Bills of exchange drawn in one state of the Union, on persons
living in another state partake of the character of foreign bill,
and ought to be so treated in the courts of the United States.
For all national purposes embraced by the federal Constitution,
the states and the citizens thereof are one, united under the same
sovereign authority and governed by the same laws. In all other
respects, the states, are necessarily foreign and independent of
each other.
The action was instituted in the circuit court on a bill of
exchange drawn on 16 March, 1819, by the defendants at Baltimore on
Stephen Dever at New Orleans in favor of Rosewell L. Colt or order,
of Baltimore, and by him endorsed for value received to the
plaintiff, a citizen of New York.
A judgment was confessed by the defendants for $2,100, subject
to the opinion of the court, upon a case stated, and which
presented the question whether the circuit court had jurisdiction
in the case.
The defendants objected to the jurisdiction on the ground that
the bill was an inland, and not a foreign, bill of exchange, and
therefore the defendants and the drawee Rosewell L. Colt, being
citizens of Maryland, although the bill was regularly in the hands
of the plaintiff as endorsee, who is a citizen of a different
state, the circuit court had no cognizance of the claim.
The provision of the act of Congress upon which the question
arises is in the 11th section of the "Act to establish the judicial
powers of the courts of the United States," passed September 24,
1789. The words of the act are
"Nor shall any district or circuit court have cognizance of any
suit to recover the contents of any promissory note or other chose
in action in favor of an assignee unless a suit might have been
prosecuted in such court to recover the said contents if no
assignment had been made, except in cases of foreign bills of
exchange. "
Page 27 U. S. 587
The judges of the circuit court divided in opinion on the
question of jurisdiction, and ordered the record to be certified to
this Court.
Page 27 U. S. 589
MR. JUSTICE WASHINGTON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action of assumpsit founded on a bill of exchange
drawn at Baltimore in the State of Maryland upon Stephen Dever at
New Orleans in favor of R. L. Colt, a citizen of Maryland, who
endorsed the same to the plaintiff, a citizen of New York. The
action was brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for
the District of Maryland, and upon a case agreed stating the above
facts, the judges of that court were divided in opinion whether
they could entertain jurisdiction of the cause upon the ground
insisted upon by the defendants' counsel that the bill was to be
considered as inland. The difficulty which occasioned the
adjournment of the cause to this Court is produced by the 11th
section of the Judiciary Act of 1789, which declares that no
district or circuit court shall have
"cognizance of
Page 27 U. S. 590
any suit to recover the contents of any promissory note or other
chose in action in favor of an assignee unless a suit might have
been prosecuted in such court to recover the said contents if no
assignment had been made, except in cases of
foreign bills
of exchange."
The only question is whether the bill on which the suit is
founded is to be considered a foreign bill of exchange.
It is to be regretted that so little aid in determining this
question is to be obtained from decided cases either in England, or
in the United States.
Sir William Blackstone, in his commentaries, [
Footnote 1] distinguishes foreign from inland
bills by defining the former as bills drawn by a merchant residing
abroad upon his correspondent in England or
vice versa,
and the latter as those drawn by one person on another when both
drawer and drawee reside within the same Kingdom. Chitty 16, and
the other writers [
Footnote 2]
on bills of exchange are to the same effect, and all of them agree
that until the statutes of 8 and 9 W. III, ch. 17, and 3 and 4
Anne, ch. 9, which placed these two kinds of bills upon the same
footing and subjected inland bills to the same law and custom of
merchants which governed foreign bills, the latter were much more
regarded in the eye of the law than the former, as being thought of
more public concern in the advancement of trade and commerce.
Applying this definition to the political character of the
several states of this union in relation to each other, we are all
clearly of opinion that bills drawn in one of these states upon
persons living in any other of them partake of the character of
foreign bills, and ought so to be treated. For all national
purposes embraced by the federal Constitution, the states and the
citizens thereof are one, united under the same sovereign authority
and governed by the same laws. In all other respects, the states
are necessarily foreign to and independent of each other. Their
constitutions and forms of government being, although republican,
altogether different, as are their laws and institutions. This
sentiment
Page 27 U. S. 591
was expressed with great force by the president of the Court of
Appeals of Virginia in the case of
Warder v. Arrell, 2
Wash. 298, where he states that in cases of contracts, the laws of
a foreign country where the contract was made must govern, and then
adds as follows:
"The same principle applies, though with no greater force, to
the different states of America, for though they form a
confederated government, yet the several states retain their
individual sovereignties and, with respect to their municipal
regulations, are to each other foreign."
This character of the laws of one state in relation to the
others is strongly exemplified in the particular subject under
consideration, which is governed, as to the necessity of protest
and rate of damages, by different rules in the different states. In
none of these laws however, so far as we can discover from
Griffith's Law Register, to which we were referred by the counsel,
except those of Virginia, are bills, drawn in one state upon
another, designated as inland, although the damages allowed upon
protested bills of that description are generally and with great
propriety lower than upon bills drawn upon a country foreign to the
United States, since the disappointment and injury to the holder
must always be greater in the latter than in the former case. It is
for the same reason, no doubt, that by the laws of most of the
states, bills drawn in and upon the same state and protested are
either exempt from damages altogether or the rate is lower upon
them than upon bills drawn on some other of the states.
The only case which was cited at the bar or which has come to
our knowledge to show that a bill drawn in one state upon a person
in any other of the states is an inland bill is that of
Miller
v. Hackley, 5 Johns. 375. Alluding to this case in the third
volume of his Commentaries 63 in a note, Chancellor Kent remarks
very truly that the opinion was not given on the point on which the
decision rested, and he adds that it was rather the opinion of Mr.
Justice Van Ness than that of the court. It is not unlikely,
besides, that that opinion was in no small degree influenced by
what is said by Judge Tucker in a note to 2 Black.Com.
Page 27 U. S. 592
467, which was much relied upon by one of the counsel in the
argument, where the author would appear to define an inland bill,
as being one drawn by a person residing in one state on another
within the United States. He is so understood by Chancellor Kent in
the passage which has been referred to, but this is undoubtedly by
a mistake, as the note manifestly refers to the laws of Virginia,
and by an act of that state, passed on 28 December, 1795, it is
expressly declared that all bills of exchange drawn by any person
residing in that state on a person in the United States shall be
considered in all cases as inland bills. The case of
Miller v.
Hackley therefore can hardly be considered as an authority for
the position which it was intended to maintain. We think it cannot
be so considered by the courts of New York, since the principle
supposed to be decided in that case would seem to be directly at
variance with the uniform decisions of the same courts upon the
subject of judgments rendered in the tribunals of the sister
states. In the case of
Hitchcock v. Aicken, 1 Caines 460,
all the judges seem to have treated those judgments as foreign in
the courts of New York, and the only point of difference between
them grew out of the construction of the 1st section of the Fourth
Article of the Constitution of the United States and the Act of
Congress of 26 May, 1790, ch. 38, respecting the effect of those
judgments and the credit to be given to them in the courts of the
sister states.
It would seem from a note to the case of
Bartlett v.
Knight, 1 Mass. 430, where a collection of state decisions on
the same subject is given, that these judgments had generally if
not universally been considered as foreign by the courts of many of
the states. If this be so, it is difficult to understand upon what
principle bills of exchange drawn in one state upon another state
can be considered as inland unless in a state where they are
declared to be such by a statute of that state.
It has not been our good fortune to see the case of
Duncan
v. Course, 1 South Carolina Constitutional Reports 100, but
the note above referred to in 3 Kent's Com. informs us that it
decides that bills of this description are to be
Page 27 U. S. 593
considered in the light of foreign bills, and the learned
commentator concludes, upon the whole and principally upon the
ground of the decision just quoted, that the weight of American
authority is on that side.
That it is so in respect to the necessity of protesting bills of
that description was not very strenuously controverted by the
counsel for the defendant. But he insists that under a just
construction of the 11th section of the Judiciary Act, concerning
the jurisdiction of the federal courts, these bills ought to be
considered and treated as inland. The argument is that the mischief
intended to be remedied by the provisions in the latter part of
that section by the assignment of promissory notes and other choses
in action is the same in relation to bills of exchange of the
character under consideration.
We are of a different opinion. The policy which probably
dictated this provision in the above section was to prevent frauds
upon the jurisdiction of those courts by pretended assignments of
bonds, notes, and bills of exchange strictly inland, and as these
evidences of debt generally concern the internal negotiations of
the inhabitants of the same state and would seldom find their way
fairly into the hands of persons residing in another state, the
prohibition as to them would impose a very trifling restriction, if
any, upon the commercial intercourse of the different states with
each other. It is quite otherwise as to bills drawn in one state
upon another. They answer all the purposes of remittances and of
commercial facilities equally with bills drawn upon other countries
or
vice versa, and if a choice of jurisdictions be
important to the credit of bills of the latter class, which it
undoubtedly is, it must be equally so to that of the former.
Nor does the reason for restraining the transfer of other choses
in action apply to bills of exchange of this description, which,
from their commercial character, might be expected to pass fairly
into the hands of persons residing in the different states of the
union. We conclude upon the whole that in no point of view ought
they to be considered otherwise than as foreign bills.
Page 27 U. S. 594
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Maryland and on the questions and points on which the judges of the
said circuit court were opposed in opinion and which were certified
to this Court for its opinion and was argued by counsel, on
consideration whereof it is the opinion of this Court that the bill
of exchange on which this action is brought ought to be considered
as a foreign bill within the meaning of the 11th section of the
Judiciary Act of 24 September, 1787, and that the said circuit
court has jurisdiction of this cause, whereupon it is considered,
ordered, and adjudged by this Court, that it be certified to the
said Circuit Court for the District of Maryland that the bill of
exchange on which this action is brought ought to be considered as
a foreign bill within the meaning of the 11th section of the
Judiciary Act of 24 September, 1787, and that that Court has
jurisdiction of the cause. [
Footnote 3]
[
Footnote 1]
Vol. II, p. 467.
[
Footnote 2]
Bayley, Kyd.
[
Footnote 3]
The opinion of Mr. Justice Washington in the case of
Lonsdale v. Brown, in which the same point was ruled in
the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania, will be found in the appendix, No. II [omitted -- see
printed version].