1. Case from a state court, involving the construction and
application of treaties,
held reviewable by certiorari. P.
284 U. S.
35,
Page 284 U. S. 31
2. Article XVII of the Consular Convention of 1878 with Italy
provides that
"The respective Consuls General . . . shall enjoy in both
countries all the rights, prerogatives, immunities, and privileges
which are or may hereafter be granted to the officers of the same
grade, of the most favoured nation."
Article VI of the Treaty of 1856 with Persia (terminated in
1928) declares:
"In case of a citizen or subject of either of the contracting
parties dying within the territories of the other, his effects
shall be delivered up integrally to the family or partners in
business of the deceased, and in case he has no relations or
partners, his effects in either country shall be delivered up to
the consul or agent of the nation of which the deceased was a
subject or citizen, so that he may dispose of them in accordance
with the laws of his country."
An Italian subject, domiciled in New York, died there, intestate
and without heirs or next of kin, before the termination of the
treaty; and, in the administration of his estate by the New York
courts, the question arose whether his net assets, after satisfying
creditors and expense of administration, should escheat to the
state or be paid to the Italian Consul General for disposition to
the Kingdom of Italy.
Held:
(1) The provision in the convention, assuming it contemplates
reciprocity of rights and is so recognized by Italy, confers upon
the Consul General the rights defined by the treaty provision. P.
284 U. S.
36.
(2) The termination of the treaty, having occurred after the
death, does not affect the case.
Id.
(3) The net assets must be delivered to the Consul General,
since Art. VI contains no qualification recognizing precedence of
local laws, and, when considered with other portions of the treaty,
and the general purpose of the treaty to promote commercial
intercourse, it clearly includes subjects of either country who are
domiciled in the other. Pp.
284 U. S.
36-39.
3. As treaties are contracts between independent nations, their
words are to be taken in their ordinary meaning as understood in
the public law of nations. P.
284 U. S.
40.
4. The United States, under the treatymaking power, may
determine the disposition of property of aliens, and any
conflicting law of a state must yield.
Id.
135 N.Y.Misc. 733; 240 N.Y.Supp. 691, reversed.
Appeal, given the effect of a writ of certiorari, to review a
decree of the Surrogates' Court of New York County settling an
estate, which was affirmed by the Appellate Division, 229 App.Div.
862 243 N.Y.S. 814. The
Page 284 U. S. 32
record went back to the Surrogates' Court by remittitur, leave
to appeal to the Court of Appeals having been denied by that court
and by the Appellate Division.
Page 284 U. S. 34
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
Antonio Comincio, a native of Italy, died intestate in New York
City some time prior to March 10, 1925, when letters of
administration were issued to the respondent as public
administrator by the Surrogates' Court of New York County. Upon the
judicial settlement of the administrator's account, the appellant,
the Consul General of Italy at New York, presented the claim that
the decedent at the time of his death was a subject of the King of
Italy and had left no heirs or next of kin, and that, under article
XVII of the Consular Convention of 1878 between the United States
and Italy, the petitioner was entitled to receive the net assets of
the estate for distribution to the Kingdom of Italy. The Attorney
General of New York contested the claim. The Surrogates' Court,
finding that the domicile of the decedent was in New York City,
decreed that the balance of the estate, amounting to $914.64, after
payment of debts and the sums allowed as commissions and as
expenses of administration, be paid into the treasury of New York
City for the use and benefit of the unknown kin of the decedent.
In re Comincio's Estate, 135 Misc. Rep. 733, 240 N.Y.S.
691, 692. The decree was affirmed by the Appellate Division of the
Supreme Court of the state, First Department (229 App.Div. 862, 243
N.Y.S. 814), and both the Appellate Division and the Court of
Appeals of the state denied leave to appeal to the latter court.
The case may
Page 284 U. S. 35
be regarded as properly here on certiorari. Jud.Code, §
237(c), U.S.C. Tit. 28, § 344(c).
There is no controversy as to the facts. The decedent was never
naturalized, and, at the time of his death, was an Italian subject.
He had lived in New York for many years, and the finding that the
decedent was domiciled there is not open to question. Nor were any
heirs or next of kin discovered. The testimony introduced on behalf
of the Italian Consul General, which was undisputed, stated that
the decedent had no relatives, and the decree of the Surrogates'
Court recited that next of kin were unknown. The decree was made
pursuant to Chapter 230 of the Laws of New York of 1898 (as
amended). The Surrogate said in his opinion:
"Pursuant to our statutes, this amount would be directed in the
decree to be paid into the city treasury of the City of New York to
await ascertainment of the next of kin. Ultimately the amount would
find its way into the treasury of the State of New York."
The provision of the Consular Convention between the United
States and Italy, under which the claim of the Italian Consul
General was made, provides (20 Stat. 725, 732): "Article XVII. The
respective Consuls General, Consuls, Vice-Consuls and Consular
Agents, as likewise the Consular Chancellors, Secretaries, Clerks
or Attache s, shall enjoy in both countries, all the rights,
prerogatives, immunities and privileges which are or may hereafter
be granted to the officers of the same grade, of the most favoured
nation."
Pursuant to this agreement, the Italian Consul General sought
the application of article VI of the Treaty between the United
States and Persia of 1856 as follows (11 Stat. 709, 710):
"Article VI. In case of a citizen or subject of either of the
contracting parties dying within the territories of the other, his
effects shall be delivered up integrally to
Page 284 U. S. 36
the family or partners in business of the deceased, and in case
he has no relations or partners, his effects in either country
shall be delivered up to the consul or agent of the nation of which
the deceased was a subject or citizen, so that he may dispose of
them in accordance with the laws of his country."
This Treaty with Persia was terminated on May 10, 1928, but, as
this was subsequent to the death of the Italian national whose
estate is in question, the termination does not affect the present
case.
It may be assumed that article XVII of the Consular Convention
with Italy contemplates reciprocity with respect to the rights and
privileges sought, and there is no suggestion that Italy has not
recognized the right of consuls of the United States to take the
effects of the citizens of the United States dying in Italy in
circumstances similar to those in which present claim of the
Italian Consul General is pressed. As, is this view, there appears
to be no ground for denying the right of the Italian Consul General
to demand the application of the last clause of article VI of the
Treaty with Persia, the only question is as to the interpretation
of that provision.
We are not here concerned with questions of mere administration,
nor is it necessary to determine that the loose phrasing of the
provisions of article VI precludes an appropriate local
administration to protect the rights of creditors. Nor have we to
deal with a case of testamentary disposition. In this instance,
there is no will, administration has been had, creditors have been
paid, proper steps have been taken, without success, to discover
kin of the decedent, and, assuming the absence of relatives, the
question is one of escheat -- that is, whether the net assets shall
go to Italy or to the State of New York. The provision of Article
VI of the Treaty with Persia does not contain the qualifying words
"conformably with the laws of the country" (where the death
occurred), as in
Page 284 U. S. 37
the case of the Treaty between the United States and the
Argentine Confederation of 1853 (Art. IX, 10 Stat. 1001, 1009;
Rocca v. Thompson, 223 U. S. 317,
223 U. S. 326,
223 U. S.
330-332); or the phrase "so far as the laws of each
country will permit," as in the Consular Convention between the
United States and Sweden of 1910 (Art. XIV, 37 Stat. 1479, 1487,
1488;
Rocca v. Thompson, supra; Matter of D'Adamo, 212
N.Y. 214, 222, 223). The omission from Article VI of the Treaty
with Persia of a clause of this sort, so frequently found in
treaties of this class, must be regarded as deliberate. In the
circumstances shown, it is plain that effect must be given to the
requirement that the property of the decedent
"shall be delivered up to the consul or agent of the nation of
which the deceased was a subject or citizen, so that he may dispose
of them in accordance with the laws of his country,"
unless a different rule is to apply simply because the decedent
was domiciled in the United States.
The language of the provision suggests no such distinction and,
if it is to be maintained, it must be the result of construction
based upon the supposed intention of the parties to establish a
exception of which their words give no hint. In order to determine
whether such a construction is admissible, regard should be had to
the purpose of the Treaty and to the context of the provision in
question. The Treaty belongs to a class of commercial treaties the
chief purpose of which is to promote intercourse, which is
facilitated by residence. Those citizens or subjects of one party
who are permitted under the Treaty to reside in the territory of
the other party are to enjoy, while they are such residents,
certain stipulated rights and privileges. Whether there is
domiciliary intent, or domicile is acquired in fact is not made the
test of the enjoyment of these rights and privileges. The words
"citizens" and "subjects" are used in several articles of the
Treaty with Persia, and in no instance are
Page 284 U. S. 38
they qualified by a distinction between residence and domicile.
Thus, in Article III, we find the following provision (11 Stat.
709):
"Article III. The citizens and subjects of the two high
contracting parties, travelers, merchants, manufacturers, and
others, who may reside in the territory of either country, shall be
respected and efficiently protected by the authorities of the
country and their agents, and treated in all respects as the
subjects and citizens of the most favored nation are treated."
It would be wholly inadmissible to conclude that it was the
intention that citizens of the United States making their residence
in Persia under this Treaty would be denied the benefit of article
III in case they acquired a domicile in Persia. The provision
contemplated residence, nothing is said to indicate that domicile
is excluded, and the clear import of the provision is that, so long
as they retained their status as citizens of the United States,
they would be entitled to the guaranty of Article III. The same
would be true of Persians permitted to reside here under the
Treaty.
Again, the provisions of Article V of the Treaty were of special
importance, as they provided for extraterritorial jurisdiction of
the United States in relation to the adjudication of disputes.
[
Footnote 1] It would thwart
the major
Page 284 U. S. 39
purpose of the Treaty to exclude from the important protection
of these provisions citizens of the United States who might be
domiciled in Persia. The test of the application of every paragraph
of Article V, with respect both to citizens of the United States
and to Persian subjects, clearly appears to be that of nationality,
irrespective of the acquisition of a domicile as distinguished from
residence.
We find no warrant for a more restricted interpretation of the
words "a citizen or subject of either of the contracting parties"
in Article VI than that which must be given to the similar
description of persons throughout the other Articles of the Treaty.
The same intention which made nationality, without limitation with
respect to domicile, the criterion in the other provisions,
dominates this provision. The provision of Article VI is
reciprocal. The property of a Persian subject dying within the
United States, leaving no kin, is to be dealt with in the same
manner as the property of a citizen of the United States dying in
Persia in similar circumstances.
Page 284 U. S. 40
It is not necessary to invoke the familiar rule with respect to
the liberal construction of treaties, [
Footnote 2] as the instant case merely calls for a reading
of the provision as to "citizens" and "subjects" according to its
terms. There is no applicable principle which permits us to narrow
them. As treaties are contracts between independent nations, their
words are to be taken in their ordinary meaning "as understood in
the public law of nations."
Geofroy v. Riggs, 133 U.
S. 258,
133 U. S.
271.
There can be no question as to the power of the government of
the United States to make the treaty with Persia or the Consular
Convention with Italy. The treatymaking power is broad enough to
cover all subjects that properly pertain to our foreign relations,
and agreement with respect to the rights and privileges of citizens
of the United States in foreign countries, and of the nationals of
such countries within the United States, and the disposition of the
property of aliens dying within the territory of the respective
parties, is within the scope of the power, and any conflicting law
of the state must yield.
Haguenstein v. Lynham,
100 U. S. 483,
100 U. S. 489;
Geofroy v. Riggs, supra, at p.
133 U. S. 266;
Missouri v. Holland, 252 U. S. 416,
252 U. S. 434;
Sullivan v. Kidd, 254 U. S. 433,
254 U. S. 440;
Asakura v. Seattle, 265 U. S. 332,
265 U. S. 343;
Todok v. Union State Bank, 281 U.
S. 449,
281 U. S.
453.
Our conclusion is that, by virtue of the most favored nation
clause of Article XVII of the Consular Convention between the
United States and Italy of 1878, the Italian Consul General was
entitled in the instant case, being that of the death of an Italian
national in this country prior to the termination of the Treaty
between the United
Page 284 U. S. 41
States and Persia of 1856, to the benefit of Article VI of that
Treaty, and that the net assets of the decedent should be delivered
to him accordingly.
The decree is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
"Article V. All suits and disputes arising in Persia between
Persian subjects and citizens of the United States shall be carried
before the Persian tribunal to which such matters are usually
referred at the place where a consul or agent of the United States
may reside, and shall be discussed and decided according to equity
in the presence of an employee of the consul or agent of the United
States."
"All suits and disputes which may arise in the Empire of Persia
between citizens of the United States shall be referred entirely
for trial and for adjudication to the consul or agent of the United
States residing in the province wherein such suits and disputes may
have arisen or in the province nearest to it, who shall decide them
according to the laws of the United States."
"All suits and disputes occurring in Persia between the citizens
of the United States and the subjects of other foreign powers shall
be tried and adjudicated by the intermediation of their respective
consuls or agents."
"In the United States, Persian subjects, in all disputes arising
between themselves or between them and citizens of the United
States or foreigners, shall be judged according to the rules
adopted in the United States respecting the subjects of the most
favored nation."
"Persian subjects residing in the United States and citizens of
the United States residing in Persia shall, when charged with
criminal offences, be tried and judged in Persia and the United
States in the same manner as are the subjects and citizens of the
most favored nation residing in either of the above-mentioned
countries."
[
Footnote 2]
Haguenstein v. Lynham, 100 U.
S. 483,
100 U. S. 487;
Geofroy v. Riggs, 133 U. S. 258,
133 U. S. 271;
Tucker v. Alexandroff, 183 U. S. 424,
183 U. S. 437;
Asakura v. Seattle, 265 U. S. 332,
265 U. S. 342;
Jordan v. K. Tashiro, 278 U. S. 123,
278 U. S. 127;
Nielsen v. Johnson, 279 U. S. 47,
279 U. S.
52.