The right of action upon a judgment or decree of a court of
record of the United States sitting within the State of Wisconsin
is limited by the Revised Statutes of that state of 1858 to twenty
years after the cause of action accrued.
This was an action brought June 29, 1883, in the Circuit Court
of the United States for the Western District of Wisconsin by a
citizen of Ohio, the assignee of certain persons who were assignees
in different proportions of a judgment for the sum of $10,207.86,
recovered April 9, 1866, in the Circuit Court of the United States
for the District of Wisconsin, by a citizen of Tennessee against a
municipal corporation of Wisconsin. The petition having been
amended (in accordance with the opinion delivered by this Court
when the case was before it at a former term, and reported in
128 U. S. 128 U.S.
586) by showing that this plaintiff's assignors were citizens of
other states than Wisconsin, the defendant answered that the cause
of action did not arise within ten years before this action was
brought, and that the action was therefore barred by the statute of
limitations of Wisconsin. The case having been submitted to the
circuit court for trial without a jury, that court, on August 2,
1889, so held, and having filed findings of fact and conclusions of
law, rendered judgment for the defendant. The plaintiff sued out
this writ of error.
The Revised Statutes of Wisconsin of 1849, c. 127, § 41,
applied one limitation to all judgments of courts of record within
the United States, as follows:
"Every judgment and decree in any court of record of the United
States, or of any state or territory of the United States, shall be
presumed to be paid and satisfied at the expiration of twenty years
after the judgment or decree was rendered. "
Page 153 U. S. 672
The Revised Statutes of 1858, c. 138, contain the following
provisions:
"SEC 1. Civil actions can only be commenced within the periods
prescribed in this chapter, except when in special cases a
different limitation is prescribed by statute."
"SEC. 14. The periods prescribed in section one of this chapter
for the commencement of actions other than for the recovery of real
property shall be as follows:"
"SEC. 15. Within twenty years: 1. An action upon a judgment or
decree of any court of record of this state. 2. An action upon a
sealed instrument, when the cause of action accrues within this
state."
"SEC. 16. Within ten years: 1. An action upon a judgment or
decree of any court of record of any state or territory within the
United States, or of any court of the United States. 2. An action
upon a sealed instrument, when the cause of action accrued without
this state."
In the Revised Statutes of 1878, §§ 4220, 4221, the
language of the provisions as to actions on judgments is modified
so as to include in the limitation of twenty years "an action upon
a judgment or decree of any court of record of this state, or of
the United States, sitting within this state," and to confine the
limitation of ten years to
"an action upon a judgment or decree of any court of record of
any other state or territory of the United States, or of any court
of the United States sitting without this state."
By reason of a saving clause in § 4984, the case at bar is
not governed by these statutes, but by the statutes of 1858.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating the facts in the
foregoing language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
It will be perceived that the questions arising upon the
Page 153 U. S. 673
record in this case relate to the meaning, applicability, and
validity of the first paragraph of section 16 of the Revised
Statutes of Wisconsin of 1858, which, taken in connection with
sections 1 and 14, barred "an action upon a judgment or decree of
any court of record of any state or territory within the United
States, or of any court of the United States," in ten years. The
contention of the plaintiff is that under a proper construction of
the paragraph, judgments or decrees of the courts of the United
States sitting within the State of Wisconsin are not included
therein, and that if this were not so, it would be so far
unconstitutional. Defendant claims that such judgments or decrees
plainly fall within the statute, no room being left for
construction, and that it is valid as to suits on federal judgments
or decrees in the state courts, and therefore valid as to suits on
such judgments or decrees in federal courts under the thirty-fourth
section of the Judiciary Act of 1789.
By that section, it was provided that
"the laws of the several states, except where the Constitution,
treaties or statutes of the United States shall otherwise require
or provide, shall be regarded as rules of decision in trials at
common law in the courts of the United States, in cases where they
apply,"
and this was carried forward into section 721 of the Revised
Statutes. And from the beginning, this Court has recognized
statutes of limitations of actions, real and personal, as enacted
by the legislature of a state, and as construed by its highest
court, as rules of decision in the courts of the United States.
Bauserman v. Blunt, 147 U. S. 647,
147 U. S. 652,
and cases cited.
McElmoyle v.
Cohen, 13 Pet. 312,
38 U. S. 327,
is an early and leading case on the subject, cited and largely
quoted from by counsel for defendant. The statute of limitations of
Georgia involved in that case required "actions of debt upon
judgments obtained in courts other than the courts of this state"
to be brought "within five years next after the judgments shall
have been obtained," and, an action having been brought in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Georgia upon
a judgment rendered in a court of the State of South Carolina, it
was held that the statute could be pleaded
Page 153 U. S. 674
in bar thereof. Mr. Justice Wayne delivered the opinion of the
Court, and, after stating that judgments recovered in one state
"are record evidence of a debt, or judgments of record, to be
contested only in such way as judgments of record may be, and
consequently are conclusive upon the defendant in every state
except for such causes as would be sufficient to set aside the
judgment in the courts of the state in which it was rendered,"
but that a plea of the statute of limitations was "well settled
to be a plea to the remedy, and consequently that the
lex
fori must prevail," proceeded as follows:
"It would be strange if in the now well understood rights of
nations to organize their judicial tribunals according to their
notions of policy, it should be conceded to them in every other
respect than that of prescribing the time within which suits shall
be litigated in their courts. Prescription is a thing of policy,
growing out of the experience of its necessity, and the time after
which suits or actions shall be barred has been, from a remote
antiquity, fixed by every nation in virtue of that sovereignty by
which it exercises its legislation for all persons and property
within its jurisdiction. This being the foundation of the right to
pass statutes of prescription or limitation, may not our states,
under our system, exercise this right in virtue of their
sovereignty? Or is it to be conceded to them in every other
particular than that of barring the remedy upon judgments of other
states by the lapse of time? The states use this right upon
judgments rendered in their own courts, and the common law raises
the presumption of the payment of a judgment after the lapse of
twenty years. May they not then limit the time for remedies upon
the judgments of other states, and alter the common law by statute,
fixing a less or larger time for such presumption and altogether
barring suits upon such judgments if they shall not be brought
within the time stated in the statute? It certainly will not be
contended that judgment creditors of other states shall be put upon
a better footing in regard to a state's right to legislate in this
particular than the judgment creditors of the state in which the
judgment was obtained. And if this right so exists, may it not be
exercised by a state's restraining
Page 153 U. S. 675
the remedy upon the judgment of another state, leaving those of
its own courts unaffected by a statute of limitations, but subject
to the common law presumption of payment after the lapse of twenty
years? In other words, may not the law of a state fix different
times for barring the remedy in a suit upon a judgment of another
state and for those of its own tribunals? We use this mode of
argument to show the unreasonableness of a contrary doctrine. But
the point might have been shortly dismissed with this safe
declaration: that there is no direct constitutional inhibition upon
the states, nor any clause in the Constitution from which it can be
even plausibly inferred, that the states may not legislate upon the
remedy in suits upon the judgments of other states exclusive of all
interference with their merits. It being settled that the statute
of limitations may bar recoveries upon foreign judgments, that the
effect intended to be given under our Constitution to judgments is
that they are conclusive only as regards the merits, the common law
principle then applies to suits upon them that they must be brought
within the period prescribed by the local law, the
lex
fori, or the suit will be barred."
Reference is also made to
Ross v. Duval,
13 Pet. 45, in which it was held that an act of the Legislature of
Virginia providing that judgments of any court within the state,
when execution had not been issued, might be revived within ten
years from that date by
scire facias or action of debt
thereon, and that when execution had been issued, and not returned,
other executions and proceedings on the judgment might be had
within ten years, and not after, was a statute of limitations, and
applicable to a judgment obtained in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of Virginia. That was no more than
applying to the judgments of the United States courts the same rule
that applied to the judgments of the state courts, and in neither
of these cases did the precise question arise presented in the case
before us.
By the Act of May 26, 1790, c. 11, 1 Stat. 122, and the
supplement thereto of March 27, 1804, c. 56, 2 Stat. 299, now
embodied in Rev.Stat. § 905, it is provided that the records
and judicial proceedings not only of the courts of any state,
but
Page 153 U. S. 676
also of any territory or of any country subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States, authenticated as therein
prescribed,
"shall have such faith and credit given to them, in every court
within the United States as they have by law or usage in the courts
of the state from which they are taken,"
that is to say, such faith and credit as they are entitled to in
the courts of the state, territory, or other country subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States from which they are taken.
In
Dupasseur v.
Rochereau, 21 Wall. 130,
88 U. S. 135,
Mr. Justice Bradley, speaking for the Court, said:
"The only effect that can be justly claimed for a judgment in
the circuit court of the United States is such as would belong to
judgments of the state courts rendered under similar
circumstances,"
and
"it is apparent, therefore, that no higher sanctity or effect
can be claimed for the judgment of the circuit court of the United
States rendered in such a case under such circumstances than is due
to the judgments of the state courts in a like case and under
similar circumstances."
The same views were expressed by the Court through Mr. Justice
Matthews in
Embry v. Palmer, 107 U.
S. 7,
107 U. S. 9-10;
Crescent City Livestock Co. v. Butchers' Union,
120 U. S. 141,
120 U. S.
146-147. It cannot be doubted that in respect of their
effect under section 905, the judgments and decrees of the circuit
courts of the United States are entitled to the same sanctity and
effect in the courts of each state, when those courts are held
within the state, as their own judgments -- nothing more, but
nothing less.
So far as that section relates to the effect to be given to the
judicial proceedings of the states, it is founded on Article IV,
Section 1, of the Constitution, but the power to prescribe what
effect shall be given to the judicial proceedings of the courts of
the United States is conferred by other provisions of the
Constitution, such as those which declare the extent of the
judicial power of the United States, which authorize all
legislation necessary and proper for executing the powers vested by
the Constitution in the government of the United States or in any
department or officer thereof, and which declare the supremacy of
the power of the national government within the limits of the
Constitution.
Page 153 U. S. 677
The judicial power of the United States is vested in one Supreme
Court and in such inferior courts as the Congress may from time to
time ordain and establish. Congress has accordingly established
circuit courts. The judicial power vested in them extends to
controversies between citizens of different states, and the
citizens of each state are entitled to the privileges and
immunities of citizens in the several states.
It is argued that this legislation, if given the construction
contended for, would involve the assertion of power over the
federal courts, and by discrimination impair their jurisdiction and
authority, and also in effect deprive the citizens of other states
of privileges secured to them by the supreme law of the land. That
as long as a limitation prescribed by state law is equally
applicable to all judgments rendered within or without a state,
there is no discrimination against judgments rendered in the
federal courts, but when there is a discrimination between
judgments rendered in the courts of a state and those rendered in
the federal courts held in the same state, it is an attack upon the
judicial authority of the United States, and in limitation of the
right of citizens to invoke that jurisdiction. Hence that this
statute of 1858, if it have the scope insisted on, cannot apply as
a rule of decision in this case, under section 721, because the
Constitution of the United States otherwise requires, that that
section does not concede to the states the right to make laws that
in any way discriminate against the judgments of the courts of the
United States in a particular state, but simply prescribes the rule
that whatever the state laws are in respect of the conduct and
course of the judgments of its own courts should be the guide
within constitutional limits for the action of courts of the United
States in proceedings in respect of the judgments of those courts
in that state, and that in that view the first paragraph of section
15, providing that actions could be brought within twenty years
upon a judgment or decree of any court of record of Wisconsin,
applied, while the first paragraph of section 16 did not apply
except in reference to judgments of any court of the United States
other than in the State of Wisconsin.
Massingill v.
Downs, 7 How. 760,
48 U. S. 766,
is cited by plaintiff,
Page 153 U. S. 678
which, however, did not involve the limitation of actions. There
a lien upon real estate, acquired by virtue of a judgment recovered
in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District
of Mississippi in 1839, when, by a law of the state, it was a valid
lien, was held not to be lost by noncompliance with a subsequent
statute of the state, passed in 1841, making it a condition of the
validity of liens under judgments theretofore rendered that the
judgments should be recorded within four months of the passage of
the statute in the office of the circuit court of the county in
which the land was. And this Court said:
"In those states where the judgment or the execution of a state
court creates a lien only within the county in which the judgment
is entered, it has not been doubted that a similar proceeding in
the circuit court of the United States would create a lien to the
extent of its jurisdiction. This has been the practical
construction of the power of the courts of the United States,
whether the lien was held to be created by the issuing of process
or by express statute. Any other construction would materially
affect, and in some degree subvert, the judicial power of the
Union. It would place suitors in the state courts in a much better
condition than in the federal courts."
Cooke v. Avery, 147 U. S. 375,
147 U. S.
387.
But we do not understand defendant's counsel to contend that a
state has power to regulate or vary the proceedings or judgments of
the United States courts as such, or that Congress can either
delegate its own powers or enlarge those of a state, but that, as a
mere question of power, a state may prescribe limitations upon
judgments without regard to the court pronouncing them, that a
judgment is simply record evidence of the debt or liability as
between the parties, that there is no constitutional prohibition
upon the power to limit actions thereon, and that, while actions on
judgments in the courts of the United States cannot be controlled
by the exercise of this power, that result is reached under section
721, which makes the law of the state in that regard a rule of
decision.
As a general rule, this Court follows the decisions of the
highest court of a state in the construction of the statutes of
Page 153 U. S. 679
the state, unless they conflict with or impair the efficacy of
some provision of the Constitution of the United States or of an
act of Congress; but we think we are at liberty, and perhaps
required, under the circumstances existing here, to interpret this
statute for ourselves.
In June, 1870, the Circuit Court of the United States for the
District of Wisconsin, in the case of
Cole v. Weil, Judge
Drummond and District Judge Miller holding the court, sustained a
demurrer to the plea of the ten-years limitation in bar of an
action upon a judgment recovered in the District Court of the
United States for the District of Wisconsin. In January, 1885, the
circuit court held otherwise in the case before us, and found for
the defendant on the defense now under consideration, and judgment
having been rendered, the cause was brought on error to this Court,
the record being filed October 9, 1885. On December 10, 1888, that
judgment was reversed upon a question of jurisdiction, and the
cause remanded.
128 U. S. 128 U.S.
586. While that writ of error was pending in this Court, and in
August, 1886, an action was brought in one of the state circuit
courts against the Town of Waterloo upon, among other causes of
action, a judgment obtained in the United States Circuit Court for
the District of Wisconsin. To this the ten-year bar was pleaded and
sustained, and the case carried to the state supreme court, which,
September 20, 1887, decided that the judgment came within the words
of subdivision one of section sixteen, c. 138, Rev.Stat. 1858, and
that the action thereon was barred by the lapse of ten years.
Waterman v. Waterloo, 69 Wis. 260.
In
Ballin v. Loeb, 78 Wis. 404, decided December 16,
1890, plaintiffs obtained judgment against a corporation in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of
Wisconsin, and execution was issued thereon and returned "No
property found," whereupon they filed a bill in the state court
under a state statute in that behalf for the sequestration of the
property of the corporation, and to have a receiver appointed, in
order to a fair and equal division of the assets of the corporation
among all its creditors. The question was raised whether they,
having obtained their judgment in the
Page 153 U. S. 680
circuit court of the United States, could avail themselves of
the statutory remedy.
The supreme court held that they could, and said:
"It is contended by the learned counsel of the appellant that
the return of an execution on a judgment in a federal court will
not sustain this action, and that such a judgment is that of a
foreign court, or the same as one of a sister state. There may have
been late decisions to such effect, but the current of authorities,
as well as the laws of the United States and of this state,
establish the rule that the judgments of the United States courts
of the Wisconsin districts are to be treated as domestic judgments
of a superior court of this state."
The court referred to various acts of Congress under which
proceedings and judgments in federal courts are assimilated to
those of state courts, and to the fact that in state courts they
"are treated in all respects as to remedies like domestic judgments
in the states in which they were rendered," and, after citing, to
the point that United States courts are not foreign within the
state where they are held,
Turrell v. Warren, 25 Minn. 9;
Wandling v. Straw, 25 W.Va. 705;
Thomson v. Lee
County, 22 Ia. 206;
St. Albans v. Bush, 4 Vt. 58;
Barney v. Patterson's Lessee, 6 Har. & Johns. 182;
McCauley v. Hargroves, 48 Ga. 50;
Williams v.
Wilkes, 14 Penn.St. 228;
Embry v. Palmer,
107 U. S. 3, thus
concluded:
"We are disposed to adopt this rule, so well established, as
against any adverse decisions, as it appears more in the spirit of
comity and reasonable. In this proceeding, the judgment of the
plaintiff will have the same effect as if rendered by any superior
court of this state, because it was rendered in a Wisconsin
district of a United States court."
It seems to us that if the supreme court had arrived at this
conclusion at the time
Waterman v. Waterloo was under
consideration, a different result might have been reached. It is
true that in that case the supreme court said:
"That the circuit courts of the United States are properly
called domestic courts of the states wherein they are held could
not possibly change the meaning of this language, 'or of any
Page 153 U. S. 681
court of the United States' without destroying it entirely. What
other United States courts except the district and circuit courts
of the United States render judgments upon which the statute of
limitations can run?"
But we think we may be permitted to assume that if the supreme
court had then definitively adjudicated that judgments of the
United States courts held in Wisconsin were not to be regarded as
those of a foreign court or of a sister state, but were to be
treated as domestic judgments of a superior court of that state, it
would have found a sufficient subject for the operation of the
first paragraph of section 16 in respect of judgments and decrees
"of any court of the United States," in the judgments and decrees
of such courts when held in other states. Moreover it should be
observed that the question of the power under the Constitution to
control in any way or to discriminate as to federal judgments
rendered in the state does not seem to have been brought to the
attention of the court, and was not adverted to.
Since the domestic character of the federal courts sitting in
the State of Wisconsin is conceded, and the principle fully
recognized that their judgments are to be treated in all respects
as to remedies like the judgments of the state courts, it would
seem to follow that the words, "judgment or decree of any court of
record of this state" in section 15 of chapter 138 of the Revised
Statutes of 1858, included the judgments and decrees of federal
courts rendered within the state, and but for the words, "or of any
court of the United States," in section 16, there would be no
difficulty in arriving at that conclusion, and, in view of all the
legislation upon the subject, we think we are not obliged to take
those words literally, but that they are open to construction.
By the Revised Statutes of 1849, a limitation of twenty years
was prescribed for actions upon all judgments of record, wherever
rendered, and upon all specialties, wherever the cause of action
accrued. Rev.Stats. 1849, c. 127, §§ 14, 20, 41.
By an act of 1866, as amended in 1868, it was provided that
executions might be issued any time within five years, and at any
time thereafter,
"upon any judgment which has heretofore
Page 153 U. S. 682
been or may hereafter be rendered or docketed in any court of
record
in this state, . . .
provided that no
execution shall issue, nor any action or proceedings be had upon
any such judgment after twenty years from the time of the rendition
of docketing thereof."
Laws 1866, c. 14, p. 16; Laws 1868, c. 11, p. 14.
The Revised Statutes of 1878 provided that actions must be
commenced within twenty years "upon a judgment or decree of any
court of record of this state, or of the United States, sitting
within this state," and "upon a sealed instrument when the cause of
action accrues within this state," with an exception relating to
municipal bonds, and within ten years
"upon a judgment or decree of any court of record of any other
state or Territory of the United States, or of any court of the
United States sitting without this state,"
and "upon on a sealed instrument when the cause of action
accrued without this state," with a similar exception as to
municipal bonds. Rev.Stats. 1878, §§ 4220, 4221.
The provisions of the Revised Statutes of 1858 under
consideration (c. 138, p. 821) were that the period of time for the
commencement of actions other than for the recovery of real
property should be:
"SEC. 15. Within twenty years: 1. An action upon a judgment or
decree of any court of record of this state. 2. An action upon a
sealed instrument when the cause of action accrues within this
state."
"SEC. 16. Within ten years: 1. An action upon a judgment or
decree of any court of record of any state or territory within the
United States, or of any court of the United States. 2. An action
upon a sealed instrument when the cause of action accrued without
this state."
Thus it is seen that under the statute of 1849, there was no
discrimination. Under the statute of 1878, a discrimination was
made between causes of action accruing on judgments, decrees, and
sealed instruments within and without the state. Under the acts of
1866 and 1868, judgments of courts of record in the state were
treated alike.
Was it intended by the statute of 1858 to make any other
Page 153 U. S. 683
discrimination than that more accurately expressed in the
statute of 1878? Was it intended to discriminate against the
judgments and decrees of the federal courts in Wisconsin as if they
were foreign courts, or courts of another state? Was it intended to
disparage the jurisdiction and authority of the federal courts? It
is said in
Harrington v. Smith, 28 Wis. 43, 59, that
"the true rule for the construction of statutes is to look to
the whole and every part of the statute, and the apparent intention
derived from the whole, to the subject matter, to the effects and
consequences, and to the reason and spirit of the law, and thus to
ascertain the true meaning of the legislature, though the meaning
so ascertained may sometimes conflict with the literal sense of the
words."
If we take the words in section 16 "any court of record of any
state or Territory of the United States" literally, they include
the courts of Wisconsin as they did in the statute of 1849; yet we
should say that the first paragraph of section 15 was not thereby
repealed, but, on the contrary, that the cases therein mentioned
were to be taken as excepted. And so, while the words in section 16
"any court of the United States" are broad enough to cover the
courts of the United States in Wisconsin, we do not consider that
the latter were embraced thereby, but that section 16 applied to
those courts of the United States which were not included in
section 15, as those holding courts in Wisconsin were. The
distinction intended was between causes of action accruing within
and causes of action accruing without the state, and the statute of
1878 was declaratory of a meaning which already existed.
Koshkonong v. Burton, 104 U. S. 668,
104 U. S. 671,
involved a different question, but it will be found that in the
statement of the statute of 1858 the distinction was indicated.
We cannot attribute to the Legislature of Wisconsin any design
to discriminate against the judgments and decrees of the courts of
the United States rendered in that state by reducing the statutory
period for the commencement of actions thereon to a less number of
years than obtained as to the judgments and decrees of the state
courts, and so to compel citizens of other states to bring their
suits originally in those
Page 153 U. S. 684
courts, rather than in the federal courts, as secured to them by
the Constitution; or their own citizens to do so if they had causes
of action arising under the Constitution and laws of the United
States. We do not entertain the least idea that the legislature was
actuated by any such disposition, and are persuaded that the
language of the act of 1858 produced no such result.
We are of opinion that the ten-year bar constituted no defense
to the action of plaintiff, and therefore the judgment is
Reversed, and the cause remanded, with a direction to enter
judgment for plaintiff on the findings.