1. Upon the record of this suit to recover the purchase price of
securities sold in violation of the Minnesota Blue Sky Law and on
misrepresentations, the defendant's immunity from suit cannot be
said to have been finally adjudicated by the state courts prior to
the legislature's enactment of an Act which operated to abolish any
defense that the defendant may have had under the state statutes of
limitations, and the Act therefore did not deprive the defendant of
property without due process of law in violation of the Fourteenth
Amendment. Following
Campbell v. Holt, 115 U.
S. 620. P.
325 U. S.
310.
Page 325 U. S. 305
2. The essential holding in
Campbell v. Holt -- that,
where lapse of time has not invested a party with title to real or
personal property, a state legislature, consistently with the
Fourteenth Amendment, may repeal or extend a statute of
limitations, even after right of action is barred thereby, restore
to the plaintiff his remedy, and divest the defendant of the
statutory bar -- so far as applicable to this case, is sound, and
should not be overruled. Pp.
325 U. S. 311,
325 U. S.
315.
3. The Act in question was a general one, applying to all
similarly situated persons or transactions, and did not violate the
equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. P. 309,
n 5.
4. That the defendant had no opportunity to submit testimony of
legislators as to the intent of the Act did not constitute a denial
of due process of law. P. 309,
n 5.
216 Minn. 269, 13 N.W.2d 1, affirmed.
Appeal from a judgment upholding the constitutionality of a
state statute in a suit to recover the purchase price of securities
sold to the plaintiff.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court of Minnesota
attacks as violative of the Fourteenth Amendment a provision of the
Minnesota statutes enacted as part of a general revision of the
Minnesota Securities or Blue Sky Law. Its effect upon appellant was
to lift the bar of the statute of limitations in a pending
litigation, which appellant contends amounts to taking its property
without due process of law.
This action was brought in state court in November, 1937, to
recover the purchase price of "Chase units," sold by appellant in
Minnesota to the appellee's testate August
Page 325 U. S. 306
10, 1929. The "units" had not been registered, as required by
the laws of that state. The action was based in part on illegality
of the sale, but it also was grounded on common law fraud and
deceit. Defendant relied among other defenses on the statute of
limitations. Plaintiff countered that the running of the statute
had been suspended because defendant had withdrawn from the state
and the statute did not run during its absence. The case was tried
by the court without a jury. It found that there was a sale in
violation of the Blue Sky Law, that the Minnesota 6-year statute of
limitations, Mason's Minn.St.1927, § 9191, applying to actions
"upon a liability created by statute," governed the case, but had
been tolled by withdrawal of the appellant from the state in 1931.
Judgment was therefore rendered for the purchase price, adjusted
for interest and dividends, and the Court found it unnecessary to
pass on the fraud issues.
The Supreme Court of Minnesota reversed. [
Footnote 1] It held, by reference to a companion
case, [
Footnote 2] that the
statute of limitations had not been tolled by the appellant's
absence from the state because it had designated agents to receive
service of process after its departure, as required by statute. The
case was remanded on January 10, 1941, without prejudice to further
proceedings on "issues other than that of the tolling of the
statute of limitations."
While proceedings were pending in the lower court, the
legislature enacted a statute, effective July 1, 1941, which
amended the Blue Sky Law in many particulars not pertinent here.
The section in question added a specific statute of limitations
applicable to actions based on violations of the Blue Sky Law
[
Footnote 3] as to which there
had been no provision
Page 325 U. S. 307
except a general statute of limitations. Under the former law,
the limitation on actions for fraud did not commence to run until
its discovery. Under the new law, actions for failure to disclose
nonregistration or for misrepresentations concerning registration,
or for falsity of representations implied from the fact of sale,
all of which grounds were set up in this action, must be brought
within six years of delivery of the securities. Aggrieved
purchasers
Page 325 U. S. 308
were therefore denied future benefit of suspension of the period
of limitation during the time such frauds or grounds of action
remained undiscovered. But it also was provided that, where
delivery had occurred more than five years prior to the effective
date of the Act, which was the fact in this case, the action might
be brought within one year after the law's enactment. The effect of
this was to abolish any defense that appellant might otherwise have
made under the Minnesota statutes of limitation.
Both appellant and appellee moved in the trial court, shortly
after the Act became effective, for supplemental findings.
Appellant asked findings in its favor on the theory that the action
was barred, that the new Act was inapplicable, and that there was
no proof of actual fraud. Appellee contended that the 1941 law
applied, and that, by reason of it, recovery was not barred. The
trial court determined that the plaintiff was entitled to recover
in tort both on the ground of an illegal sale and on the ground of
common law fraud and deceit; that plaintiff had not discovered the
deception until shortly before the action was begun; that the
provisions of the 1941 Act applied to the plaintiff's "cause of
action, or any of the separate grounds of relief asserted by
plaintiff," and operated to extend the time for the commencement of
action thereon to July 1, 1942, and that plaintiff's action was
therefore commenced within the time limited by the statutes of
Minnesota. The appellant moved for amended findings, and then, for
the first time, raised the federal constitutional question that the
statute, if applied so to lift the bar, deprived appellant of
property without due process of law in violation of the Fourteenth
Amendment. Its motion was denied.
Appealing again to the Supreme Court of Minnesota, appellant,
among other things, urged this federal constitutional question. The
Supreme Court again did not reach decision of the fraud aspects of
the case. It held that the
Page 325 U. S. 309
Blue Sky Law required the securities to be registered, and was
violated by the sale; that the action was one in tort to recover as
damages the purchase price of unregistered securities sold in
Minnesota; that the new limitations statute was applicable, and had
the effect of lifting any preexisting bar of the general limitation
statute, and that, in so doing, it did not violate the due process
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The court relied on
Campbell v. Holt, 115 U. S. 620,
saying:
"We do not find that
Campbell v. Holt has been reversed
or reconsidered, and we regard it as sound law; and, certainly, so
far as the Federal Constitution is concerned, it is binding on this
court until reversed by the Supreme Court. [
Footnote 4]"
The judgment was therefore affirmed, rehearing was sought and
denied, [
Footnote 5] and the
case brought here by appeal.
Page 325 U. S. 310
As the case stood in the state courts, it is not one where a
defendant's statutory immunity from suit had been fully adjudged,
so that legislative action deprived it of a final judgment in its
favor. The lower court had decided against appellant. The Supreme
Court had confined its reversal to one question -- whether the
defendant's withdrawal from the state tolled the running of the
statute of limitations. The case was returned to the lower court
without prejudice to any other question.
Appellant, however, insists that it was sued upon two separate
and independent causes of action, one being "upon a liability
created by statute," and that its immunity from suit on that cause
of action had been finally adjudicated. The argument is not
consistent with the holdings of the state court. The Blue Sky Law
imposes duties upon a seller of certain securities, but it does not
expressly define a liability for their omission, or create a cause
of action in favor of a buyer of unregistered securities. The state
courts, nevertheless, held that such an illegal sale will support a
common law action in tort.
Drees v. Minnesota Petroleum
Co., 189 Minn. 608, 250 N.W. 563. And, on the second appeal of
this case, the court said:
"The action was brought in tort to recover as damages the
purchase price of unregistered securities. . . . It also sought
recovery on the ground of deceit based on misrepresentation, but,
in view of our disposition of the case, we need not consider
Page 325 U. S. 311
that phase of the case. [
Footnote 6]"
It is not uncommon that a single cause of action in tort will
rest both on omission of a statutory duty and on common law
negligence; the two bases do not necessarily multiply the causes of
action.
Cf. Baltimore Steamship Co. v. Phillips,
274 U. S. 316,
274 U. S. 321;
New York Central & H.R. R. Co. v. Kinney, 260 U.
S. 340,
260 U. S. 346;
Seaboard Air Line Ry v. Koennecke, 239 U.
S. 352,
239 U. S. 354.
This appears to be permitted by the law of Minnesota.
Tuder v.
Oregon Short Line R. Co., 131 Minn. 317, 318, 319, 155 N.W.
200. It is true that the Supreme Court, in disposing of the first
appeal, relied on a companion case in which it was said that
"plaintiff must be considered to have sued
upon a liability
created by statute.'" [Footnote
7] The pleadings in the companion case are not before us. No
separate statement of a statutory cause of action is set out in the
complaint in this case. The state court did not dispose of the
liability for statutory violation as a separate cause of action, by
dismissal or otherwise. We cannot say that it was finally or
separately adjudicated. The state courts seem to have treated the
complaint as setting up several bases for a single common law cause
of action in tort which had been remanded for retrial at the time
the new statute was enacted. We must regard it in that same
light.
The substantial federal questions which survive the state court
decision are whether this case is governed by
Campbell v.
Holt and, if so, whether that case should be reconsidered and
overruled.
In
Campbell v. Holt, supra, this Court held that, where
lapse of time has not invested a party with title to real or
personal property, a state legislature, consistently with the
Fourteenth Amendment, may repeal or extend a statute of
limitations, even after right of action is barred thereby, restore
to the plaintiff his remedy, and divest the defendant
Page 325 U. S. 312
of the statutory bar. This has long stood as a statement of the
law of the Fourteenth Amendment, and we agree with the court below
that its holding is applicable here, and fatal to the contentions
of appellant. [
Footnote 8]
Appellant asks that, in case we find
Campbell v. Holt
controlling, it be reconsidered and overruled. We are reminded that
some state courts have not followed it in construing provisions of
their constitutions similar to the due process clause. [
Footnote 9] Many have, as they are
privileged to do, so interpreted their own easily amendable
constitutions
Page 325 U. S. 313
to give restrictive clauses a more rigid interpretation than we
properly could impose upon them from without by construction of the
federal instrument which is amendable only with great difficulty
and with the cooperation of many States.
We are also cited to some criticisms of
Campbell v.
Holt in legal literature. [
Footnote 10] But neither in volume nor in weight are they
more impressive than has been directed at many decisions that deal
with controversial and recurrent issues.
Statutes of limitations always have vexed the philosophical
mind, for it is difficult to fit them into a completely logical and
symmetrical system of law. There has been controversy as to their
effect. Some are of opinion that, like the analogous civil law
doctrine of prescription, [
Footnote 11] limitations statutes should be viewed as
extinguishing the claim and destroying the right itself. Admittedly
it is troublesome to sustain as a "right" a claim that can find no
remedy for its invasion. On the other hand, some common law courts
have regarded true statutes of limitation as doing no more than to
cut off resort to the courts for enforcement of a claim. [
Footnote 12] We do not need to
settle these arguments.
Page 325 U. S. 314
Statutes of limitation find their justification in necessity and
convenience, rather than in logic. They represent expedients,
rather than principles. They are practical and pragmatic devices to
spare the courts from litigation of stale claims, and the citizen
from being put to his defense after memories have faded, witnesses
have died or disappeared, and evidence has been lost.
Order of
Railroad Telegraphers v. Railway Express Agency, 321 U.
S. 342,
321 U. S. 349.
They are, by definition, arbitrary, and their operation does not
discriminate between the just and the unjust claim, or the
avoidable and unavoidable delay. They have come into the law not
through the judicial process, but through legislation. [
Footnote 13] They represent a public
policy about the privilege to litigate. Their shelter has never
been regarded as what now is called a "fundamental" right, or what
used to be called a "natural" right of the individual. He may, of
course, have the protection of the policy while it exists, but the
history of pleas of limitation shows them to be good only by
legislative grace, and to be subject to a relatively large degree
of legislative control.
This Court, in
Campbell v. Holt, adopted as a working
hypothesis, as a matter of constitutional law, the view that
statutes of limitation go to matters of remedy, not to destruction
of fundamental rights. The abstract logic of the distinction
between substantive rights and remedial or procedural rights may
not be clear-cut, but it has been found a workable concept to point
up the real and valid difference between rules in which stability
is of prime importance and those in which flexibility is a more
important value. The contrast between the acceptable result of the
reasoning of
Campbell v. Holt and its rather
unsatisfactory rationalization was well pointed out by Mr. Justice
Holmes when, as Chief Justice of Massachusetts, he wrote:
Page 325 U. S. 315
"Nevertheless, in this case, as in others, the prevailing
judgment of the profession has revolted at the attempt to place
immunities which exist only by reason of some slight technical
defect on absolutely the same footing as those which stand on
fundamental grounds. Perhaps the reasoning of the cases has not
always been as sound as the instinct which directed the decisions.
It may be that sometimes it would have been as well not to attempt
to make out that the judgment of the court was consistent with
constitutional rules if such rules were to be taken to have the
exactness of mathematics. It may be that it would have been better
to say definitely that constitutional rules, like those of the
common law, end in a penumbra where the Legislature has a certain
freedom in fixing the line as has been recognized with regard to
the police power.
Camfield v. United States, 167 U. S.
518,
167 U. S. 523-524. But,
however that may be, multitudes of cases have recognized the power
of the Legislature to call a liability into being where there was
none before if the circumstances were such as to appeal with some
strength to the prevailing views of justice, and if the obstacle in
the way of the creation seemed small."
Danforth v. Groton Water Co., 178 Mass. 472, 476, 59
N.E. 1033. This statement was approved and followed by the New York
Court of Appeals in
Robinson v. Robins Dry Dock & Repair
Co., 238 N.Y. 271, 144 N.E. 579.
The essential holding in
Campbell v. Holt, so far as it
applies to this case, is sound, and should not be overruled. The
Fourteenth Amendment does not make an act of state legislation void
merely because it has some retrospective operation. What it does
forbid is taking of life, liberty, or property without due process
of law. Some rules of law probably could not be changed
retroactively without hardship and oppression, and this whether
wise or unwise in their origin. Assuming that statutes of
limitation, like other types of legislation, could be so
manipulated that
Page 325 U. S. 316
their retroactive effects would offend the Constitution,
certainly it cannot be said that lifting the bar of a statute of
limitation so as to restore a remedy lost through mere lapse of
time is
per se an offense against the Fourteenth
Amendment. Nor has the appellant pointed out special hardships or
oppressive effects which result from lifting the bar in this class
of cases with retrospective force. This is not a case where
appellant's conduct would have been different if the present rule
had been known, and the change foreseen. It does not say, and could
hardly say, that it sold unregistered stock depending on a statute
of limitation for shelter from liability. The nature of the
defenses shows that no course of action was undertaken by appellant
on the assumption that the old rule would be continued. When the
action was commenced, it no doubt expected to be able to defend by
invoking Minnesota public policy that lapse of time had closed the
courts to the case, and its legitimate hopes have been
disappointed. But the existence of the policy at the time the
action was commenced did not, under the circumstances, given the
appellant a constitutional right against change of policy before
final adjudication. Whatever grievance appellant may have at the
change of policy to its disadvantage, it had acquired no immunity
from this suit that has become a federal constitutional right. The
judgment is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Donaldson v. Chase Securities Corp., 209 Minn. 165, 296
N.W. 518.
[
Footnote 2]
Pomeroy v. National City Co., 209 Minn. 155, 296 N.W.
513.
[
Footnote 3]
The section reads:
"Other actions or prosecutions not limited. -- No action shall
be maintained for relief upon a sale of securities made in
violation of any of the provisions of this act, or upon a sale of
securities made in violation of any of the provisions of a
registration thereof under this act, or for failure to disclose
that the sale thereof was made in violation of any of the
provisions of this act or in violation of any of the provisions of
a registration thereof under this act, or upon any representation
with respect to the registration or nonregistration of the security
claimed to be implied from any such sale, unless commenced within
six years after the date on which said securities were delivered to
the purchaser pursuant to such sale, provided that, if, prior to
the effective date of this section, more than five years shall have
elapsed from the date of such delivery, then such action may be
brought within a period of one year following such effective date,
and provided further that no purchaser of a security otherwise
entitled thereto shall bring any action for relief of the character
above set forth who shall have refused or failed, within 30 days
after the receipt thereof by such purchaser, to accept a written
offer from the seller or from any person who participated in such
sale to take back the securities in question and to refund the full
amount paid therefor by such purchaser, together with interest on
such amount from the date of payment to the date of repayment, such
interest to be computed at the same rate as the fixed interest or
dividend rate, if any, provided for in such securities, or, if no
rate is so provided at the rate of six percentum per annum, less in
every case the amount of any income received by the purchaser on
such securities. Any written offer so made to a purchaser of a
security shall be of no force or effect unless a duplicate thereof
shall be filed with the commissioner of securities prior to the
delivery thereof to such purchaser."
"Nothing in this section, except as herein expressly set forth,
shall limit any other right of any person to bring any action in
any court for any act involved in or right arising out of a sale of
securities or the right of the state to punish any person for any
violation of law."
Mason's Minn.St.1941 Supp., § 3996-24.
[
Footnote 4]
Donaldson v. Chase Securities Corp., 216 Minn. 269,
276, 13 N.W.2d 1, 5.
[
Footnote 5]
The petition for rehearing for the first time raised two
questions also urged here, but which may be disposed of
shortly.
1. That the Act in question violated the Fourteenth Amendment in
denying equal protection of the law. Even if seasonably made, which
is doubtful (
see American Surety Co. v. Baldwin,
287 U. S. 156),
the claim is without merit. The statute, on its face, is a general
one, applying to all similarly situated persons or transactions. It
appears that a number of cases were involved. Among other
litigations were
Stern v. National City
Co., 25 F. Supp.
948,
aff'd sub nom. City Co. of New York v. Stern, 110
F.2d 601,
rev'd, 312 U.S. 666;
Chase Securities Corp.
v. Vogel, 110 F.2d 607,
rev'd, 312 U.S. 666. These
were remanded by this Court to the Circuit Court of Appeals "for
further proceedings with respect to any question not determined by
the Supreme Court of Minnesota" in the
Pomeroy and
Donaldson cases. Also in this class of cases was
Shepherd v. City Co. of New York, 24 F. Supp. 682. That
the motivation for the Act may have arisen in a few cases or in a
single case would not establish that a general act such as we have
described would deny equal protection.
2. The claim that appellant was denied due process of law
because it had no opportunity to submit testimony of legislators as
to legislative intent appears to us frivolous. The state court has
seen fit to draw inferences as to the intent of an act from its
timing, and from its provisions, and from background facts of
public notoriety. But that does not mean that the judgment must be
set aside to afford a party the opportunity to call legislators to
prove that the court's inferences as to intent were wrong. Statutes
ordinarily bespeak their own intention, and, when their meaning is
obscure or dubious, a state court may determine for itself what
sources of extrastatutory enlightenment it will consult. Our custom
of going back of an act to explore legislative history does not
obligate state courts to do so, and there is nothing in the
Constitution which, by the widest stretch of the imagination, could
be held to require taking testimony from a few or a majority of the
legislators to prove legislative "intent."
[
Footnote 6]
Donaldson v. Chase Securities Corp., 216 Minn. 269-271,
13 N.W.2d 1-2.
[
Footnote 7]
Pomeroy v. National City Co., 209 Minn. 155-156, 296
N.W. 513-514.
[
Footnote 8]
Appellant invokes the principle of our decisions in
William
Danzer & Co. v. Gulf & Ship Island R. Co.,
268 U. S. 633, and
Davis v. Mills, 194 U. S. 451. But
the state court so construed the relationship between its
limitation acts and the state law creating the asserted liability
as to make these cases inapplicable, and we do not think it did so
improperly. In the
Danzer case, it was held that, where a
statute in creating a liability also put a period to its existence,
a retroactive extension of the period after its expiration amounted
to a taking of property without due process of law. Read with the
Danzer case,
Davis v. Mills stands for the
proposition that the result may be the same if the period of
limitation is prescribed by a different statute if it "was directed
to the newly created liability so specifically as to warrant saying
that it qualified the right."
194 U. S. 194
U.S. 454. But the situation here plainly does not parallel that in
the
Danzer case, and the state court, whose province it is
to construe state legislation, has found no parallel to the
Davis case. At the time this action was commenced, the
Blue Sky Law of Minnesota had imposed on appellant a duty; it had
not explicitly created a liability. The liability was implied by
the state's common law; the period of limitation was found only in
the general statute of limitations, enacted many years earlier. The
state court concluded that the challenged statute did not confer on
appellees a new right or subject appellants to a new liability. It
considered that the effect of the legislation was merely to
reinstate a lapsed remedy, that appellant had acquired no vested
right to immunity from a remedy for its wrong in selling
unregistered securities, and that reinstatement of the remedy by
the state legislature did not infringe any federal right under the
Fourteenth Amendment, as expounded by this Court in
Campbell v.
Holt.
[
Footnote 9]
Wasson v. State, 187 Ark. 537, 60 S.W.2d 1020;
Bussey v. Bishop, 169 Ga. 251, 150 S.E. 78;
Board of
Education v. Blodgett, 155 Ill, 441, 40 N.E. 1025;
Jackson
v. Evans, 284 Ky. 748, 145 S.W.2d 1061;
Wilkes County v.
Forester, 204 N.C. 163, 167 S.E. 691;
Raymer v. Comley
Lumber Co., 169 Okl. 576,
38 P.2d 8;
Cathey v. Weaver, 111 Tex. 515, 242 S.W. 447;
In re
Swan's Estate, 95 Utah 408, 79 P.2d 999;
Eingartner v.
Illinois Steel Co., 103 Wis. 373, 79 N.W. 433.
[
Footnote 10]
Appellant cites 2 Lewis' Sutherland, Statutory Construction (2d
ed.1904) § 708, p. 1288; 1 Wood, Limitations (4th ed.1916)
§ 11, pp. 47-49; 24 Col.Law 803 (1924); Corn.L.Q. 212 (1925);
2 Geo.Wash.Law Rev. 100 (1933); Rottschaefer, Constitutional Law
(1939) § 252, pp. 548-9.
[
Footnote 11]
See La.Civ.Code, Arts, 3457-3459;
Billings v.
Hall, 7 Cal. 1, 4;
Goddard's Heirs v. Urquhart, 6 La.
659, 673.
[
Footnote 12]
See Gilbert v. Selleck, 93 Conn. 412, 106 A. 439;
In re Daniel's Estate, 208 Minn. 420, 294 N.W. 465;
Bates v. Cullum, 177 Pa. 633, 35 A. 861.
[
Footnote 13]
For history of these acts,
see Atkinson, "Some
Procedural Aspects of the Statute of Limitations," 27 Col.Law Rev.
157 (1927).