentioned.
We have found, too, that several of the civilians who wrote upon
the question did so without having kept in mind the difference
between the positive and negative prescription of the civil law. In
doing so, some of them -- not regarding the latter in its more
extended signification as including all those bars or exceptions of
law or of fact which may be opposed to the prosecution of a claim,
as well out of the jurisdiction in which a contract was made as in
it -- were led to the conclusion that the prescription was a part
of the contract, and not the denial of a remedy for its
enforcement. It may be as well here to state the difference between
the two prescriptions in the civil law. Positive, or the Roman
usucaptio, is the acquisition of property, real or
personal, immovable or movable, by the continued possession of the
acquirer for such a time as is described by the law to be
sufficient. Erskine's Inst. 556.
"Adjectio dominii per
continuationem possessionis temporis legi definiti." Dig.
3.
Negative prescription is the loss or forfeiture of a right by
the proprietor's neglecting to exercise or prosecute it during the
whole period which the law hath declared to be sufficient to infer
the loss of it. It includes the former, and applies also to all
those demands which are the subject of personal actions. Erskine's
Inst. 560, and 3 Burge 26.
Most of the civilians, however, did not lose sight of the
differences between these prescriptions, and if their reasons for
doing so had been taken as a guide, instead of some expressions
used by them, in respect to what may be presumed as to the
extinction or payment of a claim, while the plea in bar is pending,
we do not think that any doubt would have been expressed concerning
the correctness of their other conclusion, that statutes of
limitation in suits upon contracts only relate to the remedy. But
that was not done, and from some expressions of Pothier and Lord
Kames it was said
"If the statute of limitations does create,
proprio
vigore, a presumption of the extinction or payment of the debt
which all nations ought to regard, it is not easy to see why the
presumption of such payment, thus arising from the
lex loci
contractus, should not be as conclusive in every other place
as in the place of the contract."
And that was said in
Leroy v. Crowninshield in
opposition to
Page 50 U. S. 418
the declaration of both of those writers that in any other place
than that of the contract, such a presumption could not be made to
defeat a law providing for proceedings upon suits. Here, turning
aside for an instant from our main purpose, we find the beginning
or source of those constructions of the English statutes of
limitation which almost made them useless for the accomplishment of
their end. Within a few years, the abuses of such constructions
have been much corrected, and we are now, in the English and
American courts, nearer to the legislative intent of such
enactments.
But neither Pothier nor Lord Kames meant to be understood that
the theory of statutes of limitation purported to afford positive
presumptions of payment and extinction of contracts, according to
the laws of the place where they are made. The extract which was
made from Pothier shows his meaning is that when the statute of
limitations has been pleaded by a defendant, the presumption is in
his favor that he has extinguished and discharged his contract,
until the plaintiff overcomes it by proof that he is within one of
those exceptions of the statute which takes it out of the time
after which he cannot bring a suit to enforce judicially the
obligation of the defendant. The extract from Lord Kames only shows
what may be done in Scotland when a process has been brought for
payment of an English debt after the English prescription has taken
place. The English statute cannot be pleaded in Scotland in such a
case, but, according to the law of that forum, it may be pleaded
that the debt is presumed to have been paid. And it makes an issue,
in which the plaintiff in the suit may show that such a presumption
does not apply to his demand, and that without any regard to the
prescription of time in the English statute of limitation. It is
upon this presumption of payment that the conclusion in
Leroy
v. Crowninshield was reached, and as it is now universally
admitted that it is not a correct theory for the administration of
statutes of limitation, we may say it was in fact because that
theory was assumed in that case that doubts in it were expressed,
contrary to the judgment which was given, in submission to what was
admitted to be the law of the case. What we have said may serve a
good purpose. It is pertinent to the point raised by the pleading
in the case before us, and in our judgment there is no error in the
district court's having sustained the demurrer.
Before concluding, we will remark that nothing has been said in
this case at all in conflict with what was said by this Court in
Shelby v. Guy,
11 Wheat. 361. The distinctions made by us here between statutes
giving a right to property
Page 50 U. S. 419
from possession for a certain time, and such as only take away
remedies for the recovery of property after a certain time has
passed, confirm it. In
Shelby v. Guy, this Court declared
that, as by the laws of Virginia, five years'
bona fide
possession of a slave constitutes a good title upon which the
possessor may recover in detinue, such a title may be set up by the
vendee of such possessor in the courts of Tennessee as a defense to
a suit brought by a third party in those courts. The same had been
previously ruled in this Court in
Brent v.
Chapman, 5 Cranch 358, and it is the rule in all
cases where it is declared by statute that all rights to debts due
more than a prescribed term of years shall be deemed extinguished
and that all titles to real and personal property not pressed
within the prescribed time shall give ownership to an adverse
possessor. Such a law, though one of limitation, goes directly to
the extinguishment of the debt, claim, or right, and is not a bar
to the remedy.
Lincoln v. Battelle, 6 Wend. 475. Confl. of
Laws 582.
In
Lincoln v. Battelle, 6 Wend. 475, the same doctrine
was held. It is stated in the Conflict of Laws 582, to be a settled
point. The courts of Louisiana act upon it. We could cite other
instances in which it has been announced in American courts of the
last resort. In the cases of
De la Vega v. Vianna, 1 Barn.
& Adol. 284, and
British Linen Company v. Drummond, 10
Barn. & Cres. 903, it is said that if a French bill of exchange
is sued in England, it must be sued on according to the laws of
England, and there the English statute of limitations would from a
bar to the demand if the bill had been due for more than six years.
In the case of
Don v. Lippmann, 5 Clark & Fin. 1, it
was admitted by the very learned counsel who argued that case for
the defendants in error that though the law for expounding a
contract was the law of the place in which it was made, the remedy
for enforcing it must be the law of the place in which it is sued.
In that case will be found, in the argument of Lord Brougham before
the House of Lords, his declaration of the same doctrine, sustained
by very cogent reasoning, drawn from what is the actual intent of
the parties to a contract when it is made and from the
inconveniences of pursuing a different course. In
Beckford v.
Wade, 17 Vesey 87, Sir William Grant, acknowledging the rule,
makes the distinction between statutes merely barring the legal
remedy and such as prohibit a suit from being brought after a
specified time. It was a case arising under the possessory law of
Jamaica, which converts a possession for seven years under a deed,
will, or other conveyance, into a positive absolute title against
all the world -- without exceptions in
Page 50 U. S. 420
favor of anyone or any right, however a party may have been
situated during that time or whatever his previous right of
property may have been. There is a statute of the same kind in
Rhode Island. 2 R.I.Laws 363, 364, ed. 1822. In Tennessee there is
an act in some respects similar to the possessory law of Jamaica;
it gives an indefeasible title in fee simple to lands of which a
person has had possession for seven years, excepting only from its
operation infants,
feme coverts, non compotes mentis,
persons imprisoned or beyond the limits of the United States and
the territories thereof, and the heirs of the excepted, provided
they bring actions within three years after they have a right to
sue. Act of November 16, 1817, ch. 28, §§ 1, 2. So, in North
Carolina there is a provision in the act of 1715, ch. 17, § 2, with
the same exceptions as in the act of Tennessee, the latter being
probably copied substantially from the former. Thirty years'
possession in Louisiana prescribes land, though possessed without
title and
mala fide.
We have mentioned those acts in our own states only for the
purpose of showing the difference between statutes giving title
from possession and such as only limit the bringing of suits. It
not unfrequently happens in legislation that such sections are
found in statutes for the limitation of actions. It is in fact
because they have been overlooked that the distinction between them
has not been recognized as much as it ought to have been in the
discussion of the point whether a certain time assigned by a
statute within which an action must be brought is a part of the
contract or solely the remedy. The rule in such a case is that the
obligations of the contract upon the parties to it, except in well
known cases, are to be expounded by the
lex loci
contractus. Suits brought to enforce contracts, either in the
state where they were made or in the courts of other states, are
subject to the remedies of the forum in which the suit is,
including that of statutes of limitation.
Judgment affirmed.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the District Court of the United States for the District of
Alabama and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof it is
now here ordered and adjudged by this Court that the judgment of
the said district court in this cause be and the same is hereby
affirmed with costs and damages at the rate of six percentum per
annum.