In dealing with rudimentary contracts, or tort made or committed
abroad, courts may assume a liability to exist if nothing to the
contrary appears, but they cannot assume that the rights and
liabilities are fixed and measured in the same manner in foreign
countries a they are in this.
With rare exceptions, the liabilities of parties to each other
are fixed by the law of the territorial jurisdiction within which
the wrong is done and the parties are at the time of doing it.
The extension of hospitality of our court to foreign suitor must
not be made a cover for injustice to defendant of whom they may be
able to lay hold.
There is no general presumption that the law of Cuba as
inherited from Spain and as since modified is the same as the
common law.
While as between two common law countries the common law may be
presumed to be the same in one as in the other, a statute of one
would not be presumed to be the statute of the other.
A trial court of the United States cannot presume that the same
obligation rest upon an employer in Cuba as in this country to
repair defect in machinery called to his attention, or in case of
failure to repair to be deprived of the fellow-servant defense.
Such a rule of law, if existent in a foreign jurisdiction, must be
proved.
170 F. 369 reversed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 222 U. S. 477
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action for the loss of a hand through a defect in
machinery, in connection with which the defendant in error, the
plaintiff, was employed. The plaintiff had noticed the defect and
reported it, and, according to his testimony, had been promised
that it should be repaired or replaced as soon as they had time,
and he had been told to go on in the meanwhile. The jury was
instructed that, if that was what took place, the defendant company
assumed the risk for a reasonable time, and, in effect, that, if
that time had not expired, the plaintiff was entitled to recover.
The jury found for the plaintiff. The accident took place in Cuba,
and no evidence was given as to the Cuban law, but the judge held
that, if that law was different from the
lex fori, it was
for the defendant to allege and prove it, and that, as it had
pleaded only the general issue, the verdict must stand. 158 F. 144.
The judgment was affirmed by a majority of the circuit court of
appeals. 170 F. 369.
The court below went on the ground that, in the absence of
evidence to the contrary, it would "apply the law as it conceives
it to be, according to its idea of right and justice; or, in other
words, according to the law of the forum." We regard this statement
as too broad, and as having been wrongly applied to this case.
Page 222 U. S. 478
It may be that, in dealing with rudimentary contracts or torts
made or committed abroad, such as promises to pay money for goods
or services, or battery of the person, or conversion of goods,
courts would assume a liability to exist if nothing to the contrary
appeared.
Parrot v. Mexican Central Railway, 207 Mass.
184. Such matters are likely to impose an obligation in all
civilized countries. But when an action is brought upon a cause
arising outside of the jurisdiction, it always should be borne in
mind that the duty of the court is not to administer its notion of
justice, but to enforce an obligation that has been created by a
different law.
Slater v. Mexican National R. Co.,
194 U. S. 120,
194 U. S. 126.
The law of the forum is material only as setting a limit of policy
beyond which such obligations will not be enforced there. With very
rare exceptions, the liabilities of parties to each other are fixed
by the law of the territorial jurisdiction within which the wrong
is done and the parties are at the time of doing it.
American
Banana Co. v. United Fruit Co., 213 U.
S. 347,
213 U. S. 356.
See Bean v. Morris, 221 U. S. 485,
221 U. S.
486-487. That, and that alone, is the foundation of
their rights.
The language of Mr. Justice Bradley in
The Scotland,
105 U. S. 24, with
regard to the application of the
lex fori to a case of
collision between vessels belonging to different nations, and so
subject to no common law, referred to that class of cases and no
others, and was used only in coming to the conclusion that foreign
vessels might take advantage of our limited liability act.
See
also The Chattahoochee, 173 U. S. 540,
173 U. S. 550.
Other exceptional cases are referred to in
American Banana Co.
v. United Fruit Co. ubi supra, such as those arising in
regions having no law that civilized countries would recognize as
adequate. But as to causes of action arising in a civilized
country, the disregard of the foreign law occasionally indicated by
some English judges before the theory to be applied was quite
worked out must be disregarded in its turn. The
Page 222 U. S. 479
principle adopted by the decisions of this Court is clear.
See also Dicey, Confl. of Laws, L.2d ed. 647,
et
seq.
We repeat that the only justification for allowing a party to
recover when the cause of action arose in another civilized
jurisdiction is a well founded belief that it was a cause of action
in that place. The right to recover stands upon that as its
necessary foundation. It is part of the plaintiff's case, and if
there is reason for doubt, he must allege and prove it. The
extension of the hospitality of our courts to foreign suitors must
not be made a cover for injustice to the defendants of whom they
happen to be able to lay hold.
In the case at bar, the court was dealing with the law of Cuba,
a country inheriting the law of Spain, and, we may presume,
continuing it with such modifications as later years may have
brought. There is no general presumption that that law is the same
as the common law. We properly may say that we all know the fact to
be otherwise.
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. v. Rubber Tire
Wheel Co., 164 F. 869. Whatever presumption there is is purely
one of fact, that may be corrected by proof. Therefore the
presumption should be limited to cases in which it reasonably may
be believed to express the fact. Generally speaking, as between two
common law countries, the common law of one reasonably may be
presumed to be what it is decided to be in the other, in a case
tried in the latter state. But a statute of one would not be
presumed to correspond to a statute in the other, and when we leave
common law territory for that where a different system prevails,
obviously the limits must be narrower still.
Savage v.
O'Neil, 44 N.Y. 298;
Crashley v. Press Publishing
Co., 179 N.Y. 27, 32-33;
Aslanian v. Dostumian, 174
Mass. 328, 331.
Even if we should presume that an employee could recover in Cuba
if injured by machinery left defective through the negligence of
his employer's servants, which
Page 222 U. S. 480
would be going far, that would not be enough. The plaintiff
recovered, or, under the instructions stated at the beginning of
this decision at least may have recovered, notwithstanding his
knowledge and appreciation of the danger, on the strength of a
doctrine the peculiarity and difficulties of which are elaborately
displayed in the treatise of Mr. Labatt. 1 Labatt, Master &
Servant, c. 22, esp. § 424. To say that a promise to repair or
replace throws the risk on the master until the time for
performance has gone by, or that it does away with or leaves to the
jury what otherwise would be negligence as matter of law, is
evidence of the great consideration with which workmen are treated
here, but cannot be deemed a necessary incident of all civilized
codes. It could not be assumed without proof that the defendant was
subject to such a rule.
There was some suggestion below that there would be hardship in
requiring the plaintiff to prove his case. But it should be
remembered that parties do not enter into civil relations in
foreign jurisdictions in reliance upon our courts. They could not
complain if our courts refused to meddle with their affairs, and
remitted them to the place that established and would enforce their
rights. A discretion is asserted in some cases even when the policy
of our law is not opposed to the claim.
The Maggie
Hammond, 9 Wall. 435. The only just ground for
complaint would be if their rights and liabilities, when enforced
by our courts, should be measured by a different rule from that
under which the parties dealt.
Judgment reversed.