The plaintiffs, merchants of New York, instituted a suit in the
Circuit Court of Alabama against the administrators of the drawer
of a note, dated in New York and payable in New York. The act of
the Assembly of Alabama provides that the estate of a deceased
person which is declared to be insolvent shall be distributed by
the executors or administrators according to the provisions of the
statute, among the creditors and that no suit or action shall be
commenced or sustained against any executor or administrator after
the estate of the deceased has been represented as insolvent except
in certain cases not of the description of that on which this suit
was instituted.
Held that the insolvency of the estate,
judicially declared under the statute of Alabama, is not sufficient
in law to abate a suit instituted in the circuit court of the
United States by a citizen of another state against the
representatives of a citizen of Alabama.
The exceptions in the sixth section of the law of Alabama in
favor of debts contracted out of the state prevent the application
of the statute or its operation in a case of a debt originating in
and contracted by the deceased out of the State of Alabama.
A sovereign state, and one of the states of this Union, if the
latter were not restrained by constitutional prohibitions, might,
in virtue of sovereignty, act upon the contracts of its citizens,
wherever made, and discharge them, by denying the right of action
upon them in its own courts, but the validity of such contracts as
were made out of the sovereignty or state would exist and continue
everywhere else, according to the
lex loci contractus.
The constitutional and legal rights of a citizen of the United
States to sue in the circuit courts of the United States do not
permit an act of insolvency, completely executed under the
authority of a state, to be a good bar against a recovery upon a
contract made in another state.
The eleventh section of the act to establish the judicial courts
of the United States carries out the constitutional right of a
citizen of one state to sue a citizen of another state in the
circuit courts of the United States, and gives to the circuit
courts "original cognizance, concurrent with the courts of the
several states, of all suits of a civil nature at common law and in
equity."
It was certainly intended to give to suitors, having a right to
sue in
the circuit court, remedies coextensive with that right. These
remedies would not be so if any proceedings under an act of state
legislation to which the plaintiff was not a party, exempting a
person of such state from suit, could be pleaded to abate a suit in
the circuit court.
An action was instituted in the Circuit Court of Alabama by
Henry A. Suydam and William Boyd against the defendants as
administrators of David Newton on a promissory note given by him to
the plaintiffs.
On the trial of the cause, the following questions arose on
which the judges of the circuit court were divided, and the same
were certified to this Court.
1st. Is the plea that the estate of the said decedent is
insolvent sufficient in law to abate the said action?
2d. If the said plea be sufficient in law to abate said action,
can the circuit court of the United States for the district
aforesaid refer said cause for adjudication and final settlement to
a board of commissioners
Page 39 U. S. 68
to be appointed by a county court in one of the counties in the
State of Alabama in pursuance of an act of the Legislature of the
said state?
Page 39 U. S. 72
MR. JUSTICE WAYNE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Suydam and Boyd, partners in trade, citizens of the State of New
York, sue the defendants as administrators of David Newton upon a
promissory note given by the intestate to the plaintiff dated New
York, September 1, 1835, payable in twelve months.
The defendants, as we are left to gather from a most imperfect
record -- for the pleadings, except the declaration, are not given
-- plead in abatement of the suit that the estate represented by
them has been declared, under proceedings of a statute of Alabama,
to be insolvent, and in such case that they are not liable to be
sued.
The judges of the circuit court were opposed in opinion upon the
question "Is the plea that the estate of the said deceased is
insolvent sufficient in law to abate the said action?"
The statute of Alabama will be found in Aikin's Digest of
the
Page 39 U. S. 73
Laws of Alabama 151. The second section of it declares that the
estates of persons altogether insolvent shall be distributed among
the creditors in proportion to the sums respectively due after the
payment of debts due for the last sickness and necessary funeral
expenses. For the purpose of ascertaining such insolvency, the
executor is permitted to exhibit to the orphans' court an account
and statement of the effects of the estate, including in it also
the lands, tenements, and hereditaments of the testator or
intestate, and if it shall appear to the orphans' court that such
estate is insolvent, then, after ordering the lands, tenements, and
hereditaments of the testator or intestate to be sold, the court
shall appoint two or more commissioners, with power to receive and
examine the claims of creditors of the estate, and the
commissioners are directed to give notice of the times and places
of their meeting by notifications posted up in such public places
and in such newspapers as the orphans' court, or chief justice
thereof may direct. Six months, and not more than eighteen months,
shall be allowed by the court to creditors to bring in and prove
their claims before the commissioners. The commissioners, at the
end of the time limited, are to make a report on oath to the
orphans' court of all the claims which have been laid before them,
with the sums allowed by them on each respective claim. The court
then shall order the residue of the estate, personal and real --
the real estate being sold according to law -- to be paid and
distributed among the creditors whose claims have been allowed by
the commissioners in proportion to the sums respectively due.
Provision is then made, either at the instance of a creditor or
executor or administrator, either being dissatisfied with the
report on a particular claim, under an order of the orphans' court,
to refer that claim to a court of referees, whose report upon it,
when returned to the orphans' court and approved, is declared to be
final and conclusive. And it is further declared that no suit or
action shall be commenced or sustained against any executor or
administrator after the estate is represented insolvent except in
certain cases not necessary to be now noticed. But the statute
further provides for the liability of the executor or administrator
to the creditors for their respective shares in the distribution,
and then declares that the claims of creditors which have not been
put before the commissioners within the time limited, or which have
not been allowed in the other modes directed by the statute, shall
be forever barred unless such creditor shall find other estate of
the deceased, not inventoried or accounted for by the executor or
administrator, before distribution.
Is then the insolvency of the estate, judicially declared under
the statute, sufficient in law to abate the suit of the
plaintiff?
We think such an insolvency cannot abate the action upon which
this division of opinion has been certified to this Court. The
statute itself contains a provision which meets the question. The
sixth section declares that
"All claims against the estates of deceased persons shall be
presented to the executor or administrator within eighteen
Page 39 U. S. 74
months after the same shall have accrued, . . .or within
eighteen months after letters have been granted and not after, and
all claims not presented within that time, shall be forever barred
from recovery,"
but excepts, among other exceptions, debts contracted out of
Alabama. Now if an estate may be declared insolvent under the
statute in less than the longest time allowed to creditors to
present their claims, and creditors for debts contracted out of the
state are not limited to that time to present their claims, it
follows as a necessary consequence that an estate having been
declared to be insolvent within the shorter time cannot exclude
such creditor from maintaining a suit against the executor or
administrator. And in cases of insolvency declared after eighteen
months, creditors of debts contracted out of the state cannot be
included in the exclusion from the right to sue, for no time is
limited for such claims to be presented, and in an action to
enforce them, a recovery can only be prevented by such defenses as
would prevail in any other suit.
We think this a conclusive interpretation of the sixth section,
and on this ground, that the plea of the estate being insolvent is
not sufficient to abate this action.
But if the sixth section was not in the statute, our opinion
would be the same, from the rule which must be applied to interpret
such a statute. Statutes are mandatory, except of the established
rules for the interpretation of them.
This is a statute which, by the exemption it gives to executors
and administrators from suit, would seem to imply a denial to
creditors of the intestate the right to sue, without respect to the
foreign country or state in our own Union where the debt was
contracted. It is a general statute, without a direct application
to contracts made out of Alabama, and its construction cannot be
extended to such contracts.
Ratio est, quia statutum intelligit
semper disponere de contractibus factis intra et non extra
territorium suum. Casaragis Disc. 130, sec. 14-16.20.22. A
sovereign state, and one of the states of the Union, if the latter
were not restrained by constitutional prohibitions, might, in
virtue of sovereignty, act upon the contracts of its citizens,
wherever made and discharge them by denying a right of action upon
them in its courts. But the validity of such contracts as were made
out of the sovereignty or state, would exist and continue
everywhere else, according to the
lex loci contractus.
This shows the reason for and force of the rule just given, and it
may be laid down as a safe position that a statute discharging
contracts or denying suits upon them without the particular mention
of foreign contracts does not include them.
We do not mean, however, to decide this question solely by the
interpretation which has been given to the statute.
It may be put upon other grounds, making our conclusion equally
certain. They are such as are connected with the constitutional and
legal rights of the plaintiffs to sue in the circuit courts of the
United States, and upon the law which under our system does not
permit an act of insolvency completely executed under the
authority
Page 39 U. S. 75
of one state to be a good bar against the recovery upon a
contract made in another state.
The eleventh section of the act to establish the Judicial courts
of the United States carries out the constitutional right of a
citizen of one state to sue a citizen of another state in the
circuit court of the United States and gives to the circuit court
"original cognizance, concurrent with the courts of the several
states, of all suits of a civil nature, at common law, and in
equity," &c. It was certainly intended to give to suitors
having a right to sue in the circuit court remedies coextensive
with these rights. These remedies would not be so if any
proceedings under an act of a state legislature, to which a
plaintiff was not a party, exempting a person of such state from
suit, could be pleaded to abate a suit in the circuit court. The
division of opinion too, as it is presented in the record, is
brought within the decisions of this Court in
Sturges v.
Crowninshield, 4 Wheat. 122, and
Ogden v.
Saunders, 12 Wheat. 213. It must be remarked,
however, that the statute of Alabama is one for the distribution of
insolvent estates, not liable to the objections of a general law;
and is only brought under the cases mentioned, by an attempt to
extend its provisions to a citizen of another state.
In
Sturges v. Crowninshield it is said
"Every bankrupt or insolvent system in the world must partake of
the character of a judicial investigation. Parties whose rights are
affected, are entitled to a hearing. Hence, any bankrupt or
insolvent system professes to summon the creditors before some
tribunal to show cause against granting a discharge to the
bankrupt. But on what principle can a citizen of another state be
forced into the courts of a state for this investigation? The
judgment to be passed is to prostrate his rights, and on the
subject of those rights, the Constitution exempts him from the
jurisdiction of the state tribunals without regard to the place
where the contract may originate."
In
Ogden v. Saunders,
"A bankrupt or insolvent law of any state which discharges both
the person of the debtor and his future acquisitions of property is
not a law impairing the obligation of contracts so far as respects
debts contracted subsequently to the passage of the law. But a
certificate of discharge cannot be pleaded in bar of an action
brought by a citizen of another state in the courts of the United
States or of any other state than that where the discharge was
obtained."
Though this is a statute intended to act upon the distribution
of insolvent estates, and not a statute of bankruptcy, whatever
exemption it may give from suit to an executor or administrator of
an insolvent estate against the citizens of Alabama, a citizen of
another state, being a creditor of the testator or intestate,
cannot be acted upon by any proceedings under the statute unless he
shall have voluntarily made himself a party in them, so as to
impair his constitutional and legal right to sue an executor or
administrator in the circuit court of the United States.
Let it then be certified to the circuit court of the United
States for the Southern District of Alabama as the opinion of this
Court
Page 39 U. S. 76
that the plea that the estate of the decedent is insolvent is
not sufficient in law to abate the plaintiffs' action.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern
District of Alabama, and on the points and questions on which the
judges of the said circuit court were opposed in opinion, and which
were certified to this Court for its opinion agreeably to the act
of Congress in such case made and provided and was argued by
counsel, on consideration whereof it is the opinion of this Court
that "the plea that the estate of the said decedent is insolvent is
not sufficient in law to bate the plaintiffs' action." Whereupon it
is now here ordered and adjudged by this Court that it be so
certified to the said circuit court accordingly.