A citizen and resident of this country who has his principal
place of business here but has an agent in a foreign country and is
accustomed to purchase and store large quantities of goods there,
and, in a suit brought against him by a citizen and in a court of
that country, appears and defends with the sole object of
preventing his property within the jurisdiction, but not in the
custody of that court, from being taken in satisfaction of any
judgment that may be recovered against him there cannot, in an
action brought against him in this country upon such a judgment,
impeach it for want of jurisdiction of his person.
The admission at the trial in a court of a foreign country,
according to its law and practice, of testimony not under oath and
without opportunity of cross-examination, and of documents with
which the defendant had no connection and which by our law would
not be admissible against him, is not of itself a sufficient ground
for impeaching the judgment of that court in an action brought upon
it in this country.
When an action is brought in a court of this country by a
citizen of a foreign country against one of our own citizens to
recover a sum of money adjudged by a court of that country to be
due from the defendant to the plaintiff, and the foreign judgment
appears to have been rendered by a competent court, having
jurisdiction of the cause and of the parties, and upon due
allegations and proofs and opportunity to defend against them, and
its proceedings are according to the course of a civilized
jurisprudence, and are stated in a clear and formal record, the
judgment is
prima facie evidence, at least, of the truth
of the matter adjudged, and the judgment is conclusive upon the
merits tried in the foreign court unless some special ground is
shown for impeaching it, as by showing that it was affected by
fraud or prejudice or that, by the principles of international law
and by the comity of our own country, it is not entitled to full
credit and credit.
A judgment for a sum of money, rendered by a court of a foreign
country, having jurisdiction of the cause and of the parties, in a
suit brought by
Page 159 U. S. 114
one of its citizens against one of ours, is
prima facie
evidence only, and not conclusive of the merits of the claim in an
action brought here upon the judgment if by the law of the foreign
country, as in France, judgments of our own courts are not
recognized as conclusive.
The first of these two cases was an action at law, brought
December 18, 1885, in the Circuit Court of the United States for
the Southern District of New York, by Gustave Bertin Guyot, as
official liquidator of the firm of Charles Fortin & Co., and by
the surviving members of that firm, all aliens and citizens of the
Republic of France, against Henry Hilton and William Libbey,
citizens of the United States and of the State of New York and
trading as copartners in the cities of New York and Paris and
elsewhere under the firm name of A. T. Stewart & Co. The action
was upon a judgment recovered in a French court at Paris, in the
Republic of France, by the firm of Charles Fortin & Co., all of
whose members were French citizens, against Hilton & Libbey,
trading as copartners, as aforesaid, and citizens of the United
States and of the State of New York.
The complaint alleged that in 1886 and since, during the time of
all the transactions included in the judgment sued on, Hilton and
Libbey, as successors to Alexander T. Stewart and Libbey, under the
firm name of A. T. Stewart & Co., carried on a general business
as merchants in the Cities of New York and Paris and elsewhere, and
maintained a regular store and place of business at Paris; that
during the same time, Charles Fortin & Co. carried on the
manufacture and sale of gloves at Paris, and the two firms had
there large dealings in that business, and controversies arose in
the adjustment of accounts between them.
The complaint further alleged that between March 1, 1879, and
December 1, 1882, five suits were brought by Fortin & Co.
against Stewart & Co. for sums alleged to be due, and three
suits by Stewart & Co. against Fortin & Co., in the
Tribunal of Commerce of the Department of the Seine, a judicial
tribunal or court organized and existing under the laws of France,
sitting at Paris and having jurisdiction of suits and controversies
between merchants or traders growing
Page 159 U. S. 115
out of commercial dealings between them; that Stewart & Co.
appeared by their authorized attorneys in all those suits, and
that, after full hearing before an arbitrator appointed by that
court and before the court itself, and after all the suits had been
consolidated by the court, final judgment was rendered on January
20, 1883, that Fortin & Co. recover of Stewart & Co.
various sums, arising out of the dealings between them, amounting
to 660,847 francs, with interest, and dismissed part of Fortin
& Co.'s claim.
The complaint further alleged that appeals were taken by both
parties from that judgment to the Court of Appeal of Paris, Third
Section, an appellate court of record organized and existing under
the laws of the Republic of France and having jurisdiction of
appeals from the final judgments of the Tribunal of Commerce of the
Department of the Seine, where the amount in dispute exceeded the
sum of 1,500 francs, and that the said Court of Appeal, by a final
judgment rendered March 19, 1884, and remaining of record in the
office of its clerk at Paris, after hearing the several parties by
their counsel, and upon full consideration of the merits, dismissed
the appeal of the defendants, confirmed the judgment of the lower
court in favor of the plaintiffs, and ordered, upon the plaintiffs'
appeal, that they recover the additional sum of 152,528 francs,
with 182,849 francs for interest on all the claims allowed, and
12,559 francs for costs and expenses.
The complaint further alleged that Guyot had been duly appointed
by the Tribunal of Commerce of the Department of the Seine official
liquidator of the firm of Forth & Co., with full powers,
according to law and commercial usage, for the verification and
realization of its property, both real and personal, and to collect
and cause to be executed the judgments aforesaid.
The complaint further alleged that the judgment of the Court of
Appeals of Paris, and the judgment of the Tribunal of Commerce, as
modified by the judgment of the appellate court, still remain in
full force and effect;
"that the said courts respectively had jurisdiction of the
subject matter of the controversies so submitted to them, and of
the parties, the
Page 159 U. S. 116
said defendants having intervened, by their attorneys and
counsel, and applied for affirmative relief in both courts; that
the plaintiffs have hitherto been unable to collect the said
judgments or any part thereof, by reason of the absence of the said
defendants, they having given up their business in Paris prior to
the recovery of the said judgment on appeal, and having left no
property within the jurisdiction of the Republic of France out of
which the said judgments might be made;"
and that there are still justly due and owing from the
defendants to the plaintiffs upon those said judgments certain
sums, specified in the complaint, and amounting in all to 1,008,783
francs in the currency of the Republic of France, equivalent to
$195,122.47.
The defendants, in their answer, set forth in detail the
original contracts and transactions in France between the parties
and the subsequent dealings between them modifying those contracts,
and alleged that the plaintiffs had no just claim against the
defendants, but that, on the contrary, the defendants, upon a just
settlement of the accounts, were entitled to recover large sums
from the plaintiffs.
The answer admitted the proceedings and judgments in the French
courts and that the defendants gave up their business in France
before the judgment on appeal, and had no property within the
jurisdiction of France out of which that judgment could be
collected.
The answer further alleged that the Tribunal of Commerce of the
Department of the Seine was a tribunal whose judges were merchants,
ship captains, stockbrokers, and persons engaged in commercial
pursuits, and of which Charles Fortin had been a member until
shortly before the commencement of the litigation.
The answer further alleged that in the original suits brought
against the defendants by Fortin & Co., the citations were left
at their storehouse in Paris; that they were then residents and
citizens of the State of New York, and neither of them at that
time, or within four years before, had been within, or resident or
domiciled within, the jurisdiction of that tribunal or owed any
allegiance to France, but that
Page 159 U. S. 117
they were the owners of property situated in that country which
would by the law of France have been liable to seizure if they did
not appear in that tribunal, and that they unwillingly, and solely
for the purpose of protecting that property, authorized and caused
an agent to appear for them in those proceedings, and that the
suits brought by them against Fortin & Co. were brought for the
same purpose, and in order to make a proper defense, and to
establish counterclaims arising out of the transactions between the
parties, and to compel the production and inspection of Fortin
& Co.'s books, and that they sought no other affirmative relief
in that tribunal.
The answer further alleged that, pending that litigation, the
defendants discovered gross frauds in the accounts of Fourtin &
Co., that the arbitrator and the tribunal declined to compel Fortin
& Co. to produce their books and papers for inspection, and
that, if they had been produced, the judgment would not have been
obtained against the defendants.
The answer further alleged that without any fault or negligence
on the part of the defendants, there was not a full and fair trial
of the controversies before the arbitrator, in that no witness was
sworn or affirmed; in that Charles Fortin was permitted to make,
and did make, statements not under oath containing many falsehoods;
in that the privilege of cross-examination of Fortin and other
persons who made statements before the arbitrator was denied to the
defendants, and in that extracts from printed newspapers, the
knowledge of which was not brought home to the defendants, and
letters and other communications in writing between Fortin &
Co. and third persons, to which the defendants were neither privy
nor party, were received by the arbitrator; that without such
improper evidence, the judgment would not have been obtained, and
that the arbitrator was deceived and misled by the false and
fraudulent accounts introduced by Fortin & Co. and by the
hearsay testimony given, without the solemnity of an oath and
without cross-examination, and by the fraudulent suppression of the
books and papers.
The answer further alleged that Fortin & Co. made up their
statements and accounts falsely and fraudulently, and with
Page 159 U. S. 118
intent to deceive the defendants and the arbitrator and the said
courts of France, and those courts were deceived and misled
thereby; that owing to the fraudulent suppression of the books and
papers of Fortin & Co. upon the trial and the false statements
of Fortin regarding matters involved in the controversy, the
arbitrator and the courts of France
"were deceived and misled in regard to the merits of the
controversies pending before them, and wrongfully decided against
said Stewart & Co., as hereinbefore stated; that said judgment,
hereinbefore mentioned, is fraudulent, and based upon false and
fraudulent accounts and statements, and is erroneous in fact and in
law, and is void; that the trial hereinbefore mentioned was not
conducted according to the usages and practice of the common law,
and the allegations and proofs given by said Fortin & Co., upon
which said judgment is founded, would not be competent or
admissible in any court or tribunal of the United States, in any
suit between the same parties involving the same subject matter,
and it is contrary to natural justice and public policy that the
said judgment should be enforced against a citizen of the United
States, and that, if there had been a full and fair trial upon the
merits of the controversies so pending before said tribunals, no
judgment would have been obtained against said Stewart &
Co."
"Defendants, further answering, allege that it is contrary to
natural justice that the judgment hereinbefore mentioned should be
enforced without an examination of the merits thereof; that by the
laws of the Republic of France, to-wit, article 181 [121] of the
Royal Ordinance of June 15, 1629, it is provided namely:"
"Judgments rendered, contracts or obligations recognized, in
foreign kingdoms and sovereignties, for any cause whatever shall
give rise to no lien or execution in our Kingdom. Thus, the
contracts shall stand for simple promises, and, notwithstanding
such judgments, our subjects against whom they have been rendered
may contest their rights anew before our own judges."
"And it is further provided by the laws of France, by article
546 of the Code de Procedure Civile, as follows:"
" Judgments rendered by foreign tribunals shall be capable of
execution
Page 159 U. S. 119
in France only in the manner and in the cases set forth by
articles 2123 and 2128 of the Civil Code."
"And it is further provided by the laws of France, by article
2128 [2123] of the Code de Procedure Civile [Civil Code]:"
" A lien cannot, in like manner, arise from judgments rendered
in any foreign country, save only as they have been declared in
force by a French tribunal, without prejudice, however, to
provisions to the contrary, contained in public laws and
treaties."
"[And by article 2128 of that Code: 'Contracts entered into in a
foreign country cannot give a lien upon property in France if there
are no provisions contrary to this principle in public laws or in
treaties.']"
"That the construction given to said statutes by the judicial
tribunals of France is such that no comity is displayed towards the
judgments of tribunals of foreign countries against the citizens of
France, when sued upon in said courts of France, and the merits of
the controversies upon which the said judgments are based are
examined anew, unless a treaty to the contrary effect exists
between the said Republic of France and the country in which such
judgment is obtained. That no treaty exists between the said
Republic of France and the United States, by the terms or effect of
which the judgments of either country are prevented from being
examined anew upon the merits, when sued upon in the courts of the
country other than that in which it is obtained. That the tribunals
of the Republic of France give no force and effect, within the
jurisdiction of the said country, to the duly rendered judgments of
courts of competent jurisdiction of the United States against
citizens of France, after proper personal service of the process of
said courts is made thereon in this country."
The answer further set up, by way of counterclaim and in detail,
various matters arising out of the dealings between the parties,
and alleged that none of the plaintiffs had since 1881 been
residents of the State of New York, or within the jurisdiction of
that state, but the defendants were, and always had been, residents
of that state.
The answer concluded by demanding that the plaintiffs'
Page 159 U. S. 120
complaint be dismissed, and that the defendants have judgment
against them upon the counterclaims, amounting to $102,942.91.
The plaintiffs filed a replication to so much of the answer as
made counterclaims, denying its allegations and setting up in bar
thereof the judgment sued on.
The defendants, on June 22, 1888, filed a bill in equity against
the plaintiffs setting forth the same matters as in their answer to
the action at law and praying for a discovery and for an injunction
against the prosecution of the action. To that bill a plea was
filed setting up the French judgments, and upon a hearing, the bill
was dismissed. 42 F. 249. From the decree dismissing the bill an
appeal was taken, which is the second case now before this
Court.
The action at law afterwards came on for trial by a jury, and
the plaintiffs put in the records of the proceedings and judgments
in the French courts, and evidence that the jurisdiction of those
courts was as alleged in the complaint and that the practice
followed and the method of examining the witnesses were according
to the French law, and also proved the title of Guyot as
liquidator.
It was admitted by both parties that for several years prior to
1876, the firm of Alexander T. Stewart & Co., composed of
Stewart and Libbey, conducted their business as merchants in the
City of New York, with branches in other cities of America and
Europe; that both partners were citizens and residents of the City
and State of New York during the entire period mentioned in the
complaint, and that in April, 1876, Stewart died, and Hilton and
Libbey formed a partnership to continue the business under the same
firm name, and became the owners of all the property and rights of
the old firm.
The defendants made numerous offers of evidence in support of
all the specific allegations of fact in their answer, including the
allegations as to the law and comity of France. The plaintiffs, in
their brief filed in this Court, admitted that most of these
offers
"were offers to prove matters in support of the defenses and
counterclaims set up by the defendants in the cases tried before
the French courts, and which, or most
Page 159 U. S. 121
of which, would have been relevant and competent if the
plaintiffs in error are not concluded by the result of those
litigations, and have now the right to try those issues, either on
the ground that the French judgments are only
prima facie
evidence of the correctness of those judgments, or on the ground
that the case is within the exception of a judgment obtained by
fraud."
The defendants, in order to show that they should not be
concluded by having appeared and litigated in the suits brought
against them by the plaintiffs in the French courts, offered to
prove that they were residents and citizens of the State of New
York, and neither of them had been, within four years prior to the
commencement of those suits, domiciled or resident within the
jurisdiction of those courts; that they had a purchasing agent and
a storehouse in Paris, but only as a means or facility to aid in
the transaction of their principal business, which was in New York,
and they were never otherwise engaged in business in France; that
neither of them owed allegiance to France, but they were the owners
of property there which would, according to the laws of France,
have been liable to seizure if they had not appeared to answer in
those suits; that they unwillingly, and solely for the purpose of
protecting their property within the jurisdiction of the French
tribunal, authorized an agent to appear, and he did appear in the
proceedings before it, and that their motion to compel an
inspection of the plaintiffs' books, as well as the suits brought
by the defendants in France, were necessary by way of defense or
counterclaim to the suits there brought by the plaintiffs against
them.
Among the matters which the defendants alleged and offered to
prove in order to show that the French judgments were procured by
fraud were that Fortin & Co., with intent to deceive and
defraud the defendants, and the arbitrator and the courts of
France, entered in their books, and presented to the defendants,
and to the French courts, accounts bearing upon the transactions in
controversy which were false and fraudulent, and contained
excessive and fraudulent charges against the defendants in various
particulars, specified; that the
Page 159 U. S. 122
defendants made due application to the Tribunal of Commerce to
compel Fortin & Co. to allow their account books and letter
books to be inspected by the defendants, and the application was
opposed by Fortin & Co., and denied by the tribunal; that the
discovery and inspection of those books were necessary to determine
the truth of the controversies between the parties; that before the
Tribunal of Commerce, Charles Fortin was permitted to and did give
in evidence statements not under oath relating to the merits of the
controversies there pending, and falsely represented that a certain
written contract made in 1873 between Stewart & Co. and Fortin
& Co. concerning their dealings was not intended by the parties
to be operative according to its terms, and in support of that
false representation made statements as to admissions by Stewart in
a private conversation with him, and that the defendants could not
deny those statements, because Stewart was dead, and they were not
protected from the effect of Fortin's statements by the privilege
of cross-examining him under oath, and that the French judgments
were based upon false and fraudulent accounts presented and
statements made by Fortin & Co. before the Tribunal of Commerce
during the trial before it.
The records of the judgments of the French courts, put in
evidence by the plaintiffs, showed that all the matters now relied
on to show fraud were contested in and considered by those
courts.
The plaintiffs objected to all the evidence offered by the
defendants on the grounds that the matters offered to be proved
were irrelevant, immaterial, and incompetent; that in respect to
them the defendants were concluded by the judgment sued on and
given in evidence, and that none of those matters, if proved, would
be a defense to this action upon that judgment.
The court declined to admit any of the evidence so offered by
the defendants, and directed a verdict for the plaintiffs in the
sum of $277,775.44, being the amount of the French judgment and
interest. The defendants, having duly excepted to the rulings and
direction of the court, sued out a writ of error.
Page 159 U. S. 123
The writ of error in the action at law and the appeal in the
suit in equity were argued together in this Court in January, 1894,
and, by direction of the Court, were reargued in April, 1894,
before a full Bench.
Page 159 U. S. 162
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the case, delivered the opinion
of the Court.
These two cases -- the one at law and the other in equity -- of
Hilton v. Guyot, and the case of
Ritchie v.
McMullen, which has been under advisement at the same time,
present important questions relating to the force and effect of
foreign judgments not hitherto adjudicated by this Court, which
have been argued
Page 159 U. S. 163
with great learning and ability and which require for their
satisfactory determination a full consideration of the authorities.
To avoid confusion in indicating the parties, it will be convenient
first to take the case at law of
Hilton v. Guyot.
International law, in its widest and most comprehensive sense --
including not only questions of right between nations, governed by
what has been appropriately called the "law of nations," but also
questions arising under what is usually called "private
international law," or the "conflict of laws," and concerning the
rights of persons within the territory and dominion of one nation
by reason of acts, private or public, done within the dominions of
another nation -- is part of our law, and must be ascertained and
administered by the courts of justice as often as such questions
are presented in litigation between man and man, duly submitted to
their determination.
The most certain guide, no doubt, for the decision of such
questions is a treaty or a statute of this country. But when, as is
the case here, there is no written law upon the subject, the duty
still rests upon the judicial tribunals of ascertaining and
declaring what the law is, whenever it becomes necessary to do so
in order to determine the rights of parties to suits regularly
brought before them. In doing this, the courts must obtain such aid
as they can from judicial decisions, from the works of jurists and
commentators, and from the acts and usages of civilized nations.
Fremont v. United
States, 17 How. 542,
58 U. S. 557;
The Scotia, 14
Wall. 170,
81 U. S. 188;
Respublica v. De
Longchamps, 1 Dall. 111,
1 U.S. 116;
Moultrie v. Hunt,
23 N.Y. 394, 396.
No law has any effect, of its own force, beyond the limits of
the sovereignty from which its authority is derived. The extent to
which the law of one nation, as put in force within its territory,
whether by executive order, by legislative act, or by judicial
decree shall be allowed to operate within the dominion of another
nation depends upon what our greatest jurists have been content to
call "the comity of nations." Although the phrase has been often
criticized, no satisfactory substitute has been suggested.
"Comity," in the legal sense, is neither a matter of
absolute
Page 159 U. S. 164
obligation, on the one hand, nor of mere courtesy and goodwill,
upon the other. But it is the recognition which one nation allows
within its territory to the legislative, executive, or judicial
acts of another nation, having due regard both to international
duty and convenience and to the rights of its own citizens or of
other persons was are under the protection of its laws.
MR. JUSTICE Story, in his Commentaries on the Conflict of Laws,
treating of the question in what department of the government of
any state, in the absence of any clear declaration of the sovereign
will, resides the authority to determine how far the laws of a
foreign state shall have effect, and observing that this differs in
different states according to the organization of the departments
of the government of each, says:
"In England and America, the courts of justice have hitherto
exercised the same authority in the most ample manner, and the
legislatures have in no instance (it is believed) in either country
interfered to provide any positive regulations. The common law of
both countries has been expanded to meet the exigencies of the
times as they have arisen, and so far as the practice of nations,
or the
jus gentium privatum, has been supposed to furnish
any general principle, it has been followed out."
Story's Conflict of Laws §§ 23, 24.
Afterwards, speaking of the difficulty of applying the positive
rules laid down by the Continental jurists, he says that "there is
indeed great truth" in these remarks of Mr. Justice Porter,
speaking for the Supreme Court of Louisiana:
"They have attempted to go too far to define and fix that which
cannot, in the nature of things, be defined and fixed. They seem to
have forgotten that they wrote on a question which touched the
comity of nations, and that that comity is, and ever must be,
uncertain; that it must necessarily depend on a variety of
circumstances which cannot be reduced to any certain rule; that no
nation will suffer the laws of another to interfere with her own to
the injury of her citizens; that whether they do or not must depend
on the condition of the country in which the foreign law is sought
to be enforced, the particular nature of her legislation, her
policy, and the character
Page 159 U. S. 165
of her institutions; that in the conflict of laws it must often
be a matter of doubt which should prevail, and that, whenever a
doubt does exist, the court which decides will prefer the laws of
its own country to that of the stranger."
Story's Conflict of Laws § 28;
Saul v. His
Creditors (1827), 5 Martin (N.S.) 569, 596.
Again, Mr. Justice Story says:
"It has been thought by some jurists that the term
comity is not sufficiently expressive of the obligation of
nations to give effect to foreign laws when they are not
prejudicial to their own rights and interests. And it has been
suggested that the doctrine rests on a deeper foundation; that it
is not so much a matter of comity or courtesy as a matter of
paramount moral duty. Now, assuming that such a moral duty does
exist, it is clearly one of imperfect obligation, like that of
beneficence, humanity, and charity. Every nation must be the final
judge for itself not only of the nature and extent of the duty, but
of the occasions on which its exercise may be justly demanded."
And after further discussion of the matter, be concludes:
"There is, then, not only no impropriety in the use of the
phrase 'comity of nations,' but it is the most appropriate phrase
to express the true foundation and extent of the obligation of the
laws of one nation within the territories of another."
Story's Conflict of Laws §§ 33-38.
Chief Justice Taney, likewise, speaking for this Court, while
Mr. Justice Story was a member of it, and largely adopting his
words, said:
"It is needless to enumerate here the instances in which, by the
general practice of civilized countries, the laws of the one will,
by the comity of nations, be recognized and executed in another
where the rights of individuals are concerned. . . . The comity
thus extended to other nations is no impeachment of sovereignty. It
is the voluntary act of the nation by which it is offered, and is
inadmissible when contrary to its policy, or prejudicial to its
interests. But it contributes so largely to promote justice between
individuals, and to produce a friendly intercourse between the
sovereignties to which they belong, that courts of justice have
continually acted upon it as a part of the voluntary law of
nations. . . . It is not the comity of the courts, but the
comity
Page 159 U. S. 166
of the nation, which is administered and ascertained in the same
way, and guided by the same reasoning, by which all other
principles of municipal law are ascertained and guided."
Bank v. Earle
(1839), 13 Pet. 519,
38 U. S. 589;
Story on Conflict of Laws § 38.
Mr. Wheaton says:
"All the effect which foreign laws can have in the territory of
a state depends absolutely on the express or tacit consent of that
state. . . . The express consent of a state to the application of
foreign laws within its territory is given by acts passed by its
legislative authority, or by treaties concluded with other states.
Its tacit consent is manifested by the decisions of its judicial
and administrative authorities, as well as by the writings of its
publicists. There is no obligation recognized by legislators,
public authorities, and publicists to regard foreign laws; but
their application is admitted only from considerations of utility
and the mutual convenience of states,
ex commitate, ob
reciprocam utilitatem."
Wheaton's International Law (8th ed.) §§ 78, 79.
"No sovereign is bound, unless by special compact, to execute
within his dominions a judgment rendered by the tribunals of
another state, and if execution be sought by suit upon the judgment
or otherwise, the tribunal in which the suit is brought, or from
which execution is sought, is on principle at liberty to examine
into the merits of such judgment, and to give effect to it or not,
as may be found just and equitable. The general comity, utility,
and convenience of nations have, however, established a usage among
most civilized states by which the final judgments of foreign
courts of competent jurisdiction are reciprocally carried into
execution, under certain regulations and restrictions, which differ
in different countries."
§ 147.
Chancellor Kent says: "The effect to be given to foreign
judgments is altogether a matter of comity in cases where it is not
regulated by treaty." 2 Kent Com. (6th ed.) 120.
In order to appreciate the weight of the various authorities
cited at the bar, it is important to distinguish different kinds of
judgments. Every foreign judgment, of whatever nature, in order to
be entitled to any effect, must have been rendered
Page 159 U. S. 167
by a court having jurisdiction of the cause, and upon regular
proceedings, and due notice. In alluding to different kinds of
judgments, therefore, such jurisdiction, proceedings, and notice
will be assumed. It will also be assumed that they are untainted by
fraud, the effect of which will be considered later.
A judgment
in rem, adjudicating the title to a ship or
other movable property within the custody of the court, is treated
as valid everywhere. As said by Chief Justice Marshall:
"The sentence of a competent court proceeding
in rem is
conclusive with respect to the thing itself, and operates as an
absolute change of the property. By such sentence, the right of the
former owner is lost and a complete title given to the person who
claims under the decree. No court of coordinate jurisdiction can
examine the sentence. The question, therefore, respecting its
conformity to general or municipal law can never arise, for no
coordinate tribunal is capable of making the inquiry."
Williams v.
Armroyd, 7 Cranch 423,
11 U. S. 432.
The most common illustrations of this are decrees of courts of
admiralty and prize, which proceed upon principles of international
law.
Croudson v.
Leonard, 4 Cranch 434;
Williams v.
Armroyd, above cited;
Ludlow v. Dale, 1 Johns.Cas.
16. But the same rule applies to judgments
in rem under
municipal law.
Hudson v.
Guestier, 4 Cranch 293;
Ennis v.
Smith, 14 How. 400,
45 U. S. 430;
Wisconsin v. Pelican Ins. Co., 127 U.
S. 265,
127 U. S. 291;
Scott v. McNeal, 154 U. S. 34,
154 U. S. 46;
Castrique v. Imrie, L.R. 4 H.L. 414;
Monroe v.
Douglas, 4 Sandf.Ch. 126.
A judgment affecting the status of persons, such as a decree
confirming or dissolving a marriage, is recognized as valid in
every country unless contrary to the policy of its own law.
Cottington's Case, 2 Swanston 326;
Roach v.
Garvan, 1 Ves.Sen. 157;
Harvey v. Farnie, 8 App.Cas.
43;
Cheely v. Clayton, 110 U. S. 701. It
was of a foreign sentence of divorce that Lord Chancellor
Nottingham, in the House of Lords, in 1678, in
Cottington's
Case, above cited, said:
"It is against the law of nations not to give credit to the
judgments and sentences of foreign countries till they be reversed
by the law,
Page 159 U. S. 168
and according to the form, of those countries wherein they were
given, for what right hath one kingdom to reverse the judgment of
another? And how can we refuse to let a sentence take place till it
be reversed? And what confusion would follow in Christendom if they
should serve us so abroad, and give no credit to our
sentences."
Other judgments, not strictly
in rem, under which a
person has been compelled to pay money, are so far conclusive that
the justice of the payment cannot be impeached in another country,
so as to compel him to pay it again. For instance, a judgment in
foreign attachment is conclusive, as between the parties, of the
right to the property or money attached. Story on Conflict of Laws
(2d ed.) § 592a. And if, on the dissolution of a partnership,
one partner promises to indemnify the other against the debts of
the partnership, a judgment for such a debt, under which the latter
has been compelled to pay it, is conclusive evidence of the debt in
a suit by him to recover the amount upon the promise of indemnity.
It was of such a judgment and in such a suit that Lord Nottingham
said:
"Let the plaintiff receive back so much of the money brought
into court as may be adequate to the sum paid on the sentence for
custom, the justice whereof is not examinable here."
Gold v. Canham (1679), 2 Swanst. 325, 1 Cas. in Ch.
311.
See also Tarleton v. Tarleton, 4 M. & S. 20;
Konitzky v. Meyer, 49 N.Y. 571.
Other foreign judgments which have been held conclusive of the
matter adjudged were judgments discharging obligations contracted
in the foreign country between citizens or residents thereof. Story
on Conflict of Laws §§ 330-341;
May v. Breed, 7
Cush. 15. Such was the case cited at the bar of
Burroughs
or
Burrows v. Jamineau or
Jemino, Mosely 1, 2
Strange 733, 2 Eq.Cas.Ab. p. 525, pl. 7, 12 Vin.Ab. p. 87, pl. 9
Sel.Cas. in Ch. 69; 1 Dickens 48.
In that case, bills of exchange drawn in London were negotiated,
endorsed, and accepted at Leghorn, in Italy, by the law of which an
acceptance became void if the drawer failed without leaving effects
in the acceptor's hands. The acceptor accordingly, having received
advices that the drawer had failed
Page 159 U. S. 169
before the acceptances, brought a suit at Leghorn against the
last endorsees to be discharged of his acceptances, paid the money
into court, and obtained a sentence there by which the acceptances
were vacated as against those endorsees, and all the endorsers and
negotiators of the bills, and the money deposited was returned to
him. Being afterwards sued at law in England by subsequent holders
of the bills, he applied to the Court of Chancery, and obtained a
perpetual injunction. Lord Chancellor King, as reported by
Strange,
"was clearly of opinion that this cause was to be determined
according to the local laws of the place where the bill was
negotiated, and, the plaintiff's acceptance of the bill having been
vacated and declared void by a court of competent jurisdiction, he
thought that sentence was conclusive, and bound the Court of
Chancery here;"
as reported in Viner, that "the court at Leghorn had
jurisdiction of the thing and of the persons;" and, as reported by
Mosely, that though
"the last endorsees had the sole property of the bills, and were
therefore made the only parties to the suit at Leghorn, yet the
sentence made the acceptance void against the now defendants and
all others."
It is doubtful, at the least, whether such a sentence was
entitled to the effect given to it by Lord Chancellor King.
See
Novelli v. Rossi, 2 B. & A. 757;
Castrique v.
Imrie, L.R. 4 H.L. 414, 435; 2 Smith's Lead.Cas. (2d ed.)
450.
The remark of Lord Hardwicke,
arguendo, as Chief
Justice, in
Boucher v. Lawson (1734) that
"the reason gone upon by Lord Chancellor King, in the case of
Burroughs v. Jamineau, was certainly right that where any
court, whether foreign or domestic, that has the proper
jurisdiction of the cases makes a determination, it is conclusive
to all other courts,"
evidently had reference, as the context shows, to judgments of a
court having jurisdiction of the thing, and did not touch the
effect of an executory judgment for a debt. Cas.temp.Hardw. 85, 89;
Cunningham 144, 148.
In former times, foreign decrees in admiralty
in
personam were executed, even by imprisonment of the defendant,
by the court of admiralty in England, upon letters rogatory from
the foreign sovereign, without a new suit. Its right to
Page 159 U. S. 170
do so was recognized by the court of King's Bench in 1607 in a
case of habeas corpus, cited by the plaintiffs, and reported as
follows:
"If a man of Frizeland sues an Englishman in Frizeland before
the governor there, and there recovers against him a certain sum,
upon which the Englishman, not having sufficient to satisfy it,
comes into England, upon which the governor sends his letters
missive into England,
omnes magistratus infra regnum Angliae
rogans, to make execution of the said judgment, the judge of
the admiralty may execute this judgment by imprisonment of the
party, and he shall not be delivered by the common law, for this is
by the law of nations that the justice of one nation should be
aiding to the justice of another nation, and for one to execute the
judgment of the other, and the law of England takes notice of this
law, and the judge of the admiralty is the proper magistrate for
this purpose, for he only hath the execution of the civil law
within the realm. Pasch. 5 Jac.B.R.,
Weir's Case, resolved
upon a habeas corpus and remanded."
1 Rol.Ab. p. 530, pl. 12; 6 Vin.Ab. p. 512, pl. 12. But the only
question there raised or decided was of the power of the English
court of admiralty, and not of the conclusiveness of the foreign
sentence, and in later times the mode of enforcing a foreign decree
in admiralty is by a new libel.
See The City of Mecca, 5
P.D. 28, 6 P.D. 106.
The extraterritorial effect of judgments
in personam at
law or in equity may differ according to the parties to the cause.
A judgment of that kind between two citizens or residents of the
country, and thereby subject to the jurisdiction in which it is
rendered, may be held conclusive as between them everywhere. So if
a foreigner invokes the jurisdiction by bringing an action against
a citizen, both may be held bound by a judgment in favor of either,
and if a citizen sues a foreigner and judgment is rendered in favor
of the latter, both may be held equally bound.
Ricardo v.
Garcias, 12 Cl. & Fin. 368;
The Griefswald,
Swabey 430, 435;
Barber v. Lamb, 8 C.B. (N.S.) 95;
Lea
v. Deakin, 11 Bissell 23.
The effect to which a judgment, purely executory, rendered
Page 159 U. S. 171
in favor of a citizen or resident of the country, in a suit
there brought by him against a foreigner, may be entitled in an
action thereon against the latter in his own country, as is the
case now before us, presents a more difficult question, upon which
there has been some diversity of opinion.
Early in the last century, it was settled in England that a
foreign judgment on a debt was considered not like a judgment of a
domestic court of record, as a record or a specialty, a lawful
consideration for which was conclusively presumed, but as a simple
contract only.
This clearly appears in
Dupleix v. De Roven (1705),
where one of two merchants in France recovered a judgment there
against the other for a sum of money, which not being paid, he
brought a suit in chancery in England for a discovery of assets and
satisfaction of the debt, and the defendant pleaded the statute of
limitations of six years, and prevailed, Lord Keeper Cowper
saying:
"Although the plaintiff obtained a judgment or sentence in
France, yet here the debt must be considered as a debt by simple
contract. The plaintiff can maintain no action here but an
indebitatus assumpsit or an
insimul computassent,
so that the statute of limitations is pleadable in this case."
2 Vernon 540.
Several opinions of Lord Hardwicke define and illustrate the
effect of foreign judgments when sued on or pleaded in England.
In
Otway v. Ramsay (1736), in the King's Bench, Lord
Hardwicke treated it as worthy of consideration "what credit is to
be given by one court to the courts of another nation, proceeding
both by the same rules of law," and said: "It is very desirable in
such case that the judgment given in one kingdom should be
considered as
res judicata in another." But it was held
that debt would not lie in Ireland upon an English judgment,
because "Ireland must be considered as a provincial kingdom, part
of the dominions of the crown of England, but no part of the
realm," and an action of debt on a judgment was local. 4 B. &
C. 414-416, note;
s.c., 14 Vin.Ab. 569, pl.;, 2 Stra.
1090.
A decision of Lord Hardwicke as Chancellor was mentioned
Page 159 U. S. 172
in
Walker v. Witter (1778), 1 Doug. 1, 6, by Lord
Mansfield, who said:
"He recollected a case of a decree on the chancery side in one
of the courts of great sessions in Wales, from which there was an
appeal to the House of Lords, and the decree affirmed there.
Afterwards, a bill was filed in the Court of Chancery, on the
foundation of the decree so affirmed, and Lord Hardwicke thought
himself entitled to examine into the justice of the decision of the
House of Lords, because the original decree was in the court of
Wales, whose decisions were clearly liable to be examined."
And in
Galbraith v. Neville (1789), 1 Doug. 6, note,
Mr. Justice Buller said:
"I have often heard Lord Mansfield repeat what was said by Lord
Hardwicke in the case alluded to from Wales, and the ground of his
lordship's opinion was this: when you call for my assistance to
carry into effect the decision of some other tribunal, you shall
not have it if it appears that you are in the wrong, and it was on
that account that he said he would examine into the propriety of
the decree."
The case before Lord Hardwicke mentioned by Lord Mansfield would
appear (notwithstanding the doubt of its authenticity expressed by
Lord Kenyon in
Galbraith v. Neville) to have been a suit
to recover a legacy, briefly reported, with references to Lord
Hardwicke's note book, and to the original record, as
Morgan v.
Morgan (1737-1738), West.Ch. 181, 597;
s.c., 1 Atk.
53, 408.
In
Gage v. Bulkeley (1744), briefly reported in 3 Atk.
215, cited by the plaintiffs, a plea of a foreign sentence in a
commissary court in France was overruled by Lord Hardwicke, saying:
"It is the most proper case to stand for an answer, with liberty to
except, that I ever met with." His reasons are fully stated in two
other reports of the case. According to one of them, at the opening
of the argument, he said:
"Can a sentence or judgment pronounced by a foreign jurisdiction
be pleaded in this Kingdom to a demand for the same thing in any
court of justice here? I always thought it could not, because every
sentence, having its authority from the sovereign in whose
dominions it is given, cannot bind the jurisdiction of foreign
courts, who own not the same authority,
Page 159 U. S. 173
and have a different sovereign, and are only bound by judicial
sentence given under the same sovereign power by which they
themselves act. . . . But though a foreign sentence cannot be used
by way of plea in the courts here, yet it may be taken advantage of
in the way of evidence. . . . You cannot in this Kingdom maintain
debt upon judgment obtained for money in a foreign jurisdiction,
but you may on assumpsit in nature of debt, upon a simple contract,
and give the judgment in evidence, and have a verdict, so that the
distinction seems to be, where such foreign sentence is used as a
plea to bind the courts here as a judgment, and when it is made use
of in evidence as binding the justice of the case only."
And afterwards, in giving his decision, he said:
"The first question is whether the subject matter of the plea is
good. The second is whether it is well pleaded. The first question
depends upon this: whether the sentence or judgment of a foreign
court can be used by way of plea in a court of justice in England,
and no authority, either at law or in equity, has been produced to
show that it may be pleaded, and therefore I shall be very cautious
how I establish such a precedent. . . . It is true such sentence is
an evidence which may affect the right of this demand when the
cause comes to be heard, but if it is no plea in a court of law to
bind their jurisdiction, I do not see why it should be so
here."
Ridgeway temp. Hardw. 263, 264, 270, 273. A similar report of
his judgment is in 2 Ves.Sen. (Belt's Supp.) 409, 410.
In
Roach v. Garvan (1748), where an infant ward of the
Court of Chancery had been married in France by her guardian to his
son before a French court, and the son "petitioned for a decree for
cohabitation with his wife, and to have some money out of the
bank," Lord Hardwicke said, as to the validity of the marriage:
"It has been argued to be valid, from being established by the
sentence of a court in France having proper jurisdiction, and it is
true that, if so, it is conclusive, whether in a foreign court or
not, from the law of nations in such cases; otherwise, the rights
of mankind would be very precarious and uncertain. But the question
is whether this is a proper sentence, in a proper cause, and
between proper
Page 159 U. S. 174
parties, of which it is impossible to judge without looking
further into the proceedings, this being rather the execution of
the sentence than the sentence itself."
And after observing upon the competency of the French tribunal
and pointing out that restitution of conjugal rights was within the
jurisdiction of the ecclesiastical court, and not of the Court of
Chancery, he added: "Much less will I order any money out of the
bank to be given him." 1 Ves.Sen. 157, 159. He thus clearly
recognized the difference between admitting the effect of a foreign
judgment as adjudicating the status of persons and executing a
foreign judgment by enforcing a claim for money.
These decisions of Lord Hardwicke demonstrate that, in his
opinion, whenever the question was of giving effect to a foreign
judgment for money in a suit in England between the parties, it did
not have the weight of a domestic judgment, and could not be
considered as a bar or as conclusive, but only as evidence of the
same weight as a simple contract, and the propriety and justice of
the judgment might be examined.
In
Sinclair v. Fraser (1771), the appellant, having as
attorney in Jamaica made large advances for his constituent in
Scotland and having been superseded in office, brought an action
before the Supreme Court of Jamaica, and, after appearance,
obtained judgment against him, and afterwards brought an action
against him in Scotland upon that judgment. The Court of Session
determined that the plaintiff was bound to prove before it the
ground, nature, and extent of the demand on which the judgment in
Jamaica was obtained, and therefore gave judgment against him. But
the House of Lords (in which, as remarked by one reporter, Lord
Mansfield was then the presiding spirit, acting in concert with or
for the Lord Chancellor in disposing of the Scotch appeals)
"ordered and declared that the judgment of the Supreme Court of
Jamaica ought to be received as evidence
prima facie of
the debt, and that it lies upon the defendant to impeach the
justice thereof or to show the same to have been irregularly
obtained,"
and therefore reversed the judgment of the Court of Session. 2
Paton ix, 253;
s.c., 6 Morison Dict.Dec. 4542; 1 Doug. 5,
note.
Page 159 U. S. 175
Accordingly, in
Crawford v. Witten (1773), a
declaration in assumpsit, in an action in England upon a judgment
recovered in the Mayor's Court of Calcutta, in Bengal, without
showing the cause of action there, was held good on demurrer. Lord
Mansfield considered the case perfectly clear. Mr. Justice Aston,
according to one report, said: "The declaration is sufficient. We
are not to suppose it an unlawful debt," and, according to another
report:
"They admitted the assumpsit by their demurrer. When an action
comes properly before any court, it must be determined by the laws
which govern the country in which the action accrued."
And Mr. Justice Ashurst said: "I have often known assumpsit
brought on judgments in foreign courts. The judgment is a
sufficient consideration to support the implied promise." Loft,
154;
s.c., nom. Crawford v. Whittal, 1 Doug. 4, note.
In
Walker v. Witter (1778), an action of debt was
brought in England upon a judgment recovered in Jamacia. The
defendant pleaded
nil debet and
nul tiel record.
Judgment was given for the plaintiff, Lord Mansfield saying:
"The plea of
nul tiel record was improper. Though the
plaintiffs had called the judgment a record, yet, by the additional
words in the declaration, it was clear they did not mean that sort
of record to which implicit faith is given by the courts of
Westminster Hall. They had not misled the court nor the defendant,
for they spoke of it as a court of record in Jamaica. The question
was brought to a narrow point, for it was admitted on the part of
the defendant that
indebitatus assumpsit would have lain,
and on the part of the plaintiff that the judgment was only
prima facie evidence of the debt. That being so, the
judgment was not a specialty, but the debt only a simple contract
debt, for assumpsit will not lie on a specialty. The difficulty in
the case had arisen from not fixing accurately what a court of
record is in the eye of the law. That description is confined
properly to certain courts in England, and their judgments cannot
be controverted. Foreign courts, and courts in England not of
record, have not that privilege, nor the courts in Wales, etc. But
the doctrine in the case of
Sinclair v. Fraser was
unquestionable. Foreign judgments are
Page 159 U. S. 176
a ground of action everywhere, but they are examinable."
Justices Willes, Ashurst, and Buller concurred, the two latter
saying that wherever
indebitatus assumpsit will lie, debt
will also lie. 1 Doug. 1, 5, 6.
In
Herbert v. Cook (1782), again, in an action of debt
upon a judgment of an inferior English court, not a court of
record, Lord Mansfield said that it was "like a foreign judgment,
and not conclusive evidence of the debt." Willes 36, note.
In
Galbraith v. Neville (1789), upon a motion for a new
trial after verdict for the plaintiff in an action of debt on a
judgment of the Supreme Court of Jamaica, Lord Kenyon expressed
"very serious doubts concerning the doctrine laid down in
Walker v. Witter that foreign judgments are not binding on
the parties here." But Mr. Justice Buller said:
"The doctrine which was laid down in
Sinclair v. Fraser
has always been considered as the true line ever since -- namely
that the foreign judgment shall be
prima facie evidence of
the debt, and conclusive till it be impeached by the other party. .
. . As to actions of this sort, see how far the court could go if
what was said in Walker v. Witter were departed from. It was there
held that the foreign judgment was only to be taken to be right
prima facie -- that is, we will allow the same force to a
foreign judgment that we do to those of our own courts not of
record. But if the matter were carried further, we should give them
more credit; we should give them equal force with those of courts
of record here. Now a foreign judgment has never been considered as
a record. It cannot be declared on as such, and a plea of
nul
tiel record, in such a case, is a mere nullity. How then can
it have the same obligatory force? In short, the result is this:
that it is
prima facie evidence of the justice of the
demand in an action of assumpsit, having no more credit than is
given to every species of written agreement,
viz., that it
shall be considered as good till it is impeached."
1 Doug. 6, note. And the court afterwards unanimously refused
the new trial, because,
"without entering into the question how far a foreign judgment
was impeachable, it was at all events clear that it was
prima
facie evidence of the debt, and they were of opinion
Page 159 U. S. 177
that no evidence had been adduced to impeach this."
5 East 475, note.
In
Messing v. Massareene (1791), the plaintiff, having
obtained a judgment against the defendants in a French court,
brought an action of assumpsit upon it in England, and, the
defendants having suffered a default, moved for a reference to a
master, and for a final judgment on his report, without executing a
writ of inquiry. The motion was denied, Lord Kenyon saying: "This
is an attempt to carry the rule further than has yet been done,
and, as there is no instance of the kind, I am not disposed to make
a precedent for it," and Mr. Justice Buller saying: "Though debt
will lie here on a foreign judgment, the defendant may go into the
consideration of it." 4 T.R. 493.
In
Bayley v. Edwards (1792), the judicial committee of
the Privy Council, upon appeal from Jamaica, held that a suit in
equity pending in England was not a good plea in bar to a
subsequent bill in Jamaica for the same matter, and Lord Camden
said:
"In
Gage v. Bulkeley [evidently referring to the full
report in Ridgeway, above quoted, which had been cited by counsel],
Lord Hardwicke's reasons go a great way to show the true effect of
foreign sentences in this country, and all the cases show that
foreign sentences are not conclusive bars here, but only evidence
of the demand."
3 Swanston 703, 708, 710.
In
Phillips v. Hunter (1795), the House of Lords, in
accordance with the opinion of the majority of the judges consulted
and against that of Chief Justice Eyre, decided that a creditor of
an English bankrupt, who had obtained payment of his debt by
foreign attachment in Pennsylvania, was liable to an action for the
money by the assignees in bankruptcy in England. But it was agreed
on all hands that the judgment in Pennsylvania and payment under it
were conclusive as between the garnishee and the plaintiff in that
suit, and the distinction between the effect of a foreign judgment
which vests title, and of one which only declares that a certain
sum of money is due, was clearly stated by Chief Justice Eyre as
follows:
Page 159 U. S. 178
"This judgment against the garnishee in the court of
Pennsylvania was recovered properly or improperly. If,
notwithstanding the bankruptcy, the debt remained liable to an
attachment according to the laws of that country, the judgment was
proper; if, according to the laws of that country, the property in
the debt was divested out of the bankrupt debtor and vested in his
assignees, the judgment was improper. But this was a question to be
decided, in the cause instituted in Pennsylvania, by the courts of
that country, and not by us. We cannot examine their judgment, and
if we could, we have not the means of doing it in this case. It is
not stated upon this record, nor can we take notice, what the law
of Pennsylvania is upon this subject. If we had the means, we could
not examine a judgment of a court in a foreign state, brought
before us in this manner."
"It is in one way only that the sentence or judgment of a court
of a foreign state is examinable in our courts, and that is when
the party who claims the benefit of it applies to our courts to
enforce it. When it is thus voluntarily submitted to our
jurisdiction, we treat it not as obligatory to the extent to which
it would be obligatory, perhaps, in the country in which it was
pronounced, nor as obligatory to the extent to which, by our law,
sentences and judgments are obligatory not as conclusive, but as
matter
in pais, as consideration
prima facie
sufficient to raise a promise. We examine it as we do all other
considerations or promises, and for that purpose we receive
evidence of what the law of the foreign state is, and whether the
judgment is warranted by that law."
2 H.Bl. 402, 409-410.
In
Wright v. Simpson (1802), Lord Chancellor Eldon
said:
"Natural law requires the courts of this country to give credit
to those of another for the inclination and power to do justice,
but not if that presumption is proved to be ill founded in that
transaction which is the subject of it, and if it appears in
evidence that persons suing under similar circumstances neither had
met, nor could meet, with justice, that fact cannot be immaterial
as an answer to the presumption."
6 Ves. 714, 730.
Page 159 U. S. 179
Under Lord Ellenborough, the distinction between a suit on a
foreign judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant,
and a suit to recover money which the plaintiff had been compelled
to pay under a judgment abroad, was clearly maintained.
In
Buchanan v. Rucker (1808), in assumpsit upon a
judgment rendered in the Island of Tobago, the defendant pleaded
non assumpsit and prevailed because it appeared that he
was not a resident of the island, and was neither personally served
with process nor came in to defend, and the only notice was,
according to the practice of the court, by nailing up a copy of the
declaration at the courthouse door. It was argued that "the
presumption was in favor of a foreign judgment, as well as of a
judgment obtained in one of the courts of this country," to which
Lord Ellenborough answered:
"That may be so if the judgment appears, on the face of it,
consistent with reason and justice, but it is contrary to the first
principles of reason and justice that, either in civil or criminal
proceedings, a man should be condemned before he is heard. . . .
There might be such glaring injustice on the face of a foreign
judgment, or it might have a vice rendering it so ludicrous, that
it could not raise an assumpsit, and, if submitted to the
jurisdiction of the courts of this country, could not be
enforced."
1 Camp. 63, 66-67. A motion for a new trial was denied. 9 East
192.
And see Sadler v. Robins (1808), 1 Camp. 253,
256.
In
Hall v. Odber (1809), in assumpsit upon a judgment
obtained in Canada, with other counts on the original debt, Lord
Ellenborough and Justices Grose, Le Blanc, and Bayley agreed that a
foreign judgment was not to be considered as having the same force
as a domestic judgment, but only that of a simple contract between
the parties, and did not merge the original cause of action, but
was only evidence of the debt, and therefore assumpsit would lie,
either upon the judgment or upon the original cause of action. 11
East 118.
In
Tarleton v. Tarleton (1815), on the other hand, the
action was brought upon a covenant of indemnity in an agreement for
dissolution of a partnership to recover a sum which the
Page 159 U. S. 180
plaintiff had been compelled to pay under a decision in a suit
between the parties in the Island of Grenada. Such was the case of
which Lord Ellenborough, affirming his own ruling at the trial,
said:
"I thought that I did not sit at
nisi prius to try a
writ of error in this case upon the proceedings in the court
abroad. The defendant had notice of the proceedings, and should
have appeared and made his defense. The plaintiff, by this neglect,
has been obliged to pay the money in order to avoid a
sequestration."
The distinction was clearly brought out by Mr. Justice Bayley,
who said: "As between the parties to the suit, the justice of it
might be again litigated, but as against a stranger it
cannot.� 4 M. & S. 20, 22-23.
In
Harris v. Saunders (1825), Chief Justice Abbott
(afterwards Lord Tenterden) and his associates, upon the authority
of
Otway v. Ramsay, above cited, held that even since the
Act of Union of 39 & 40 Geo. III. c. 67, assumpsit would lie in
England upon a judgment recovered in Ireland, because such a
judgment could not be considered a specialty debt in England. 4 B.
& C. 411, 6 D. & R. 471.
The English cases above referred to have been stated with the
more particularity and detail, because they directly bear upon the
question what was the English law, being then our own law, before
the Declaration of Independence? They demonstrate that, by that law
as generally understood, and as declared by Hardwicke, Mansfield,
Buller, Camden, Eyre, and Ellenborough, and doubted by Kenyon only,
a judgment recovered in a foreign country for a sum of money, when
sued upon in England, was only
prima facie evidence of the
demand, and subject to be examined and impeached. The law of
England since it has become to us a foreign country will be
considered afterwards.
The law upon this subject as understood in the United States at
the time of their separation from the mother country was clearly
set forth by Chief Justice Parsons, speaking for the Supreme
Judicial Court of Massachusetts in 1813, and by Mr. Justice Story
in his Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States,
published in 1833. Both those
Page 159 U. S. 181
eminent jurists declared that, by the law of England, the
general rule was that foreign judgments were only
prima
facie evidence of the matter which they purported to decide,
and that, by the common law before the American Revolution, all the
courts of the several colonies and states were deemed foreign to
each other, and consequently judgments rendered by any one of them
were considered as foreign judgments, and their merits reexaminable
in another colony not only as to the jurisdiction of the court
which pronounced them, but also as to the merits of the
controversy, to the extent to which they were understood to be
reexaminable in England. And they noted that in order to remove
that inconvenience, statutes had been passed in Massachusetts, and
in some of the other colonies, by which judgments rendered by a
court of competent jurisdiction in a neighboring colony could not
be impeached.
Bissell v. Briggs, 9 Mass. 462, 464-465;
Mass.Stat. 1773-74, c. 16; 5 Prov.Laws, 323, 369; Story on the
Constitution (1st ed.) §§ 1301, 1302; (4th ed.)
§§ 1306, 1307.
It was because of that condition of the law as between the
American colonies and states that the United States, at the very
beginning of their existence as a nation, ordained that full faith
and credit should be given to the judgments of one of the states of
the Union in the courts of another of those states.
By the articles of confederation of 1777, Art. 4, § 3,
"full faith and credit shall be given, in each of these states, to
the records, acts and judicial proceedings of the courts and
magistrates of every other state." 1 Stat. 4. By the Constitution
of the United States, Article IV, § 1,
"Full faith and credit shall be given in each state to the
public acts, records and judicial proceedings of every other state,
and the Congress may by general laws prescribe the manner in which
such acts, records and proceedings shall be proved, and the effect
thereof."
And the first Congress of the United States under the
Constitution, after prescribing the manner in which the records and
judicial proceedings of the courts of any state should be
authenticated and proved, enacted that
"the said records and judicial proceedings, authenticated as
aforesaid, shall have
Page 159 U. S. 182
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 whence the said records are or shall be taken."
Act May 26, 1790, c. 11, 1 Stat. 122; Rev.Stat. § 905.
The effect of these provisions of the Constitution and laws of
the United States was at first a subject of diverse opinions not
only in the courts of the several states, but also in the circuit
courts of the United States; Mr. Justice Cushing, Mr. Justice
Wilson, and Mr. Justice Washington, holding that judgments of the
courts of a state had the same effect throughout the Union as
within that state, but Chief Justice Marshall (if accurately
reported) being of opinion that they were not entitled to
conclusive effect, and that their consideration might be impeached.
Armstrong v.
Carson (1794), 2 Dall. 302;
Green v.
Sarmiento (1811), 3 Wash. C.C. 17, 21; Pet. C.C. 74, 78;
Peck v. Williamson (reported as in November, 1813,
apparently a mistake for 1812), 1 Carolina Law Repository 53.
The decisions of this Court have clearly recognized that
judgments of a foreign state are
prima facie evidence
only, and that, but for these constitutional and legislative
provisions, judgments of a state of the Union, when sued upon in
another state, would have no greater effect.
In
Croudson v. Leonard (1808), in which this Court held
that the sentence of a foreign court of admiralty
in rem
condemning a vessel for breach of blockade was conclusive evidence
of that fact in an action on a policy of insurance, Mr. Justice
Washington, after speaking of the conclusiveness of domestic
judgments generally, said:
"The judgment of a foreign court is equally conclusive, except
in the single instance where the party claiming the benefit of it
applies to the courts in England to enforce it, in which case only
the judgment is
prima facie evidence. But it is to be
remarked that in such a case, the judgment is no more conclusive as
to the right it establishes than as to the fact it decides."
8 U. S. 4 Cranch
434,
8 U. S. 442.
In
Mills v. Duryee (1813), in which it was established
that, by virtue of the Constitution and laws of the United States,
the judgment of a court of one of the states was conclusive
Page 159 U. S. 183
evidence, in every court within the United States, of the matter
adjudged, and therefore
nul tiel record, and not
nil
debet, was a proper plea to an action brought in a court of
the United States in the District of Columbia upon a judgment
recovered in a court of the State of New York, this Court, speaking
by Mr. Justice Story, said:
"The pleadings in an action are governed by the dignity of the
instrument on which it is founded. If it be a record conclusive
between the parties, it cannot be denied but by the plea
of nul
tiel record, and when Congress gave the effect of a record to
the judgment it gave all the collateral consequences. . . . Were
the construction contended for by the plaintiff in error to
prevail, that judgments of the state courts ought to be considered
prima facie evidence only, this clause in the Constitution
would be utterly unimportant and illusory. The common law would
give such judgments precisely the same effect."
11 U. S. 7 Cranch
481,
11 U. S.
484-485.
In
Hampton v. McConnell (1818), the point decided in
Mills v. Duryee was again adjudged, without further
discussion, in an opinion delivered by Chief Justice Marshall.
16 U. S. 3 Wheat.
234.
The
obiter dictum of Mr. Justice Livingston in
Hopkins v. Lee
(1821), 6 Wheat. 109,
19 U. S. 114,
repeated by Mr. Justice Daniel in
Pennington
v. Gibson (1853), 16 How. 65,
57 U. S. 78, as
to the general effect of foreign judgments, has no important
bearing upon the case before us.
In
McElmoyle v. Cohen (1839), Mr. Justice Wayne,
discussing the effect of the act of Congress of 1790, said that
"the adjudications of the English courts have now established
the rule to be that foreign judgments are
prima facie
evidence of the right and matter they purport to decide."
38 U. S. 13 Pet.
312,
38 U. S.
325.
In
D'Arcy v. Ketchum (1850), in which this Court held
that the provisions of the Constitution and laws of the United
States gave no effect in one state to judgments rendered in another
state by a court having no jurisdiction of the cause or of the
parties, Mr. Justice Catron said:
"In construing the act of 1790, the law as it stood when the act
was passed
Page 159 U. S. 184
must enter into that construction, so that the existing defect
in the old law may be seen and its remedy by the act of Congress
comprehended. Now it was most reasonable, on general principles of
comity and justice, that among states and their citizens united as
ours are, judgments rendered in one should bind citizens of other
states where defendants had been served with process or voluntarily
made defense. As these judgments, however, were only
prima
facie evidence, and subject to be inquired into by plea when
sued on in another state, Congress saw proper to remedy the evil
and to provide that such inquiry and double defense should not be
allowed. To this extent, it is declared in the case of
Mills v.
Duryee, Congress has gone in altering the old rule."
52 U. S. 11 How.
165,
52 U. S.
175-176.
In
Christmas v. Russell (1866), in which this Court
decided that because of the Constitution and laws of the United
States, a judgment of a court of one state of the Union, when sued
upon in a court of another, could not be shown to have been
procured by fraud, Mr. Justice Clifford, in delivering the opinion,
after stating that under the rules of the common law a domestic
judgment rendered in a court of competent jurisdiction could not be
collaterally impeached or called in question, said:
"Common law rules placed foreign judgments upon a different
footing, and those rules remain, as a general remark, unchanged to
the present time. Under these rules, a foreign judgment was
prima facie evidence of the debt, and it was open to
examination, not only to show that the court in which it was
rendered had no jurisdiction of the subject matter, but also to
show that the judgment was fraudulently obtained."
72 U. S. 5 Wall.
290,
72 U. S.
304.
In
Bischoff v. Wethered (1869), in an action on an
English judgment rendered without notice to the defendant other
than by service on him in this country, this Court, speaking by Mr.
Justice Bradley, held that the proceeding in England
"was wholly without jurisdiction of the person, and whatever
validity it may have in England, by virtue of statute law, against
property of the defendant there situate, it can have no validity
here, even of a
prima facie character."
76 U. S. 9 Wall.
812,
76 U. S.
814.
Page 159 U. S. 185
In
Hanley v. Donoghue (1885),
116 U. S.
1,
116 U. S. 4, and
in
Wisconsin v. Pelican Ins. Co. (1888),
127 U.
S. 265,
127 U. S. 292,
it was said that judgments recovered in one state of the Union,
when proved in the courts of another, differed from judgments
recovered in a foreign country in no other respect than in not
being reexaminable on their merits nor impeachable for fraud in
obtaining them if rendered by a court having jurisdiction of the
cause and of the parties.
But neither in those cases nor in any other has this Court
hitherto been called upon to determine how far foreign judgments
may be reexamined upon their merits, or be impeached for fraud in
obtaining them.
In the courts of the several states it was long recognized and
assumed as undoubted and indisputable that by our law, as by the
law of England, foreign judgments for debts were not conclusive,
but only
prima facie evidence of the matter adjudged. Some
of the cases are collected in the margin.
*
In the leading case of
Bissell v. Briggs, above cited,
Chief Justice Parsons said:
"A foreign judgment may be produced here by a party to it either
to justify himself by the execution of that judgment in the country
in which it was rendered or to obtain the execution of it from our
courts. . . . If the foreign court rendering the judgment had
jurisdiction of the cause, yet the courts here will not execute the
judgment, without first
Page 159 U. S. 186
allowing an inquiry into its merits. The judgment of a foreign
court therefore is by our laws considered only as presumptive
evidence of a debt, or as
prima facie evidence of a
sufficient consideration of a promise, where such court had
jurisdiction of the cause, and if an action of debt be sued on any
such judgment,
nil debet is the general issue, or if it be
made the consideration of a promise, the general issue is non
assumpsit. On these issues the defendant may impeach the justice of
the judgment by evidence relative to that point. On these issues,
the defendant may also, by proper evidence, prove that the judgment
was rendered by a foreign court which had no jurisdiction, and if
his evidence be sufficient for this purpose, he has no occasion to
impeach the justice of the judgment."
9 Mass. 463, 464.
In a less known case, decided in 1815 but not published until
1879, the reasons for this view were forcibly stated by Chief
Justice Jeremiah Smith, speaking for the Supreme Court of New
Hampshire, as follows:
"The respect which is due to judgments, sentences, and decrees
of courts in a foreign state by the law of nations seems to be the
same which is due to those of our own courts. Hence, the decree of
an admiralty court abroad is equally conclusive with decrees of our
admiralty courts. Indeed, both courts proceed by the same rule, are
governed by the same law -- the maritime law of nations,
Coll.Jurid. 100, which is the universal law of nations except where
treaties alter it."
"The same comity is not extended to judgments or decrees which
may be founded on the municipal laws of the state in which they are
pronounced. Independent states do not choose to adopt such
decisions without examination. These laws and regulations may be
unjust, partial to citizens, and against foreigners. They may
operate injustice to our citizens, whom we are bound to protect.
They may be, and the decisions of courts founded on them, just
cause of complaint against the supreme power of the state where
rendered. To adopt them is not merely saying that the courts have
decided correctly on the law, but it is approbating the law itself.
Wherever, then, the court may have proceeded on municipal
Page 159 U. S. 187
law, the rule is that the judgments are not conclusive evidence
of debt, but
prima facie evidence only. The proceedings
have not the conclusive quality which is annexed to the records or
proceedings of our own courts, where we approve both of the rule
and of the judges who interpret and apply it. A foreign judgment
may be impeached. Defendant may show that it is unjust, or that it
was irregularly or unduly obtained. Doug. 5, note."
Bryant v. Ela, Smith (N.H.) 396, 404.
From this review of the authorities, it clearly appears that at
the time of the separation of this country from England, the
general rule was fully established that foreign judgments
in
personam were
prima facie evidence only, and not
conclusive of the merits of the controversy between the parties.
But the extent and limits of the application of that rule do not
appear to have been much discussed or defined with any approach to
exactness in England or America until the matter was taken up by
Chancellor Kent and by Mr. Justice Story.
In
Taylor v. Bryden (1811), an action of assumpsit
brought in the Supreme Court of the State of New York on a judgment
obtained in the State of Maryland against the defendant as endorser
of a bill of exchange, and which was treated as a foreign judgment,
so far as concerned its effect in New York (the decision of this
Court to the contrary in
Mills v.
Duryee, 7 Cranch 481, not having yet been made),
Chief Justice Kent said:
"The judgment in Maryland is presumptive evidence of a just
demand, and it was incumbent upon the defendant, if he would
obstruct the execution of the judgment here, to show by positive
proof that it was irregularly or unduly obtained. . . . To try over
again, as of course, every matter of fact which had been duly
decided by a competent tribunal would be disregarding the comity
which we justly owe to the courts of other states, and would be
carrying the doctrine of reexamination to an oppressive extent. It
would be the same as granting a new trial in every case and upon
every question of fact. Suppose a recovery in another state, or in
any foreign court, in an action for a
Page 159 U. S. 188
tort, as for an assault and battery, false imprisonment,
slander, etc., and the defendant was duly summoned and appeared,
and made his defense, and the trial was conducted orderly and
properly, according to the rules of a civilized jurisprudence, is
every such case to be tried again here on the merits? I much doubt
whether the rule can ever go to this length. The general language
of the books is that the defendant must impeach the judgment by
showing affirmatively that it was unjust by being irregularly or
unfairly procured."
But the case was decided upon the ground that the defendant had
done no more than raise a doubt of the correctness of the judgment
sued on. 8 Johns. 173, 177, 178.
Chancellor Kent afterwards, treating of the same subject in the
first edition of his Commentaries (1827), put the right to impeach
a foreign judgment somewhat more broadly, saying:
"No sovereign is obliged to execute within his dominion a
sentence rendered out of it, and if execution be sought by a suit
upon the judgment or otherwise, he is at liberty, in his courts of
justice, to examine into the merits of such judgment [for the
effect to be given to foreign judgments is altogether a matter of
comity in cases where it is not regulated by treaty]. In the former
case [of a suit to enforce a foreign judgment], the rule is that
the foreign judgment is to be received in the first instance as
prima facie evidence of the debt, and it lies on the
defendant to impeach the justice of it or to show that it was
irregularly and unduly obtained. This was the principle declared
and settled by the House of Lords in 1771 in the case of
Sinclair v. Fraser upon an appeal from the Court of
Cession in Scotland."
In the second edition (1832), he inserted the passages above
printed in brackets, and in a note to the fourth edition (1840),
after citing recent conflicting opinions in Great Britain, and
referring to Mr. Justice Story's reasoning in his Commentaries on
the Conflict of Laws, § 607, in favor of the conclusiveness of
foreign judgments, he added:
"And that is certainly the more convenient and the safest rule,
and the most consistent with sound principle, except in cases in
which the court which pronounced the judgment has not due
jurisdiction of the case, or of the
Page 159 U. S. 189
defendant, or the proceeding was in fraud, or founded in
palpable mistake or irregularity, or bad by the law of the
rei
judicatae, and in all such cases, the justice of the judgment
ought to be impeached."
2 Kent Com. (1st ed.) 102; (later Eds.) 120.
Mr. Justice Story, in his Commentaries on the Conflict of Laws,
first published in 1834, after reviewing many English authorities,
said: "The present inclination of the English courts seems to be to
sustain the conclusiveness of foreign judgments," to which, in the
second edition, in 1841, he added: "Although certainly there yet
remains no inconsiderable diversity of opinion among the learned
judges of the different tribunals." § 606.
He then proceeded to state his own view of the subject on
principle, saying:
"It is indeed very difficult to perceive what could be done if a
different doctrine were maintainable to the full extent of opening
all the evidence and merits of the cause anew on a suit upon the
foreign judgment. Some of the witnesses may be since dead; some of
the vouchers may be lost or destroyed. The merits of the cause, as
formerly before the court upon the whole evidence, may have been
decidedly in favor of the judgment; upon a partial possession of
the original evidence, they may now appear otherwise. Suppose a
case purely sounding in damages, such as an action for an assault,
for slander, for conversion of property, for a malicious
prosecution, or for a criminal conversation; is the defendant to be
at liberty to retry the whole merits, and to make out, if he can, a
new case upon new evidence? Or is the court to review the former
decision, like a Court of Appeal, upon the old evidence? In a case
of covenant, or of debt, or of a breach of contract, are all the
circumstances to be reexamined anew? If they are, by what laws and
rules of evidence and principles of justice is the validity of the
original judgment to be tried? Is the court to open the judgment,
and to proceed
ex aequo et bono? Or is it to administer
strict law, and stand to the doctrines of the local administration
of justice? Is it to act upon the rules of evidence acknowledged in
its own jurisprudence, or upon those of the foreign jurisprudence?
These and many more questions might be put to
Page 159 U. S. 190
show the intrinsic difficulties of the subject. Indeed, the rule
that the judgment is to be
prima facie evidence for the
plain tiff would be a mere delusion if the defendant might still
question it by opening all or any of the original merits on his
side, for under such circumstances it would be equivalent to
granting a new trial. It is easy to understand that the defendant
may be at liberty to impeach the original justice of the judgment
by showing that the court had no jurisdiction, or that he never had
any notice of the suit, or that it was procured by fraud, or that
upon its face it is founded in mistake, or that it is irregular and
bad by the local law,
fori rei judicatae. To such an
extent, the doctrine is intelligible and practicable. Beyond this,
the right to impugn the judgment is in legal effect the right to
retry the merits of the original cause at large, and to put the
defendant upon proving those merits."
§ 607.
He then observed:
"The general doctrine maintained in the American courts in
relation to foreign judgments certainly is that they are
prima
facie evidence, but that they are impeachable. But how far and
to what extent this doctrine is to be carried does not seem to be
definitely settled. It has been declared that the jurisdiction of
the court, and its power over the parties and the things in
controversy, may be inquired into, and that the judgment may be
impeached for fraud. Beyond this, no definite lines have as yet
been drawn."
§ 608.
After stating the effect of the Constitution of the United
States and referring to the opinions of some foreign jurists, and
to the law of France, which allows the merits of foreign judgments
to be examined, Mr. Justice Story concluded his treatment of the
subject as follows:
"It is difficult to ascertain what the prevailing rule is in
regard to foreign judgments in some of the other nations of
continental Europe -- whether they are deemed conclusive evidence
or only
prima facie evidence. Holland seems at all times,
upon the general principle of reciprocity, to have given great
weight to foreign judgments and in many cases, if not in all cases,
to have given to them a weight equal to that given to domestic
judgments, wherever the like rule of reciprocity with regard to
Dutch
Page 159 U. S. 191
judgments has been adopted by the foreign country whose judgment
is brought under review. This is certainly a very reasonable rule,
and may perhaps hereafter work itself firmly into the structure of
international jurisprudence."
§ 618.
In
Bradstreet v. Neptune Ins. Co. (1839), in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Massachusetts, Mr. Justice Story said:
"If a civilized nation seeks to have the sentences of its own
courts held of any validity elsewhere, they ought to have a just
regard to the rights and usages of other civilized nations and the
principles of public and national law in the administration of
justice."
3 Sumnner 600, 608-609.
In
Burnham v. Webster (1845), in an action of assumpsit
upon a promissory note, brought in the Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Maine, the defendant pleaded a former
judgment in the Province of New Brunswick in his favor in an action
there brought by the plaintiff. The plaintiff replied that the note
was withdrawn from that suit, by consent of parties and leave of
the court, before verdict and judgment, and the defendant demurred
to the replication. Judge Ware, in overruling the demurrer,
said:
"Whatever difference of opinion there may be as to the binding
force of foreign judgments, all agree that they are not entitled to
the same authority as the judgments of domestic courts of general
jurisdiction. They are but evidence of what they purport to decide,
and liable to be controlled by counter evidence, and do not, like
domestic judgments, import absolute verity and remain
incontrovertible and conclusive until reversed."
And he added that if the question stood entirely clear from
authority, he should be of opinion that the plaintiff could not be
allowed to deny the validity of the proceedings of a court whose
authority he had invoked. 2 Ware, 236, 239-241.
At a subsequent trial of that case before a jury, (1846) 1
Woodb. & Min. 172, the defendant proved the judgment in New
Brunswick. The plaintiff then offered to prove the facts stated in
his replication, and that any entry on the record of the judgment
in New Brunswick concerning this note was therefore by mistake or
inadventure. This evidence was
Page 159 U. S. 192
excluded, and a verdict taken for the plaintiff, subject to the
opinion of the court. Mr. Justice Woodbury, in granting a new
trial, delivered a thoughtful and discriminating opinion upon the
effect of foreign judgments, from which the following passages are
taken:
"They do, like domestic ones, operate conclusively,
ex
proprio vigore, within the governments in which they are
rendered, but not elsewhere. When offered and considered elsewhere,
they are,
ex commitate, treated with respect, according to
the nature of the judgment and the character of the tribunal which
rendered it and the reciprocal mode, if any, in which that
government treats our judgments, and according to the party
offering it, whether having sought or assented to it voluntarily or
not, so as to give it in some degree the force of a contract, and
hence to be respected elsewhere by analogy according to the
lex
loci contractus. With these views I would go to the whole
extent of the cases decided by Lords Mansfield and Buller, and
where the foreign judgment is not
in rem, as it is in
admiralty, having the subject matter before the court, and acting
on that, rather than the parties, I would consider it only
prima facie evidence as between the parties to it."
P. 175.
"By returning to that rule, we are enabled to give parties at
times most needed and most substantial relief, such as in judgments
abroad against them without notice, or without a hearing on the
merits, or by accident or mistake of facts, as here, or on rules of
evidence and rules of law they never assented to, being foreigners
and their contracts made elsewhere but happening to be traveling
through a foreign jurisdiction and being compelled
in
invitum to litigate there."
P. 177.
"Nor would I permit the
prima facie force of the
foreign judgment to go far if the court was one of a barbarous or
semi-barbarous government, and acting on no established principles
of civilized jurisprudence, and not resorted to willingly by both
parties, or both not inhabitants and citizens of the country. Nor
can much comity be asked for the judgments of another nation which,
like France, pays no respect to those of other countries except, as
before remarked, on the principle of the parties belonging there or
assenting to a trial there."
P. 179.
Page 159 U. S. 193
"On the other hand, by considering a judgment abroad as only
prima facie valid, I would not allow the plaintiff abroad,
who had sought it there, to avoid it, unless for accident or
mistake, as here, because, in other respects, having been sought
there by him voluntarily, it does not lie in his mouth to complain
of it. Nor would I in any case permit the whole merits of the
judgment recovered abroad to be put in evidence as a matter of
course, but, being
prima facie correct, the party
impugning it, and desiring a hearing of its merits, must show
first, specifically, some objection to the judgment's reaching the
merits, and tending to prove they had not been acted on, or [as?]
by showing there was no jurisdiction in the court, or no notice, or
some accident or mistake, or fraud which prevented a full defense,
and has entered into the judgment, or that the court either did not
decide at all on the merits or was a tribunal not acting in
conformity to any set of legal principles, and was not willingly
recognized by the party as suitable for adjudicating on the merits.
After matters like these are proved, I can see no danger, but
rather great safety, in the administration of justice in permitting
to every party before us at least one fair opportunity to have the
merits of his case fully considered, and one fair adjudication upon
them before he is estopped forever."
P. 180.
In
De Brimont v. Penniman (1873), in the Circuit Court
of the United States for the Southern District of New York, Judge
Woodruff said:
"The principle on which foreign judgments receive any
recognition from our courts is one of comity. It does not require,
but rather forbids, it where such a recognition works a direct
violation of the policy of our laws, and does violence to what we
deem the rights of our citizens."
And he declined to maintain an action against a citizen of the
United States, whose daughter had been married in France to a
French citizen, upon a decree of a French court requiring the
defendant, then resident in France and duly served with process
there, to pay an annuity to his son-in-law. 10 Blatchford 436,
441.
Mr. Justice Story and Chancellor Kent, as appears by the
passages above quoted from their Commentaries, concurred in
Page 159 U. S. 194
the opinion that, in a suit upon a foreign judgment, the whole
merits of the case could not as matter of course be reexamined
anew, but that the defendant was at liberty to impeach the judgment
not only by showing that the court had no jurisdiction of the case
or of the defendant, but also by showing that it was procured by
fraud, or was founded on clear mistake or irregularity, or was bad
by the law of the place where it was rendered. Story on Conflict of
Laws § 607; 2 Kent Com. (6th ed.) 120.
The word "mistake" was evidently used by Story and Kent in this
connection not in its wider meaning of error in judgment, whether
upon the law or upon the facts, but in the stricter sense of
misapprehension or oversight, and as equivalent to what, in
Burnham v. Webster, before cited, Mr. Justice Woodbury
spoke of as "some objection to the judgment's reaching the merits,
and tending to prove that they had not been acted on," "some
accident or mistake," or "that the court did not decide at all on
the merits." 1 Woodb. & Min. 180.
The suggestion that a foreign judgment might be impeached for
error in law of the country in which it was rendered is hardly
consistent with the statement of Chief Justice Marshall, when,
speaking of the disposition of this Court to adopt the construction
given to the laws of a state by its own courts, he said:
"This course is founded on the principle, supposed to be
universally recognized, that the judicial department of every
government, where such department exists, is the appropriate organ
for construing the legislative acts of that government. Thus, no
court in the universe which professed to be governed by principle
would, we presume, undertake to say that the courts of Great
Britain or of France or of any other nation had misunderstood their
own statutes, and therefore erect itself into a tribunal which
should correct such misunderstanding. We receive the construction
given by the courts of the nation as the true sense of the law, and
feel ourselves no more at liberty to depart from that construction
than to depart from the words of the statute."
Elmendorf v.
Taylor (1825), 10 Wheat. 152,
23 U. S.
159-160.
In recent times, foreign judgments rendered within the
dominions
Page 159 U. S. 195
of the English Crown and under the law of England, after a trial
on the merits, and no want of jurisdiction and no fraud or mistake
being shown or offered to be shown, have been treated as conclusive
by the highest courts of New York, Maine, and Illinois.
Lazier
v. Westcott (1862), 26 N.Y. 146, 150;
Dunstan v.
Higgins (1893), 138 N.Y. 70, 74;
Rankin v. Goddard
(1866), 54 Me. 28, and (1868) 55 Me. 389;
Baker v. Palmer
(1876), 83 Ill. 568. In two early cases in Ohio, it was said that
foreign judgments were conclusive unless shown to have been
obtained by fraud.
Lake Bank v. Harding (1832), 5 Ohio
545, 547;
Anderson v. Anderson (1837), 8 Ohio 108, 110.
But in a later case in that state, it was said that they were only
prima facie evidence of indebtedness.
Pelton v.
Platner (1844), 13 Ohio, 209, 217. In
Jones v.
Jamison (1860), 15 La.Ann. 35, the decision was only that, by
virtue of the statutes of Louisiana, a foreign judgment merged the
original cause of action as against the plaintiff.
The result of the modern decisions in England, after much
diversity, not to say vacillation, of opinion does not greatly
differ (so far as concerns the aspects in which the English courts
have been called upon to consider the subject) from the conclusions
of Chancellor Kent and of Justices Story and Woodbury.
At one time it was held that, in an action brought in England
upon a judgment obtained by the plaintiff in a foreign country, the
judgment must be assumed to be according to the law of that country
unless the contrary was clearly proved, manifestly implying that
proof on that point was competent.
Becquet v. MacCarthy
(1831), 2 B. & Ad. 951, 957;
Alivon v. Furnival
(1834), 1 Cr., M. & R. 277, 293, 4 Tyrwh. 751, 768.
Lord Brougham, in the House of Lords, as well as Chief Justice
Tindal and Chief Justice Wilde (afterwards Lord Chancellor Truro)
and their associates, in the Common Bench, considered it to be well
settled that an Irish or colonial judgment or a foreign judgment
was not, like a judgment of a domestic court of record, conclusive
evidence, but only, like a
Page 159 U. S. 196
simple contract,
prima facie evidence of a debt.
Houlditch v. Donegal (1834), 8 Bligh N.R. 301, 342, 346, 2
Cl. & Fin. 470, 476-479;
Don v. Lippmann (1837), 5 Cl.
& Fin. 1, 20-22;
Smith v. Nicolls (1839), 7 Scott 147,
166-170, 5 Bing.N.C. 208, 220-224, 7 Dowl. 282;
Bank of
Australasia v. Harding (1850), 9 C.B. 661, 686-687.
On the other hand, Vice Chancellor Shadwell, upon an imperfect
review of the early cases, expressed the opinion that a foreign
judgment was conclusive.
Martin v. Nicolls (1830), 3 Sim.
458.
Like opinions were expressed by Lord Denman, speaking for the
Court of Queen's Bench, and by Vice Chancellor Wigram, in cases of
Irish or colonial judgments, which were subject to direct appellate
review in England.
Ferguson v. Mahon (1839), 11 Ad. &
El. 179, 183, 3 Per. & Dav. 143, 146;
Henderson v.
Henderson (1844), 6 Q.B. 288, 298, 299;
Henderson v.
Henderson (1843), 3 Hare 100, 118.
In
Bank v. Nias (1851), in an action upon an Australian
judgment, pleas that the original promises were not made, and that
those promises, if made, were obtained by fraud, were held bad on
demurrer. Lord Campbell, in delivering judgment, referred to Story
on the Conflict of Laws, and adopted substantially his course of
reasoning in § 607, above quoted, with regard to foreign
judgments. But he distinctly put the decision upon the ground that
the defendant might have appealed to the Judicial Committee of the
Privy Council, and thus have procured a review of the colonial
judgment, and he took the precaution to say:
"How far it would be permitted to a defendant to impeach the
competency or the integrity of a foreign court from which there was
no appeal it is unnecessary here to inquire."
16 Q.B. 717, 734-737.
The English courts, however, have since treated that decision as
establishing that a judgment of any competent foreign court could
not, in an action upon it, be questioned either because that court
had mistaken its own law or because it had come to an erroneous
conclusion upon the facts.
De Cosse Brissac v. Rathbone
(1861) 6 H. & N. 301;
Scott v. Pilkington
Page 159 U. S. 197
(1862) 2 B. & S. 11, 41-42;
Vanquelin v. Bouard
(1863), 15 C.B. (N.S.) 341, 368;
Castrique v. Imrie
(1870), L.R. 4 H.L. 414, 429-430;
Godard v. Gray (1870),
L.R. 6 Q.B. 139, 150;
Ochsenbein v. Papelier (1873), 8
Ch.App. 695, 701. In
Meyer v. Ralli (1876), a judgment
in rem, rendered by a French court of competent
jurisdiction, was held to be reexaminable upon the merits solely
because it was admitted by the parties, in the special case upon
which the cause was submitted to the English court, to be
manifestly erroneous in regard to the law of France. 1 C.P.D.
358.
In view of the recent decisions in England, it is somewhat
remarkable that, by the Indian Code of Civil Procedure of 1877,
"no foreign judgment [which is defined as a judgment of 'a civil
tribunal beyond the limits of British India, and not having
authority in British India, nor established by the governor general
in council'] shall operate as a bar to a suit in British India, . .
. if it appears on the face of the proceeding to be founded on an
incorrect view of international law,"
or "if it is, in the opinion of the court before which it is
produced, contrary to natural justice." Piggott on Foreign
Judgments (2d ed.) 380, 381.
It was formerly understood in England that a foreign judgment
was not conclusive if it appeared upon its face to be founded on a
mistake or disregard of English law.
Arnott v. Redfern
(1825-1826) 2 Car. & P. 88, 3 Bing. 353, and 11 J. B. Moore
209;
Novelli v. Rossi (1831) 2 B. & Ad. 757; 3 Burge
on Colonial and Foreign Laws 1065; 2 Smith's Lead.Cas. (2d ed.)
448;
Reimers v. Druce (1856), 23 Beavan 145.
In
Simpson v. Fogo (1860), 1 Johns. & Hem. 18, and
(1862) 1 Hem. & Mil. 195, Vice Chancellor Wood (afterwards Lord
Hatherley) refused to give effect to a judgment
in
personam of a court in Louisiana, which had declined to
recognize the title of a mortgagee of an English ship under the
English law. In delivering judgment upon demurrer, he said:
"The State of Louisiana may deal as it pleases with foreign law;
but if it asks courts of this country to respect its law, it must
be on a footing of paying a like respect to ours. Any comity
between the courts of two nations holding such
Page 159 U. S. 198
opposite doctrines as to the authority of the
lex loci
is impossible. While the courts of Louisiana refuse to recognize a
title acquired here, which is valid according to our law, and hand
over to their own citizens property so acquired, they cannot at the
same time expect us to defer to a rule of their law which we are no
more bound to respect than a law that any title of foreigners
should be disregarded in favor of citizens of Louisiana. The answer
to such a demand must be that a country which pays so little regard
to our laws as to set aside a paramount title acquired here must
not expect at our hands any greater regard for the title so
acquired by the citizens of that country."
1 Johns. & Hem. 28, 29. And upon motion for a decree, he
elaborated the same view, beginning by saying:
"Whether this judgment does so err or not against the recognized
principles of what has been commonly called the comity of nations
by refusing to regard the law of the country where the title to the
ship was acquired is one of the points which I have to
consider,"
and concluding that it was "so contrary to law, and to what is
required by the comity of nations" that he must disregard it. 1
Hem. & Mil. 222-247.
See also Liverpool Co. v. Hunter
(1867), L.R. 4 Eq. 62, 68, and (1868) L.R. 3 Ch. 479, 484.
In
Scott v. Pilkington (1862), Chief Justice Cockburn
treated it as an open question whether a judgment recovered in New
York for a debt could be impeached on the ground that the record
showed that the foreign court ought to have decided the case
according to English law, and had either disregarded the comity of
nations by refusing to apply the English law or erred in its view
of English law. 2 B. & S. 11, 42. In
Castrique v.
Imrie (1870), the French judgment which was adjudged not to be
impeachable for error in law, French or English, was, as the House
of Lords construed it, a judgment
in rem, under which the
ship to which the plaintiff in England claimed title had been sold.
L.R. 4 H.L. 414. In
Godard v. Gray (1870), shortly
afterwards, in which the court of Queen's Bench held that a
judgment
in personam of a French court could not be
impeached because it had put
Page 159 U. S. 199
a construction erroneous, according to English law, upon an
English contract, the decision was put by Justices Blackburn and
Mellor upon the ground that it did not appear that the foreign
court had "knowingly and perversely disregarded the rights given by
the English law," and by Justice Hannen solely upon the ground that
the defendant did not appear to have brought the English law to the
knowledge of the foreign court. L.R. 6 Q.B. 139, 149, 154. In
Messina v. Petrococchino (1872), Sir Robert Phillimore,
delivering judgment in the Privy Council, said: "A foreign judgment
of a competent court may, indeed, be impeached if it carries on the
face of it a manifest error." L.R. 4 P.C. 144, 157.
The result of the English decisions therefore would seem to be
that a foreign judgment
in personam may be impeached for a
manifest and willful disregard of the law of England.
Lord Abinger, Baron Parke, and Baron Alderson were wont to say
that the judgment of a foreign court of competent jurisdiction for
a sum certain created a duty or legal obligation to pay that sum;
or, in Baron Parke's words, that the principle on which the
judgments of foreign and colonial courts are supported and enforced
was
"that where a court of competent jurisdiction has adjudicated a
certain sum to be due from one person to another, a legal
obligation arises to pay that sum, on which an action of debt to
enforce the judgment may be maintained."
Russell v. Smyth (1842), 9 M. & W. 810, 818-819;
Williams v. Jones (1845), 13 M. & W. 628, 633,
634.
But this was said in explaining why, by the technical rules of
pleading, an action of assumpsit or of debt would lie upon a
foreign judgment, and had no reference to the question how far such
a judgment was conclusive of the matter adjudged. At common law, an
action of debt would lie on a debt appearing by a record or by any
other specialty, such as a contract under seal, and would also lie
for a definite sum of money due by simple contract. Assumpsit would
not lie upon a record or other specialty, but would lie upon any
other contract, whether expressed by the party or implied by law.
In an action upon a record, or upon a contract under seal, a lawful
consideration was conclusively presumed to exist, and could not be
denied,
Page 159 U. S. 200
but in an action, whether in debt or in assumpsit, upon a simple
contract, express or implied, the consideration was open to
inquiry. A foreign judgment was not considered, like a judgment of
a domestic court of record, as a record or specialty. The form of
action, therefore, upon a foreign judgment was not in debt,
grounded upon a record or a specialty, but was either in debt, as
for a definite sum of money due by simple contract, or in assumpsit
upon such a contract. A foreign judgment, being a security of no
higher nature than the original cause of action, did not merge that
cause of action. The plaintiff might sue either on the judgment or
on the original cause of action, and in either form of suit the
foreign judgment was only evidence of a liability equivalent to a
simple contract, and was therefore liable to be controlled by such
competent evidence as the nature of the case admitted.
See
cases already cited, especially
Walker v. Witter, 1 Doug.
1;
Phillips v. Hunter, 2 H.Bl. 402, 410;
Bissell v.
Briggs, 9 Mass. 463, 464;
Mills v.
Duryee, 7 Cranch 481,
11 U. S. 485;
D'Arcy v.
Ketchum, 11 How. 165,
52 U. S. 176;
Hall v. Odber, 11 East 118;
Smith v. Nicolls, 7
Scott 147, 5 Bing. N.C. 208.
See also Grant v. Easton, 13
Q.B.D. 302, 303;
Lyman v. Brown, 2 Curtis 559.
Mr. Justice Blackburn, indeed, in determining how far a foreign
judgment could be impeached either for error in law or for want of
jurisdiction, expressed the opinion that the effect of such a
judgment did not depend upon what he termed "that which is loosely
called
comity,'" but upon the saying of Baron Parke, above
quoted, and consequently
"that anything which negatives the existence of that legal
obligation or excuses the defendant from the performance of it must
form a good defense to the action."
Godard v. Gray (1870), L.R. 6 Q.B. 139, 148-149;
Schibsby v. Westenholz, 6 Q.B. 155, 159. And his example
has been followed by some other English judges: Fry, J., in
Rousillon v. Rousillon (1880), 14 Ch.D. 351, 370; North,
J., in
Nouvion v. Freeman (1887), 35 Ch.D. 704, 714-715;
Cotton and Lindley, L. JJ., in
Nouvion v. Freeman
(1887), 37 Ch.D. 244, 250, 256.
Page 159 U. S. 201
But the theory that a foreign judgment imposes or creates a duty
or obligation is a remnant of the ancient fiction, assumed by
Blackstone, saying that
"upon showing the judgment once obtained still in full force and
yet unsatisfied, the law immediately implies that, by the original
contract of society, the defendant hath contracted a debt and is
bound to pay it."
3 Bl.Com. 160. That fiction which embraced judgments upon
default or for torts cannot convert a transaction wanting the
assent of parties into one which necessarily implies it.
Louisiana v. New Orleans, 109 U.
S. 285,
109 U. S. 288.
While the theory in question may help to explain rules of pleading
which originated while the fiction was believed in, it is hardly a
sufficient guide at the present day in dealing with questions of
international law, public or private, and of the comity of our own
country, and of foreign nations. It might be safer to adopt the
maxim applied to foreign judgments by Chief Justice Weston,
speaking for the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine,
judicium
redditur in invitum, or, as given by Lord Coke,
in
praesumptione legis judicium redditur in invitum. Jordan
v. Robinson (1838), 15 Me. 167, 168; Co.Litt. 248b.
In
Russell v. Smyth, above cited, Baron Parke took the
precaution of adding: "Nor need we say how far the judgment of a
court of competent jurisdiction, in the absence of fraud, is
conclusive upon the parties." 9 M. & W. 819. He could hardly
have contemplated erecting a rule of local procedure into a canon
of private international law, and a substitute for "the comity of
nations," on which, in an earlier case, he had himself relied as
the ground for enforcing in England a right created by a law of a
foreign country.
Alivon v. Furnival, 1 Cr., M. & R.
277, 296, 4 Tyrwh. 751, 771.
In
Abouloff v. Oppenheimer (1882), Lord Coleridge and
Lord Justice Brett carefully avoided adopting the theory of a legal
obligation to pay a foreign judgment as the test in determining how
far such a judgment might be impeached. 10 Q.B.D. 295, 300, 305. In
Hawksford v. Giffard (1886), in the Privy Council, on
appeal from the Royal Court of Jersey, Lord Herschell said:
"This action is brought upon an English judgment which, until a
judgment was obtained in Jersey, was in
Page 159 U. S. 202
that country no more than evidence of a debt."
12 App.Cas. 122, 126. In
Nouvion v. Freeman (1889), in
the House of Lords, Lord Herschell, while he referred to the
reliance placed by counsel on the saying of Baron Parke, did not
treat a foreign judgment as creating or imposing a new obligation,
but only as declaring and establishing that a debt or obligation
existed. His words were:
"The principle upon which I think our enforcement of foreign
judgments must proceed is this, that in a court of competent
jurisdiction, where according to its established procedure, the
whole merits of the case were open at all events, to the parties,
however much they may have failed to take advantage of them, or may
have waived any of their rights, a final adjudication has been
given that a debt or obligation exists which cannot thereafter in
that court be disputed, and can only be questioned in an appeal to
a higher tribunal. In such a case, it may well be said that, giving
credit to the courts of another country, we are prepared to take
the fact that such adjudication has been made as establishing the
existence of the debt or obligation."
And Lord Bramwell said:
"How can it be said that there is a legal obligation on the part
of a man to pay a debt who has a right to say, 'I owe none, and no
judgment has established against me that I do?' I cannot see."
The foreign judgment in that case was allowed no force, for want
of finally establishing the existence of a debt. 15 App.Cas. 1,
9-10, 14.
In view of all the authorities upon the subject and of the trend
of judicial opinion in this country and in England, following the
lead of Kent and Story, we are satisfied that where there has been
opportunity for a full and fair trial abroad before a court of
competent jurisdiction, conducting the trial upon regular
proceedings, after due citation or voluntary appearance of the
defendant and under a system of jurisprudence likely to secure an
impartial administration of justice between the citizens of its own
country and those of other countries, and there is nothing to show
either prejudice in the court or in the system of laws under which
it was sitting, or fraud in procuring the judgment, or any other
special reason why the comity of this nation should not allow it
full effect,
Page 159 U. S. 203
the merits of the case should not, in an action brought in this
country upon the judgment, be tried afresh, as on a new trial or an
appeal, upon the mere assertion of the party that the judgment was
erroneous in law or in fact. The defendants therefore cannot be
permitted upon that general ground to contest the validity or the
effect of the judgment sued on.
But they have sought to impeach that judgment upon several other
grounds which require separate consideration.
It is objected that the appearance and litigation of the
defendants in the French tribunals were not voluntary, but by legal
compulsion, and therefore that the French courts never acquired
such jurisdiction over the defendants that they should be held
bound by the judgment.
Upon the question what should be considered such a voluntary
appearance as to amount to a submission to the jurisdiction of a
foreign court, there has been some difference of opinion in
England.
In
General Steam Navigation Co. v. Guillou (1843), in
an action at law to recover damages to the plaintiffs' ship by a
collision with the defendant's ship through the negligence of the
master and crew of the latter, the defendant pleaded a judgment by
which a French court, in a suit brought by him and after the
plaintiffs had been cited, had appeared, and had asserted fault on
this defendant's part, had adjudged that it was the ship of these
plaintiffs, and not that of this defendant, which was in fault. It
was not shown or suggested that the ship of these plaintiffs was in
the custody or possession of the French court. Yet Baron Parke,
delivering a considered judgment of the Court of Exchequer (Lord
Abinger and Barons Alderson and Rolfe concurring), expressed a
decided opinion that the pleas were bad in substance, for these
reasons:
"They do not state that the plaintiffs were French subjects, or
resident or even present in France, when the suit began, so as to
be bound, by reason of allegiance or domicile or temporary
presence, by a decision of a French court, and they did not select
the tribunal and sue as plaintiffs, in any of which cases the
determination might have possibly bound them. They were mere
strangers, who put forward the negligence
Page 159 U. S. 204
of the defendant as an answer, in an adverse suit in a foreign
country, whose laws they were under no obligation to obey."
11 M. & W. 877, 894, 13 Law Journal (N.S.) Exch. 168,
176.
But it is now settled in England that while an appearance by the
defendant in a court of a foreign country, for the purpose of
protecting his property already in the possession of that court,
may not be deemed a voluntary appearance, yet an appearance solely
for the purpose of protecting other property in that country from
seizure is considered as a voluntary appearance.
De Cosse
Brissac v. Rathbone (1861), 6 H. & N. 301, 20 Law Journal
(N.S.) Exch. 238;
Schibsby v. Westenholz (1870), L.R. 6
Q.B. 155, 162;
Voinet v. Barrett (1885), Cab. & El.
554, 54 Law Journal (N.S.) Q.B. 521, and 55 Law Journal (N.S.) Q.B.
39.
The present case is not one of a person traveling through or
casually found in a foreign country. The defendants, although they
were not citizens or residents of France, but were citizens and
residents of the State of New York, and their principal place of
business was in the City of New York, yet had a storehouse and an
agent in Paris, and were accustomed to purchase large quantities of
goods there, although they did not make sales in France. Under such
circumstances, evidence that their sole object in appearing and
carrying on the litigation in the French courts was to prevent
property in their storehouse at Paris, belonging to them, and
within the jurisdiction, but not in the custody, of those courts
from being taken in satisfaction of any judgment that might be
recovered against them would not, according to our law, show that
those courts did not acquire jurisdiction of the persons of the
defendants.
It is next objected that in those courts, one of the plaintiffs
was permitted to testify not under oath, and was not subjected to
cross-examination by the opposite party, and that the defendants
were therefore deprived of safeguards which are by our law
considered essential to secure honesty and to detect fraud in a
witness, and also that documents and papers were admitted in
evidence with which the defendants had no connection
Page 159 U. S. 205
and which would not be admissible under our own system of
jurisprudence. But it having been shown by the plaintiffs, and
hardly denied by the defendants, that the practice followed and the
method of examining witnesses were according to the laws of France,
we are not prepared to hold that the fact that the procedure in
these respects differed from that of our own courts is, of itself,
a sufficient ground for impeaching the foreign judgment.
It is also contended that a part of the plaintiffs' claim is
affected by one of the contracts between the parties having been
made in violation of the revenue laws of the United States,
requiring goods to be invoiced at their actual market value.
Rev.Stat. § 2854. It may be assumed that, as the courts of a
country will not enforce contracts made abroad in evasion or fraud
of its own laws, so they will not enforce a foreign judgment upon
such a contract.
Armstrong v.
Toler, 11 Wheat. 258;
De Brimont v.
Penniman, 10 Blatchford 436;
Lang v. Holbrook, Crabbe
179; Story on Conflict of Laws §§ 244, 246; Wharton's
Conflict of Laws, § 656. But as this point does not affect the
whole claim in this case, it is sufficient for present purposes to
say that there does not appear to have been any distinct offer to
prove that the invoice value of any of the goods sold by the
plaintiffs to the defendants was agreed between them to be or was
in fact lower than the actual market value of the goods.
It must however always be kept in mind that it is the paramount
duty of the court before which any suit is brought to see to it
that the parties have had a fair and impartial trial before a final
decision is rendered against either party.
When an action is brought in a court of this country by a
citizen of a foreign country against one of our own citizens to
recover a sum of money adjudged by a court of that country to be
due from the defendant to the plaintiff, and the foreign judgment
appears to have been rendered by a competent court, having
jurisdiction of the cause and of the parties, and upon due
allegations and proofs and opportunity to defend against them, and
its proceedings are according to the course of a civilized
jurisprudence, and are stated in a clear and formal
Page 159 U. S. 206
record, the judgment is
prima facie evidence, at least,
of the truth of the matter adjudged, and it should be held
conclusive upon the merits tried in the foreign court unless some
special ground is shown for impeaching the judgment, as by showing
that it was affected by fraud or prejudice or that, by the
principles of international law and by the comity of our own
country, it should not be given full credit and effect.
There is no doubt that both in this country, as appears by the
authorities already cited, and in England, a foreign judgment may
be impeached for fraud.
Shortly before the Declaration of Independence, the House of
Lords, upon the trial of the Duchess of Kingston for bigamy, put to
the judges the question whether -- assuming a sentence of the
ecclesiastical court against a marriage, in a suit for jactitation
of marriage, to be conclusive evidence so as to prevent the counsel
for the crown from proving the marriage upon an indictment for
polygame -- "the counsel for the crown may be admitted to avoid the
effect of such sentence by proving the same to have been obtained
by fraud or collusion." Chief Justice De Grey, delivering the
opinion of the judges, which was adopted by the House of Lords,
answering this question in the affirmative, said:
"But if it was a direct and decisive sentence upon the point,
and, as it stands, to be admitted as conclusive evidence upon the
court, and not to be impeached from within, yet, like all other
acts of the highest judicial authority, it is impeachable from
without. Although it is not permitted to show that the court was
mistaken, it may be shown that they were misled. Fraud is an
intrinsic collateral act, which vitiates the most solemn
proceedings of courts of justice. Lord Coke says it avoids all
judicial acts, ecclesiastical or temporal."
20 Howell's State Trials 537, 543, note; 2 Smith's Lead.Cas.
573.
All the subsequent English authorities concur in holding that
any foreign judgment, whether
in rem or
in
personam, may be impeached upon the ground that it was
fraudulently obtained.
White v. Hall (1806), 12 Ves. 321,
324;
Bowles v. Orr (1835), 1 Yo. & Col.Exch. 464, 473;
Price v. Dewhurst (1837) 8 Sim. 279, 302-305;
Don v.
Lippmann (1837), 5 Cl &
Page 159 U. S. 207
Fin. 1, 20;
Bank of Australasia v. Nias (1851), 16 Q.B.
717, 735;
Reimers v. Druce (1856), 23 Beav. 145, 150;
Castrique v. Imrie (1870), L.R. 4 H.L. 414, 445-446;
Godard v. Gray (1870), L.R. 6 Q.B. 139, 149;
Messina
v. Petrococchino (1872), L.R. 4 P.C. 144, 157;
Ochsenbein
v. Papelier (1873), 8 Ch. 695.
Under what circumstances this may be done does not appear to
have ever been the subject of judicial investigation in this
country.
It has often, indeed, been declared by this Court that the fraud
which entitles a party to impeach the judgment of one of our own
tribunals must be fraud extrinsic to the matter tried in the cause,
and not merely consist in false and fraudulent documents or
testimony submitted to that tribunal, and the truth of which was
contested before it and passed upon by it.
United States v.
Throckmorton, 98 U. S. 61,
98 U. S. 65-66;
Vance v. Burbank, 101 U. S. 514,
101 U. S. 519;
Steel v. Smelting Co., 106 U. S. 447,
106 U. S. 453;
Moffat v. United States, 115 U. S. 24,
115 U. S. 32;
United States v. Minor, 114 U. S. 233,
114 U. S. 242.
And in one English case, where a ship had been sold under a foreign
judgment, the like restriction upon impeaching that judgment for
fraud was suggested, but the decision was finally put upon the
ground that the judicial sale passed the title to the ship.
Cammell v. Sewell (1858-60), 3 H. & N. 617, 646, 5 H.
& N. 728, 729, 742.
But it is now established in England by well considered and
strongly reasoned decisions of the Court of Appeal that foreign
judgments may be impeached if procured by false and fraudulent
representations and testimony of the plaintiff, even if the same
question of fraud was presented to and decided by the foreign
court.
In
Abouloff v. Oppenheimer (1882), the plaintiff had
recovered a judgment at Tiflis, in Russia, ordering the defendants
to return certain goods, or to pay their value. The defendants
appealed to a higher Russian court, which confirmed the judgment
and ordered the defendants to pay, besides the sum awarded below,
an additional sum for costs and expenses. In an action in the
English High Court of
Page 159 U. S. 208
Justice upon those judgments, the defendants pleaded that they
were obtained by the gross fraud of the plaintiff in fraudulently
representing to the Russian courts that the goods in question were
not in her possession when the suit was commenced, and when the
judgment was given, and during the whole time the suit was pending,
and by fraudulently concealing from those courts the fact that
those goods, as the fact was and as she well knew, were in her
actual possession. A demurrer to this plea was overruled and
judgment entered for the defendants. And that judgment was affirmed
in the Court of Appeal by Lord Chief Justice Coleridge, Lord
Justice Baggallay, and Lord Justice Brett, all of whom delivered
concurring opinions, the grounds of which sufficiently appear in
the opinion delivered by Lord Justice Brett (since Lord Esher,
M.R.), who said:
"With regard to an action brought upon a foreign judgment, the
whole doctrine as to fraud is English, and is to be applied in an
action purely English. I am prepared to hold, according to the
judgment of the House of Lords adopting the proposition laid down
by De Grey, C.J., that if the judgment upon which the action is
brought was procured from the foreign court by the successful fraud
of the party who is seeking to enforce it, the action in the
English court will not lie. This proposition is absolute and
without any limitation, and as the Lord Chief Justice has pointed
out, is founded on the doctrine that no party in an English court
shall be able to take advantage of his own wrongful act or, as it
may be stated in other language, that no obligation can be enforced
in an English court of justice which has been procured by the fraud
of the person relying upon it as an obligation. . . . I will assume
that in the suit in the Russian courts, the plaintiff's fraud was
alleged by the defendants, and that they gave evidence in support
of the charge. I will assume even that the defendants gave the very
same evidence which they propose to adduce in this action.
Nevertheless the defendants will not be debarred at the trial of
this action from making the same charge of fraud and from adducing
the same evidence in support of it, and if the High Court of
Justice is satisfied that the allegations of the defendants are
true and
Page 159 U. S. 209
that the fraud was committed, the defendants will be entitled to
succeed in the present action. It has been contended that the same
issue ought not to be tried in an English court which was tried in
the Russian courts, but I agree that the question whether the
Russian courts were deceived never could be an issue in the action
tried before them. . . . In the present case, we have had to
consider the question fully, and according to the best opinion
which I can form, fraud committed by a party to a suit for the
purpose of deceiving a foreign court is a defense to an action in
this country founded upon the judgment of that foreign court. It
seems to me that if we were to accede to the argument for the
plaintiff, the result would be that a plausible deceiver would
succeed, whereas a deceiver who is not plausible would fail. I
cannot think that plausible fraud ought to be upheld in any court
of justice in England. I accept the whole doctrine, without any
limitation, that whenever a foreign judgment has been obtained by
the fraud of the party relying upon it, it cannot be maintained in
the courts of this country, and further that nothing ought to
persuade an English court to enforce a judgment against one party
which has been obtained by the fraud of the other party to the suit
in the foreign court."
10 Q.B.D. 295, 305-308.
The same view was affirmed and acted on in the same court by
Lords Justices Lindley and Bowen in
Vadala v. Lawes
(1890), 25 Q.B.D. 310, 317-320, and by Lord Esher and Lord Justice
Lopes in
Crozat v. Brogden [1894] 2 Q.B. 30, 34-35.
In the case at bar, the defendants offered to prove in much
detail that the plaintiffs presented to the French court of first
instance and to the arbitrator appointed by that court, and upon
whose report its judgment was largely based, false and fraudulent
statements and accounts against the defendants by which the
arbitrator and the French courts were deceived and misled, and
their judgments were based upon such false and fraudulent
statements and accounts. This offer, if satisfactorily proved,
would, according to the decisions of the English Court of Appeal in
Abouloff v. Oppenheimer, Vadala v. Lawes, and
Crozat
v. Brogden, above cited,
Page 159 U. S. 210
be a sufficient ground for impeaching the foreign judgment and
examining into the merits of the original claim.
But whether those decisions can be followed in regard to foreign
judgments, consistently with our own decisions as to impeaching
domestic judgments for fraud, it is unnecessary in this case to
determine, because there is a distinct and independent ground upon
which we are satisfied that the comity of our nation does not
require us to give conclusive effect to the judgments of the courts
of France, and that ground is the want of reciprocity on the part
of France as to the effect to be given to the judgments of this and
other foreign countries.
In France, the royal ordinance of June 15, 1629, art. 121,
provided as follows:
"Judgments rendered, contracts or obligations recognized, in
foreign kingdoms and sovereignties for any cause whatever shall
have no lien or execution in our kingdom. Thus, the contracts shall
stand for simple promises, and, notwithstanding the judgments, our
subjects against whom they have been rendered may contest their
rights anew before our judges."
Touillier, Droit Civil, lib. 3, tit. 3, c. 6, sect. 3, No.
77.
By the French Code of Civil Procedure, art. 546,
"Judgments rendered by foreign tribunals, and acts acknowledged
before foreign officers, shall not be capable of execution in
France except in the manner and in the cases provided by articles
2123 and 2128 of the Civil Code,"
which are as follows: by article 2123,
"A lien cannot arise from judgments rendered in a foreign
country except so far as they have been declared executory by a
French tribunal, without prejudice to provisions to the contrary
which may exist in public laws and treaties."
By article 2128,
"Contracts entered into in a foreign country cannot give a lien
upon property in France if there are no provisions contrary to this
principle in public laws or in treaties."
Touillier,
ubi sup., No. 84.
The defendants in their answer cited the above provisions of the
statutes of France, and alleged, and at the trial offered to prove,
that by the construction given to
Page 159 U. S. 211
these statutes by the judicial tribunals of France, when the
judgments of tribunals of foreign countries against the citizens of
France are sued upon in the courts of France, the merits of the
controversies upon which those judgments are based are examined
anew, unless a treaty to the contrary effect exists between the
Republic of France and the country in which such judgment is
obtained (which is not the case between the Republic of France and
the United States), and that the tribunals of the Republic of
France give no force and effect, within the jurisdiction of that
country, to the judgments duly rendered by courts of competent
jurisdiction of the United States against citizens of France after
proper personal service of the process of those courts has been
made thereon in this country. We are of opinion that this evidence
should have been admitted.
In
Odwin v. Forbes (1817), President Henry, in the
Court of Demerara, which was governed by the Dutch law and was, as
he remarked, "a tribunal foreign to and independent of that of
England," sustained a plea of an English certificate in bankruptcy,
upon these grounds:
"It is a principle of their law, and laid down particularly in
the ordinances of Amsterdam, . . . that the same law shall be
exercised towards foreigners in Amsterdam as is exercised with
respect to citizens of that state in other countries, and upon this
principle of reciprocity, which is not confined to the City of
Amsterdam, but pervades the Dutch laws, they have always given
effect to the laws of that country which has exercised the same
comity and indulgence in admitting theirs; . . . that the Dutch
bankrupt laws proceed on the same principles as those of the
English; that the English tribunals give effect to the Dutch
bankrupt laws, and that, on the principle of reciprocity and mutual
comity, the Dutch tribunals, according to their own ordinances, are
bound to give effect to the English bankrupt laws when duly proved,
unless there is any express law or ordinance prohibiting their
admission."
And his judgment was affirmed in the Privy Council on appeal.
Case of
Odwin v. Forbes, pp. 89, 159-161, 173-176; (1817)
Buck Bankr.Cas. 57, 64.
Page 159 U. S. 212
President Henry, at page 76 of his Treatise on Foreign Law,
published as a preface to his report of that case, said:
"This comity in giving effect to the judgments of other
tribunals is generally exercised by states under the same
sovereign, on the ground that he is the fountain of justice in
each, though of independent jurisdiction, and it has also been
exercised in different states of Europe with respect to foreign
judgments, particularly in the Dutch states, who are accustomed by
the principle of reciprocity to give effect in their territories to
the judgments of foreign states which show the same comity to
theirs; but the tribunals of France and England have never
exercised this comity to the degree that those of Holland have, but
always required a fresh action to be brought, in which the foreign
judgment may be given in evidence. As this is a matter of positive
law and internal policy in each state, no opinion need be given.
Besides, it is a mere question of comity, and perhaps it might be
neither politic nor prudent, in two such great states, to give
indiscriminate effect to the judgment of each other's tribunals,
however the practice might be proper or convenient in federal
states or those under the same sovereign."
It was that statement which appears to have called forth the
observations of Mr. Justice Story, already cited:
"Holland seems at all times, upon the general principle of
reciprocity, to have given great weight to foreign judgments, and
in many cases, if not in all cases, to have given to them a weight
equal to that given to domestic judgments wherever the like rule of
reciprocity with regard to Dutch judgments has been adopted by the
foreign country whose judgment is brought under review. This is
certainly a very reasonable rule, and may perhaps hereafter work
itself firmly into the structure of international
jurisprudence."
Story on Conflict of Laws § 618.
This rule, though never either affirmed or denied by express
adjudication in England or America, has been indicated, more or
less distinctly, in several of the authorities already cited.
Lord Hardwicke threw out a suggestion that the credit to be
given by one court to the judgment of a foreign court
Page 159 U. S. 213
might well be affected by "their proceeding both by the same
rules of law."
Otway v. Ramsay, 4 B. & C. 414-416,
note.
Lord Eldon, after saying that "natural law" (evidently intending
the law of nations) "requires the courts of this country to give
credit to those of another for the inclination and power to do
justice," added that
"if it appears in evidence that persons suing under similar
circumstances neither had met nor could meet with justice, that
fact cannot be immaterial as an answer to the presumption."
Wright v. Simpson, 6 Ves. 714, 730.
Lord Brougham, presiding as lord Chancellor in the House of
Lords, said:
"The law, in the course of procedure abroad, sometimes differs
so mainly from ours in the principles upon which it is bottomed
that it would seem a strong thing to hold that our courts were
bound conclusively to give execution to the sentence of foreign
courts when, for aught we know, there is not anyone of those things
which are reckoned the elements or the corner stones of the due
administration of justice present to the procedure in these foreign
courts."
Houlditch v. Donegal, 8 Bligh, N.R. 301, 338.
Chief Justice Smith, of New Hampshire, in giving reasons why
foreign judgments or decrees, founded on the municipal laws of the
state in which they are pronounced, are not conclusive evidence of
debt, but
prima facie evidence only, said:
"These laws and regulations may be unjust, partial to citizens,
and against foreigners; they may operate injustice to our citizens,
whom we are bound to protect; they may be, and the decisions of
courts founded on them, just cause of complaint against the supreme
power of the state where rendered. To adopt them is not merely
saying that the courts have decided correctly on the law, but it is
approbating the law itself."
Bryant v. Ela, Smith (N.H.) 396, 404.
Mr. Justice Story said:
"If a civilized nation seeks to have the sentences of its own
courts of any validity elsewhere, they ought to have a just regard
to the rights and usages of other civilized nations, and the
principles of public and national law in the administration of
justice."
Bradstreet v. Neptune Ins. Co., 3 Sumner 600, 608.
Page 159 U. S. 214
Mr. Justice Woodbury said that judgments
in personam,
rendered under a foreign government,
"are,
ex commitate, treated with respect according to
the nature of the judgment and the character of the tribunal which
rendered it and the reciprocal mode, if any, in which that
government treats our judgments,"
and added "nor can much comity be asked for the judgments of
another nation which, like France, pays no respect to those of
other countries."
Burnham v. Webster, 1 Woodb. & Min.
172, 175, 179.
Mr. Justice Cooley said: "True comity is equality. We should
demand nothing more and concede nothing less."
McEwan v.
Zimmer, 38 Mich. 765, 769.
Mr. Wheaton said:
"There is no obligation recognized by legislators, public
authorities, and publicists to regard foreign laws, but their
application is admitted only from considerations of utility and the
mutual convenience of states --
ex commitate, ob reciprocam
utilitatem."
"The general comity, utility, and convenience of nations have,
however, established a usage among most civilized states by which
the final judgments of foreign courts of competent jurisdiction are
reciprocally carried into execution."
Wheaton's International Law (8th ed.) §§ 79, 147.
Since Story, Kent, and Wheaton wrote their commentaries, many
books and essays have been published upon the subject of the effect
to be allowed by the courts of one country to the judgments of
another, with references to the statutes and decisions in various
countries. Among the principal ones are Foelix, Droit International
Prive (4th ed., by Demangeat, 1866) lib. 2, tits. 7, 8; Moreau,
Effets Internationaux des Jugements (1884); Piggott, on Foreign
Judgments (2d ed., 1884); Constant, De l'Execution des Jugements
Etrangers (2d ed., 1890), giving the text of the articles of most
of the modern codes upon the subject, and of French treaties with
Italian, German, and Swiss states, and numerous papers in Clunet's
Journal de Droit International Prive, established in 1874 and
continued to the present time. For the reasons stated at the outset
of this opinion, we have not thought it important to state the
conflicting theories of continental commentators
Page 159 U. S. 215
and essayists as to what each may think the law ought to be, but
have referred to their works only for evidence of authoritative
declarations, legislative or judicial, of what the law is.
By the law of France, settled by a series of uniform decisions
of the Court of Cassation, the highest judicial tribunal, for more
than half a century, no foreign judgment can be rendered executory
in France without a review of the judgment
au fond (to the
bottom), including the whole merits of the cause of action on which
the judgment rests. Pardessus, Droit Commercial § 1488; Bard,
Precis de Droit International (1883) nos. 234-239; Story on
Conflict of Laws §§ 615-617; Pigggott 452; Westllake on
Private International Law (3d ed., 1890) 350.
A leading case was decided by the Court of Cassation on April
19, 1819, and was as follows: a contract of partnership was made
between Holker, a French merchant, and Parker, a citizen of the
United States. Afterwards, and before the partnership accounts were
settled, Parker came to France, and Holker sued him in the Tribunal
of Commerce of Paris. Parker excepted on the ground that he was a
foreigner, not domiciled in France, and obtained a judgment,
affirmed on appeal, remitting the matter to the American courts --
obtint son renvoi devant les tribunaux Americains. Holker
then sued Parker in the Circuit Court of the United States for the
District of Massachusetts, and in 1814 obtained a judgment there
ordering Parker to pay him $529,949. One branch of the controversy
had been brought before this Court in 1813.
Holker v.
Parker, 7 Cranch 436. Holker, not being able to
obtain execution of that judgment in America because Parker had no
property there and continued to reside in Paris, obtained from a
French judge an order declaring the judgment executory. Upon
Parker's application to nullify the proceeding, the Royal Court of
Paris, reversing the judgment of a lower court, set aside that
order, assigning these reasons:
"Considering that judgments rendered by foreign courts have
neither effect nor authority in France; that this rule is doubtless
more particularly applicable
Page 159 U. S. 216
in favor of Frenchmen, to whom the King and his officers owe a
special protection, but that the principle is absolute, and may be
invoked by all persons, without distinction, being founded on the
independence of states; that the ordinance of 1629, in the
beginning of its article 121, lays down the principle in its
generality when it says that judgments rendered in foreign kingdoms
and sovereignties for any cause whatever shall have no execution in
the Kingdom of France, and that the Civil Code, art. 2123, gives to
this principle the same latitude when it declares that a lien
cannot result from judgments rendered in a foreign country, except
so far as they have been declared executory by a French tribunal --
which is not a matter of mere form, like the granting in past times
of a
pareatis from one department to another for judgments
rendered within the Kingdom, but which assumes, on the part of the
French tribunals, a cognizance of the cause, and a full examination
of the justice of the judgment presented for execution, as reason
demands, and that this has always been practiced in France,
according to the testimony of our ancient authorities; that there
may result from this an inconvenience where the debtor, as is
asserted to have happened in the present case, removes his property
and his person to France, while keeping his domicile in his native
country; that it is for the creditor to be watchful, but that no
consideration can impair a principle on which rests the sovereignty
of governments, and which, whatever be the case, must preserve its
whole force."
The court therefore adjudged that, before the tribunal of first
instance, Holker should state the grounds of his action, to be
contested by Parker, and to be determined by the court upon
cognizance of the whole cause. That judgment was confirmed, upon
deliberate consideration, by the Court of Cassation, for the
reasons that the ordinance of 1629 enacted, in absolute terms and
without exception, that foreign judgments should not have execution
in France; that it was only by the Civil Code and the Code of Civil
Procedure that the French tribunals had been authorized to declare
them executory; that therefore the ordinance of 1629 had no
application; that the articles of the Codes
Page 159 U. S. 217
referred to did not authorize the courts to declare judgments
rendered in a foreign country executory in France without
examination; that such an authorization would be as contrary to the
institution of the courts as would be the award or the refusal of
execution arbitrarily and at will, would impeach the right of
sovereignty of the French government, and was not in the intention
of the legislature, and that the Codes made no distinction between
different judgments rendered in a foreign country, and permitted
the judges to declare them all executory, and therefore those
judgments, whether against a Frenchman or against a foreigner, were
subject to examination on the merits.
Holker v. Parker,
Merlin, Questions do Droit, Jugement, § 14, No. 2.
The Court of Cassation has ever since constantly affirmed the
same view. Moreau, No. 106, note, citing many decisions; Clunet,
1882, p. 166. In Clunet, 1894, p. 913, note, it is said to be
"settled by judicial decisions --
il est de
jurisprudence -- that the French courts are bound, in the
absence of special diplomatic treaties, to proceed to the revision
on the whole merits --
au fond -- of foreign judgments,
execution of which is demanded of them,"
citing, among other cases, a decision of the Court of Cassation
on February 2, 1892, by which it was expressly held to result from
the articles of the Codes above cited
"that judgments rendered in favor of a foreigner against a
Frenchman, by a foreign court, are subject, when execution of them
is demanded in France, to the revision of the French tribunals
which have the right and the duty to examine them, both as to the
form and as to the merits."
Sirey, 1892, 1, 201.
In Belgium the Code of Civil Procedure of 1876 provides that if
a treaty on the basis of reciprocity be in existence between
Belgium and the country in which the foreign judgment has been
given, the examination of the judgment in the Belgian courts shall
bear only upon the questions whether it "contains nothing contrary
to public order, to the principles of the Belgian public order;"
whether, by the law of the country in which it was rendered, it has
the force of
res judicata; whether the copy is duly
authenticated; whether the
Page 159 U. S. 218
defendant's rights have been duly respected, and whether the
foreign court is not the only competent court, by reason of the
nationality of the plaintiff. Where, as is the case between Belgium
and France, there is no such treaty, the Belgian Court of Cassation
holds that the foreign judgment may be reexamined upon the merits.
Constant, 111, 116; Moreau, No. 189; Clunet, 1887, p. 217; 1888, p.
837; Piggott 439. And in a very recent case, the Civil Tribunal of
Brussels held that,
"considering that the right of revision is an emanation of the
right of sovereignty; that it proceeds from the
emporium,
and that as such it is within the domain of public law; that from
that principle it manifestly follows that, if the legislature does
not recognize executory force in foreign judgments where there
exists no treaty upon the basis of reciprocity, it cannot belong to
the parties to substitute their will for that of the legislature by
arrogating to themselves the power of delegating to the foreign
judge a portion of sovereignty."
Clunet, 1894, pp. 164, 165.
In Holland, the effect given to foreign judgments has always
depended upon reciprocity, but whether by reason of Dutch
ordinances only or of general principles of jurisprudence does not
clearly appear.
Odwin v. Forbes, and Henry on Foreign Law,
above cited; Story on Conflict of Laws § 618; Foelix, No. 397,
note; Clunet, 1879, p. 369; 1 Ferguson's International Law, 85;
Constant, 171; Moreau, No. 213.
In Denmark, the courts appear to require reciprocity to be shown
before they will execute a foreign judgment. Foelix, Nos. 328, 345;
Clunet, 1891, p. 987; Westlale,
ubi sup. In Norway, the
courts reexamine the merits of all foreign judgments, even of those
of Sweden. Foelix, No. 401; Piggott, 504, 505; Clunet, 1892, p.
296. In Sweden, the principle of reciprocity has prevailed from
very ancient times. The courts give no effect to foreign judgments
unless upon that principle, and it is doubtful whether they will
even then unless reciprocity is secured by treaty with the country
in which the judgment was rendered. Foelix, No. 400; Olivecrona, in
Clunet, 1880, p. 83; Constant, 191; Moreau, No. 222; Piggott, 503;
Westlake,
ubi sup.
Page 159 U. S. 219
In the empire of Germany, as formerly in the states which now
form part of that empire, the judgments of those states are
mutually executed, and the principle of reciprocity prevails as to
the judgments of other countries. Foelix, Nos. 328, 331, 333-341;
Moreau, Nos. 178, 179; Vierhaus, in Piggott, 460-474; Westlake,
ubi sup. By the German Code of 1877,
"compulsory execution of the judgment of a foreign court cannot
take place unless its admissibility has been declared by a judgment
of exequatur; . . . the judgment of exequatur is to be rendered
without examining whether the decision is conformable to law;"
but it is not to be granted "if reciprocity is not guaranteed."
Constant, 79-81; Piggott, 466. The Reichsgericht, or imperial
court, in a case reported in full in Piggott, has held that an
English judgment cannot be executed in Germany, because, the court
said, the German courts, by the Code, when they execute foreign
judgments at all, are "bound to the unqualified recognition of the
legal validity of the judgments of foreign courts," and
"it is therefore an essential requirement of reciprocity that
the law of the foreign state should recognize in an equal degree
the legal validity of the judgments of German courts, which are to
be enforced by its courts, and that an examination of their
legality, both as regards the material justice of the decision as
to matters of fact or law, and with respect to matters of
procedure, should neither be required as a condition of their
execution, by the court
ex officio, nor be allowed by the
admission of pleas which might lead to it."
Piggott, 470-471.
See also Clunet, 1882, p. 35; 1883,
p. 246; 1884, p. 600.
In Switzerland, by the federal Constitution, civil judgments in
one canton are executory throughout the republic. As to foreign
judgments, there is no federal law, each canton having its own law
upon the subject. But civil judgments in one canton are executory
other cantons, foreign judgments are executed according to the rule
of reciprocity only. Constant, 193-204; Piggott, 505-516; Clunet,
1887, p. 762; Westlake,
ubi sup. The law upon this subject
has been clearly stated by Brocher, President of the Court of
Cassation of Geneva and professor of law in the university there.
In his Nouveau
Page 159 U. S. 220
Traite de Droit International Prive (1876) § 174, treating
of the question whether "it might not be convenient that states
should execute, without reviewing their merits, judgments rendered
on the territory of each of them respectively," he says:
"It would certainly be advantageous for the parties interested
to avoid the delays, the conflicts, the differences of opinion, and
the expenses resulting from the necessity of obtaining a new
judgment in each locality where they should seek execution. There
might thence arise for each sovereignty a juridical or moral
obligation to lend a strong hand to foreign judgments. But would
not such an advantage be counterbalanced, and often surpassed, by
the dangers that might arise from that mode of proceeding? There is
here, we believe, a question of reciprocal appreciation and
confidence. One must at the outset inquire whether the
administration of the foreign judiciary, whose judgments it is
sought to execute without verifying their merits, presents
sufficient guaranties. If the propriety of such an execution be
admitted, there is ground for making it the object of diplomatic
treaties. That form alone can guaranty the realization of a proper
reciprocity. It furnishes, moreover, to each state the means of
acting upon the judicial organization and procedure of other
states."
In an article in the Journal, after a review of the Swiss
decisions, he recognizes and asserts that "it comes within the
competency of each canton to do what seems to it proper in such
matters." Clunet, 1879, pp. 88, 94. And in a later treatise he
says:
"We cannot admit that the recognition of a state as sovereign
ought necessarily to have as a consequence the obligation of
respecting and executing the judicial decisions rendered by its
tribunals. In strict right, the authority of such acts does not
extend beyond the frontier. Each sovereignty possesses in
particular, and more or less in private, the territory subject to
its power. No other can exercise there an act of its authority.
This territorial independence finds itself, in principle, directly
included in the very act by which one nation recognizes a foreign
state as a sovereign; but there cannot result therefrom a promise
to adopt, and to cause to be executed upon the national territory,
judgments rendered by
Page 159 U. S. 221
the officials of the foreign state, whoever they may be. That
would be an abdication of its own sovereignty, and would bind it in
such sort as to make it an accomplice in acts often injurious, and
in some cases even criminal. Such obligations suppose a reciprocal
confidence. They are not undertaken, moreover, except upon certain
conditions, and by means of a system of regulations intended to
prevent or to lessen the dangers which might result from them."
3 Cours de Droit International Prive (1885) 126, 127.
In Russia, by the Code of 1864, "the judgments of foreign
tribunals shall be rendered executory according to the rules
established by reciprocal treaties and conventions," and where no
rules have been established by such treaties, are to be "put in
execution in the empire only after authorization granted by the
courts of the empire," and
"in deciding upon demands of this kind the courts do not examine
into the foundation of the dispute adjudged by the foreign
tribunals, but decide only whether the judgment does not contain
dispositions which are contrary to the public order, or which are
not permitted by the laws of the empire."
Constant, 183-185. Yet a chamber of the Senate of St.
Petersburg, sitting as a Court of Cassation, and the highest
judicial tribunal of the empire in civil matters, has declined to
execute a French judgment upon the grounds that, by the settled law
of Russia,
"it is a principle in the Russian empire that only the decisions
of the authorities to whom jurisdiction has been delegated by the
sovereign power have legal value by themselves and of full
right,"
and that, "in all questions of international law, reciprocity
must be observed and maintained as a fundamental principle."
Adam v. Schipoff, Clunet, 1884, pp. 45, 46, 134. And
Professor Englemann, of the Russian University of Dorpat, in an
able essay, explaining that and other Russian decisions, takes the
following view of them:
"The execution of a treaty is not the only proof of reciprocity.
. . . It is necessary to commit the ascertainment of the existence
of reciprocity to the judicial tribunals, for the same reasons for
which there is conferred upon them the right to settle all
questions incident to the cause to be adjudged. The existence of
reciprocity between
Page 159 U. S. 222
two states ought to be proved in the same manner as all the
positive facts of the case. . . . It is true that the principle of
reciprocity is a principle not of right, but of policy, yet the
basis of the principle of all regular and real policy is also the
fundamental principle of right, and the point of departure of all
legal order -- the
suum cuique. This last principle
comprehends right, reciprocity, utility, and reciprocity is the
application of right to policy. . . . Let this principle be applied
wherever there is the least guaranty or even a probability of
reciprocity, and the cognizance of this question be committed to
the judicial tribunals, and one will arrive at important results,
which, on their side, will touch the desired end -- international
accord. But for this it is indispensable that the application of
this principle should be entrusted to judicial tribunals,
accustomed to decide affairs according to right, and not to
administrative authorities, which look above all to utility, and
are accustomed to be moved by political reasons, intentions, and
even passions."
Clunet, 1884, pp. 120-122. But it would seem that no foreign
judgment will be executed in Russia unless reciprocity is secured
by treaty. Clunet, 1884, pp. 46, 113, 139, 140, 602.
In Poland, the provisions of the Russian Code are in force, and
the Court of Appeal of Warsaw has decided that where there is no
treaty, the judgments of a foreign country cannot be executed,
because
"in admitting a contrary conclusion, there would be impugned one
of the cardinal principles of international relations, namely the
principle of reciprocity, according to which each state recognizes
juridical rights and relations, originating or established in
another country, only in the measure in which the latter, in its
turn, does not disregard the rights and relations existing in the
former."
Clunet, 1884, pp. 494-495.
In Roumania, it is provided by Code that
"judicial decisions rendered in foreign countries cannot be
executed in Roumania except in the same manner in which Roumanian
judgments are executed in the country in question, and provided
they are declared executory by competent Roumanian judges,"
and this article seems to be held to require legislative
reciprocity.
Page 159 U. S. 223
Moreau, No. 219; Clunet, 1879, p. 351; 1885, p. 537; 1891, p.
452; Piggott, 495.
In Bulgaria, by a resolution of the supreme court in 1881,
"the Bulgarian judges should, as a general rule, abstain from
entering upon the merits of the foreign judgment. They ought only
to inquire whether the judgment submitted to then does not contain
dispositions contrary to the public order and to the Bulgarian
laws."
Constant, 129, 130; Clunet, 1886, p. 570. This resolution
closely follows the terms of the Russian Code, which, as has been
seen, has not precluded applying the principle of reciprocity.
In Austria, the rule of reciprocity does not rest upon any
treaty or legislative enactment, but has been long established, by
imperial decrees and judicial decisions, upon general principles of
jurisprudence. Foelix, No. 331; Constant, 100-108; Moreau, No. 185;
Weiss, Traite de Droit International (1886) 950; Clunet, 1891, p.
1003; 1894, p. (1886) 980; Clunet, 1891, p. 1003; 1894, p. 908;
Piggott, 434. In Hungary, the same principles were always followed
as in Austria, and reciprocity has been made a condition by a law
of 1880. Constant, 109; Moreau, No. 186, and note; Piggott, 436;
Weiss,
ubi sup.
In Italy, before it was united into one kingdom, each state had
its own rules. In Tuscany and in Modena, in the absence of treaty,
the whole merits were reviewed. In Parma, as by the French
ordinance of 1629, the foreign judgment was subject to fundamental
revision if against a subject of Parma. In Naples, the Code and the
decisions followed those of France. In Sardinia, the written laws
required above all the condition of reciprocity, and if that
condition was not fulfilled, the foreign judgment was reexaminable
in all respects. Fiore, Effetti Internazionali delle Sentenze
(1875) 40-44; Moreau, No. 204. In the papal states, by a decree of
the Pope in 1820,
"the exequatur shall not be granted, except so far as the
judgments rendered in the states of his Holiness shall enjoy the
same favor in the foreign countries; this reciprocity is presumed
if there is no particular reason to doubt it."
Toullier, Droit Civil, lib. 3, tit. 3, c. 6, § 3, No. 93.
And see Foelix, No. 343; Westlake,
ubi sup. In
the Kingdom of Italy,
Page 159 U. S. 224
by the Code of Procedure of 1865,
"executory force is given to the judgments of foreign judicial
authorities by the Court of Appeal in whose jurisdiction they are
to be executed, by obtaining a judgment on an exequatur in which
the court examines (a) if the judgment has been pronounced by a
competent judicial authority; (b) if it has been pronounced, the
parties being regularly cited; (c) if the parties have been legally
represented or legally defaulted; (d) if the judgment contains
dispositions contrary to public order or to the internal public law
of the realm."
Constant, 157. In 1874, the Court of Cassation of Turin,
"considering that in international relations is admitted the
principle of reciprocity, as that which has its foundation in the
natural reason of equality of treatment, and in default thereof
opens the way to the exercise of the right of retaliation,"
and that the French courts examine the merits of Italian
judgments before allowing their execution in France, decided that
the Italian courts of appeal, when asked to execute a French
judgment, ought not only to inquire into the competency of the
foreign court, but also to review the merits and the justice of the
controversy.
Levi v. Pitre, in Rossi, Execuzione delle
Sentenze Straniere (1st ed. 1875) 70, 284, and in Clunet, 1879, p.
295. Some commentators, however, while admitting that decision to
be most authoritative, have insisted that it is unsound, and
opposed to other Italian decisions, to which we have not access.
Rossi,
ubi sup. (2d ed. 1890) 92; Fiore, 142-143; Clunet,
1878, p. 237; Clunet, 1879, pp. 296, 305; Piggott, 483; Constant,
161.
In the principality of Monaco, foreign judgments are not
executory, except by virtue of a special ordinance of the prince,
upon a report of the Advocate General. Constant, 169; Piggott,
488.
In Spain, formerly, foreign judgments do not appear to have been
executed at all. Foelix, No. 398; Moreau, No. 197; Silvela, in
Clunet, 1881, p. 20. But by the Code of 1855, revised in 1881
without change in this respect,
"judgments pronounced in foreign countries shall have in Spain
the force that the respective treaties given them; if there are no
special treaties with the nation in which they have been rendered,
they shall
Page 159 U. S. 225
have the same force that is given by the laws of that nation to
Spanish executory judgments; if the judgment to be executed
proceeds from a nation by whose jurisprudence effect is not given
to the judgments pronounced by Spanish tribunals, it shall have no
force in Spain,"
and
"application for the execution of judgments pronounced in
foreign countries shall be made to the Supreme Tribunal of Justice,
which, after examining an authorized translation of the foreign
judgment, and after hearing the party against whom it is directed
and the public minister, shall decide whether it ought or ought not
to be executed."
Constant, 141-142; Piggott, 499-500. A case in which the Supreme
Court of Spain in 1880 ordered execution of a French judgment after
reviewing its merits is reported in Clunet, 1881, p. 365. In
another case, in 1888, the same court, after hearing the parties
and the public minister, ordered execution of a Mexican judgment.
The public minister, in his demand for its execution, said:
"Our law of civil procedure, inspired, to a certain point, by
the modern theories of international law which, recognizing among
civilized nations a true community of right, and considering
mankind as a whole, in which nations occupy a position identical
with that of individuals towards society, gives authority in Spain
to executory judgments rendered by foreign tribunals, even in the
absence of special treaty, provided that those countries do not
proscribe the execution there of our judgments, and under certain
conditions, which, if they limit the principle, are inspired by the
wish of protecting our sovereignty and by the supreme exigencies of
justice. When nothing appears either for or against as to the
authority of the judgments of our courts in the foreign country,
one should not put an obstacle to the fulfillment, in our country,
of judgments emanating from other nations, especially when the
question is of a country which, by its historic origin, its
language, its literature, and by almost the identity of its
customs, its usages, and its social institutions, has so great a
connection with our own, which obliges us to maintain with it the
most intimate relations of friendship and courtesy."
And he pointed out that Mexico, by its Code, had adopted
reciprocity as a fundamental principle.
Page 159 U. S. 226
Among the reasons assigned by the court for ordering the Mexican
judgment to be executed was that "there exists in Mexico no
precedent of jurisprudence which refuses execution to judgments
rendered by the Spanish tribunals." Clunet, 1891, pp. 288-292.
In Portugal, foreign judgments, whether against a Portuguese or
against a foreigner, are held to be reviewable upon the merits
before granting execution thereof. Foelix, No. 399; Clunet, 1875,
pp. 54, 448; Moreau, No. 217; Constant, 176-180; Westlake,
ubi
sup.
In Greece, by the provisions of the Code of 1834, foreign
judgments both parties to which are foreigners are enforced without
examination of their merits, but if one of the parties is a Greek,
they are not enforced if found contradictory to the facts proved or
if they are contrary to the prohibitive laws of Greece. Foelix, No.
396; Constant, 151, 152; Moreau, No. 202; Saripolos, in Clunet,
1880, p. 173; Piggott, 475.
In Egypt, under the influence of European jurisprudence, the
Code of Civil Procedure has made reciprocity a condition upon which
foreign judgments are executed. Constant, 136; Clunet, 1887, pp.
98, 228; 1889, p. 322.
In Cuba and in Porto Rico, the Codes of Civil Procedure are
based upon the Spanish Code of 1855. Piggott, 435, 503. In Hayti,
the Code reenacts the provisions of the French Code. Constant, 153;
Moreau, No. 203; Piggott, 460.
In Mexico, the system of reciprocity has been adopted by the
Code of 1884 as the governing principle. Constant, 168; Clunet,
1891, p. 290.
The rule of reciprocity likewise appears to have generally
prevailed in South America. In Peru, foreign judgments do not
appear to be executed without examining the merits unless when
reciprocity is secured by treaty. Clunet, 1879, pp. 266, 267;
Piggott, 548. In Chili, there appears to have been no legislation
upon the subject, but, according to a decision of the Supreme Court
of Santiago in 1886, "the Chilian tribunals should not award an
exequatur, except upon decisions in correct form, and also
reserving the general principle of reciprocity." Clunet, 1889, p.
135; Constant, 131-132.
Page 159 U. S. 227
In Brazil, foreign judgments are not executed unless because of
the country in which they were rendered admitting the principle of
reciprocity or because of a placet of the government of Brazil,
which may be awarded according to the circumstances of the case.
Constant, 124, and note; Moreau, No. 192; Piggott, 543-546;
Westlake,
ubi sup. In the Argentine Republic, the
principle of reciprocity was maintained by the courts, and was
affirmed by the Code of 1878 as a condition
sine qua non
of the execution of foreign judgments, but has perhaps been
modified by later legislation. Moreau, No. 218; Palomeque, in
Clunet, 1887, pp. 539-558.
It appears, therefore, that there is hardly a civilized nation
on either continent which by its general law allows conclusive
effect to an executory foreign judgment for the recovery of money.
In France and in a few smaller states -- Norway, Portugal, Greece,
Monaco, and Hayti -- the merits of the controversy are reviewed as
of course, allowing to the foreign judgment, at the most, no more
effect than of being
prima facie evidence of the justice
of the claim. In the great majority of the countries on the
continent of Europe -- in Belgium, Holland, Denmark, Sweden,
Germany, in many cantons of Switzerland, in Russia and Poland, in
Roumania, in Austria and Hungary (perhaps in Italy), and in Spain
-- as well as in Egypt, in Mexico, and in a great part of South
America, the judgment rendered in a foreign country is allowed the
same effect only as the courts of that country allow to the
judgments of the country in which the judgment in question is
sought to be executed.
The prediction of Mr. Justice Story (in § 618 of his
Commentaries on the Conflict of Laws, already cited) has thus been
fulfilled, and the rule of reciprocity has worked itself firmly
into the structure of international jurisprudence.
The reasonable, if not the necessary, conclusion appears to us
to be that judgments rendered in France, or in any other foreign
country by the laws of which our own judgments are reviewable upon
the merits are not entitled to full credit and conclusive effect
when sued upon in this country, but are
prima facie
evidence only of the justice of the plaintiffs' claim.
Page 159 U. S. 228
In holding such a judgment, for want of reciprocity, not to be
conclusive evidence of the merits of the claim, we do not proceed
upon any theory of retaliation upon one person by reason of
injustice done to another, but upon the broad ground that
international law is founded upon mutuality and reciprocity, and
that by the principles of international law recognized in most
civilized nations, and by the comity of our own country, which it
is our judicial duty to known and to declare, the judgment is not
entitled to be considered conclusive.
By our law at the time of the adoption of the Constitution, a
foreign judgment was considered as
prima facie evidence,
and not conclusive. There is no statute of the United States, and
no treaty of the United States with France or with any other
nation, which has changed that law or has made any provision upon
the subject. It is not to be supposed that if any statute or treaty
had been or should be made, it would recognize as conclusive the
judgments of any country which did not give like effect to our own
judgments. In the absence of statute or treaty, it appears to us
equally unwarrantable to assume that the comity of the United
States requires anything more.
If we should hold this judgment to be conclusive, we should
allow it an effect to which, supposing the defendants' offers to be
sustained by actual proof, it would, in the absence of a special
treaty, be entitled in hardly any other country in Christendom
except the country in which it was rendered. If the judgment had
been rendered in this country, or in any other outside of the
jurisdiction of France, the French courts would not have executed
or enforced it except after examining into its merits. The very
judgment now sued on would be held inconclusive in almost any other
country than France. In England and in the colonies subject to the
law of England, the fraud alleged in its procurement would be a
sufficient ground for disregarding it. In the courts of nearly
every other nation, it would be subject to reexamination either
merely because it was a foreign judgment or because judgments of
that nation would be reexaminable in the courts of France.
Page 159 U. S. 229
For these reasons, in the action at law, the
Judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the circuit
court, with directions to set aside the verdict and to order a new
trial.
For the same reasons, in the suit in equity between these
parties, the foreign judgment is not a bar, and therefore the
Decree dismissing the bill is reversed the plea adjudged
bad, and the cause remanded to the circuit court for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
*
Bartlet v. Knight (1805), 1 Mass. 401, 405;
Buttrick v. Allen (1811), 8 Mass. 273;
Bissell v.
Briggs (1813), 9 Mass. 462, 464;
Hall v. Williams
(1828), 6 Pick. 232, 238;
Gleason v. Dodd (1842), 4 Met.
333, 336;
Wood v. Gamble (1853), 11 Cush. 8;
McKim v.
Odom (1835), 12 Me. 94, 96;
Bank v. Butman (1848), 29
Me. 19, 21;
Bryant v. Ela (1815), Smith 396, 404;
Thurber v. Blackbourne (1818), 1 N.H. 242;
Robinson v.
Prescott (1828), 4 N.H. 450;
Taylor v. Barron (1855),
10 Fost. 78, 95;
King v. Van Gilder (1791), 1 D.Chip. 59;
Rathbone v. Terry (1837), 1 R.I. 73, 76;
Aldrich v.
Kinney (1822), 4 Conn. 380, 382;
Hitchcock v. Aicken
(1803), 1 Caines 460;
Smith v. Lewis (1808), 3 Johns. 157,
159;
Taylor v. Bryden (1811), 8 Johns. 173;
Andrews v.
Montgomery (1821), 19 Johns. 162, 165;
Starbuck v.
Murray (1830), 5 Wend. 148, 155;
Benton v. Burgot
(1823), 10 S. & R. 240-242;
Barney v. Patterson
(1824), 6 H. & J. 182, 202, 203;
Taylor v. Phelps
(1827), 1 H. & G. 492, 503;
Rogers v. Coleman (1808),
Hardin 413-414;
Williams v. Preston (1830), 3 J. J. Marsh.
600, 601.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE
HARLAN, MR. JUSTICE BREWER, and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON,
dissenting.
Plaintiffs brought their action on a judgment recovered by them
against the defendants in the courts of France, which courts had
jurisdiction over person and subject matter, and in respect of
which judgment no fraud was alleged, except in particulars
contested in and considered by the French courts. The question is
whether, under these circumstances and in the absence of a treaty
or act of Congress, the judgment is reexaminable upon the merits.
This question I regard as one to be determined by the ordinary and
settled rule in respect of allowing a party who has had an
opportunity to prove his case in a competent court to retry it on
the merits, and it seems to me that the doctrine of
res
judicata applicable to domestic judgments should be applied to
foreign judgments as well, and rests on the same general ground of
public policy -- that there should be an end of litigation.
This application of the doctrine is in accordance with our own
jurisprudence, and it is not necessary that we should hold it to be
required by some rule of international law. The fundamental
principle concerning judgments is that disputes are finally
determined by them, and I am unable to perceive why a judgment
in personam, which is not open to question on the ground
of want of jurisdiction, either intrinsically or over the parties,
or of fraud, or on any other recognized ground of impeachment,
should not be held,
inter partes, though recovered abroad,
conclusive on the merits.
Page 159 U. S. 230
Judgments are executory while unpaid, but in this country,
execution is not given upon a foreign judgment as such, it being
enforced through a new judgment obtained in an action brought for
that purpose.
The principle that requires litigation to be treated as
terminated by final judgment, properly rendered, is as applicable
to a judgment proceeded on in such an action as to any other, and
forbids the allowance to the judgment debtor of a retrial of the
original cause of action, as of right, in disregard of the
obligation to pay arising on the judgment, and of the rights
acquired by the judgment creditor thereby.
That any other conclusion is inadmissible is forcibly
illustrated by the case in hand. Plaintiffs in error were trading
copartners in Paris as well as in New York, and had a place of
business in Paris at the time of these transactions and of the
commencement of the suit against them in France. The subjects of
the suit were commercial transactions, having their origin, and
partly performed, in France under a contract there made, and
alleged to be modified by the dealings of the parties there, and
one of the claims against them was for goods sold to them there.
They appeared generally in the case, without protest, and by
counterclaims relating to the same general course of business, a
part of them only connected with the claims against them, became
actors in the suit, and submitted to the courts their own claims
for affirmative relief, as well as the claims against them. The
courts were competent, and they took the chances of a decision in
their favor. As traders in France, they were under the protection
of its laws, and were bound by its laws, its commercial usages, and
its rules of procedure. The fact that they were Americans and the
opposite parties were citizens of France is immaterial, and there
is no suggestion on the record that those courts proceeded on any
other ground than that all litigants, whatever their nationality,
were entitled to equal justice therein. If plaintiffs in error had
succeeded in their cross-suit and recovered judgment against
defendants in error, and had sued them here on that judgment,
defendants in error would not have been permitted to say that the
judgment in France was
Page 159 U. S. 231
not conclusive against them. As it was, defendants in error
recovered, and I think plaintiffs in error are not entitled to try
their fortune anew before the courts of this country on the same
matters voluntarily submitted by them to the decision of the
foreign tribunal. We are dealing with the judgment of a court of a
civilized country, whose laws and system of justice recognize the
general rules in respect to property and rights between man and man
prevailing among all civilized peoples. Obviously the last persons
who should be heard to complain are those who identified themselves
with the business of that country, knowing that all their
transactions there would be subject to the local laws and modes of
doing business. The French courts appear to have acted "judicially,
honestly, and with the intention to arrive at the right
conclusion," and a result thus reached ought not to be
disturbed.
The following view of the rule in England was expressed by Lord
Herschell in
Nouvion v. Freeman, L.R. 15 App.Cas. 1, 9,
quoted in the principal opinion:
"The principle upon which I think our enforcement of foreign
judgments must proceed is this, that in a court of competent
jurisdiction, where, according to its established procedure, the
whole merits of the case were open at all events, to the parties,
however much they may have failed to take advantage of them or may
have waived any of their rights, a final adjudication has been
given that a debt or obligation exists, which cannot thereafter in
that court be disputed, and can only be questioned in an appeal to
a higher tribunal. In such a case, it may well be said that, giving
credit to the court of another country, we are prepared to take the
fact that such adjudication has been made as establishing the
existence of the debt or obligation."
But in that connection, the observations made by Mr. Justice
Blackburn in
Godard v. Gray, L.R. 6 Q.B. 139, 148, and
often referred to with approval, may usefully again be quoted:
"It is not an admitted principle of the law of nations that a
state is bound to enforce within its territories the judgments of a
foreign tribunal. Several of the continental nations (including
France) do not enforce the judgments of other countries
Page 159 U. S. 232
unless where there are reciprocal treaties to that effect. But
in England and in those states which are governed by the common
law, such judgments are enforced not by virtue of any treaty nor by
virtue of any statute, but upon a principle very well stated by
Parke, B., in
Williams v. Jones, 13 M. & W. 633:"
"Where a court of competent jurisdiction had adjudicated a
certain sum to be due from one person to another, a legal
obligation arises to pay that sum, on which an action of debt to
enforce the judgment may be maintained. It is in this way that the
judgments of foreign and colonial courts are supported and
enforced."
"And taking this as the principle, it seems to follow that
anything which negatives the existence of that legal obligation, or
excuses the defendant from the performance of it, must form a good
defense to the action. It must be open, therefore, to the defendant
to show that the court which pronounced the judgment had not
jurisdiction to pronounce it, either because they exceeded the
jurisdiction given to them by the foreign law or because he, the
defendant, was not subject to that jurisdiction, and so far the
foreign judgment must be examinable. Probably the defendant may
show that the judgment was obtained by the fraud of the plaintiff,
for that would show that the defendant was excused from the
performance of an obligation thus obtained, and it may be that
where the foreign court has knowingly and perversely disregarded
the rights given to an English subject by English law, that forms a
valid excuse for disregarding the obligation thus imposed on him;
but we prefer to imitate the caution of the present lord Chancellor
in
Castrique v. Imrie, L.R. 4 H.L. 445, and to leave those
questions to be decided when they arise, only observing in the
present case, as in that:"
"The whole of the facts appear to have been inquired into by the
French courts judicially, honestly, and with the intention to
arrive at the right conclusion; and, having heard the facts as
stated before them, they came to a conclusion which justified them
in France in deciding as they did decide. . . ."
"Indeed, it is difficult to understand how the common course of
pleading is consistent with any notion that the judgment was only
evidence. If that were so, every count on a
Page 159 U. S. 233
foreign judgment must be demurrable on that ground. The mode of
pleading shows that the judgment was considered not as merely
prima facie evidence of that cause of action for which the
judgment was given, but as in itself giving rise at least
prima
facie to a legal obligation to obey that judgment and pay the
sum adjudged. This may seem a technical mode of dealing with the
question, but in truth it goes to the root of the matter, for if
the judgment were merely considered as evidence of the original
cause of action, it must be open to meet it by any counter evidence
negativing the existence of that original cause of action. If, on
the other hand, there is a
prima facie obligation to obey
the judgment of a tribunal having jurisdiction over the party and
the cause, and to pay the sum decreed, the question would be
whether it was open to the unsuccessful party to try the cause over
again in a court not sitting as a court of appeal from that which
gave the judgment. It is quite clear that this could not be done
where the action is brought on the judgment of an English tribunal,
and, on principle, it seems the same rule should apply where it is
brought on that of a foreign tribunal."
In any aspect, it is difficult to see why rights acquired under
foreign judgments do not belong to the category of private rights
acquired under foreign laws. Now the rule is universal in this
country that private rights acquired under the laws of foreign
states will be respected and enforced in our courts unless contrary
to the policy or prejudicial to the interests of the state where
this is sought to be done, and, although the source of this rule
may have been the comity characterizing the intercourse between
nations, it prevails today by its own strength, and the right to
the application of the law to which the particular transaction is
subject is a juridical right.
And without going into the refinements of the publicists on the
subject, it appears to me that that law finds authoritative
expression in the judgments of courts of competent jurisdiction
over parties and subject matter.
It is held by the majority of the court that defendants cannot
be permitted to contest the validity and effect of this judgment on
the general ground that it was erroneous in law
Page 159 U. S. 234
or in fact and the special grounds relied on are
seriatim rejected. In respect of the last of these -- that
of fraud -- it is said that it is unnecessary in this case to
decide whether certain decisions cited in regard to impeaching
foreign judgments for fraud could be followed consistently with our
own decisions as to impeaching domestic judgments for that
reason,
"because there is a distinct and independent ground upon which
we are satisfied that the comity of our nation does not require us
to give conclusive effect to the judgments of the courts of France,
and that ground is the want of reciprocity on the part of France as
to the effect to be given to the judgments of this and other
foreign countries."
And the conclusion is announced to be
"that judgments rendered in France or in any other foreign
country by the laws of which our own judgments are reviewable upon
the merits are not entitled to full credit and conclusive effect
when sued upon in this country, but are
prima facie
evidence only of the justice of the plaintiff's claim."
In other words, that, although no special ground exists for
impeaching the original justice of a judgment, such as want of
jurisdiction or fraud, the right to retry the merits of the
original cause at large, defendant being put upon proving those
merits, should be accorded in every suit on judgments recovered in
countries where our own judgments are not given full effect, on
that ground merely.
I cannot yield my assent to the proposition that, because by
legislation and judicial decision in France, that effect is not
there given to judgments recovered in this country which, according
to our jurisprudence, we think should be given to judgments
wherever recovered (subject, of course, to the recognized
exceptions), therefore we should pursue the same line of conduct as
respects the judgments of French tribunals. The application of the
doctrine of
res judicata does not rest in discretion, and
it is for the government, and not for its courts, to adopt the
principle of retorsion, if deemed under any circumstances desirable
or necessary.
As the court expressly abstains from deciding whether the
judgment is impeachable on the ground of fraud, I refrain from any
observations on that branch of the case.
Page 159 U. S. 235
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, MR. JUSTICE BREWER, and MR. JUSTICE JACKSON
concur in this dissent.