A contract made in New York is not affected by a discharge of
the debtor under the insolvent laws of Maryland, where the debtor
resided, although the insolvent law was passed antecedently to the
contract.
The prior decisions of this Court upon this subject reviewed and
examined.
Cook was a citizen of Maryland, and Moffat and Curtis were
citizens of New York.
It was an action brought in July, 1835, by Moffat and Curtis
against Cook, upon the common money counts. Cook confessed judgment
subject to the opinion of the court upon the following case stated,
namely:
"
In Circuit Court of the United States, Fourth Circuit,
District of Maryland"
"
John L. Moffat and Joseph Curtis surviving partners
of"
"
Jonathan Wilmarth v. William G. Cook"
"
Statement of Facts. John L. Moffat, Joseph Curtis and
Jonathan Wilmarth (the last of whom is now deceased) were citizens
of the State of New York and resident there and partners trading
under the name and firm of Wilmarth, Moffat & Curtis and the
defendant was a citizen and resident of Maryland during the times
when the contracts and transactions upon which this suit is founded
or which constitutes the causes of this action, were entered into
and had and made between the said firm and said Cook."
"That the course of dealing was that Cook, the defendant, used
to write to said firm, ordering such articles or goods as he
wanted, and they, said firm, sent them to him, and charged the
goods in
Page 46 U. S. 296
their books. In order to settle the account current from time to
time, Cook sent to the said firm (usually by mail, sometimes,
perhaps, otherwise) his note at six months, and these notes
averaged $500 per month, and were punctually paid, for a time, in
Baltimore. Cook at length became embarrassed, and wanted
extensions, until he stopped payment entirely, being then indebted
to said firm,"
On book account . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$2,104.98
And owing 1 note, due 4th April, 1832, for. . . . . . 500.00
And owing 1 note, due 14th May, 1832, for . . . . . . 500.00
And owing 1 note, (do not know exactly when due). . . 416.02
And owing 1 note, due 2d June, 1832, for. . . . . . . 500.00
And owing 1 note, due 30th June, 1832, for. . . . . . 500.00
And owing 1 note, due 1st July, 1832, for . . . . . . 800.00
And owing 1 note, due 13th August, 1832, for . . . . .
500.00
And owing 1 note, due 24th September, 1932, for . . . 500.00
Total debt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6,321.00
"The above notes were remitted by Mr. Cook to said firm
previously to March, 1832, when he stopped payment. On 7 June
following, his New York creditors generally agreed to give him time
to pay, and the said firm of Wilmarth, Moffat & Curtis about
that time, by arrangement made with Mr. Disosway, Cook's attorney
in New York, gave time, and took Cook's three notes, drawn payable
to the said firm, for the sums following, all dated 12 May, 1832,
as the respective time as follows,
viz.:"
One, 12 months after date, for . . . . . . . $2,107.00
One, 15 months after date, for . . . . . . . $2,107.00
One, 18 months after date, for . . . . . . . $2,107.03
---------
$6,321.03
"These notes were drawn and dated at Baltimore by Cook, and sent
by him to his said attorney at New York, and there delivered by
said attorney to the said firm; they were given for the amount of
Cook's account, and the notes then had and held by said firm
against Cook; the old notes being then given up to his attorney.
These three notes and the consideration thereof, namely, the goods
sold and delivered as aforesaid, constitute the ground of this
action; the amount of the notes being the amount claimed. It is
also admitted that said Cook has applied for and obtained the
benefit of the insolvent laws of Maryland since such notes fell
due."
"EDWARD HINKLEY,
Attorney for Plaintiffs"
"J. GLENN,
for Defendant"
"Upon the foregoing statement of facts, the plaintiffs pray for
a general and unqualified judgment, notwithstanding the release of
Cook, since the making of said notes, under the insolvent laws of
Maryland, and the plaintiffs rely upon the cases of
Ogden
v.
Page 46 U. S. 297
Saunders, 12 Wheat. 213;
Boyle v. Zacharie &
Turner, 6 Pet. 634;
Frey v. Kirk, 4 Gill.
& J. 509."
"The circumstance of the notes being dated and made at
Baltimore, in favor of citizens, at the time, of New York, does not
make the contract a Maryland contract, any more than did the
acceptance of bills of exchange by Mr. Ogden, in the State of New
York, make such acceptance a New York contract, so as to be
discharged by Mr. Ogden's release under the insolvent laws of that
state."
"The evidences of contracts made between citizens of different
states cannot bear date in both the states of the respective
parties. In the nature of things and according to the course of
business, they would bear date and be signed by one party only, in
one of the states, most commonly in the state of the citizenship
and residence of the party signing. And it would be immaterial in
principle in which of the states it might bear date. It is a
contract between citizens of different states at the time when
made, and this is the fact and the principle which excludes it from
the operation and effect of a release of the debtor under the
insolvent laws of his state."
"EDWARD HINKLEY,
Attorney for Plaintiffs"
"1. The defendant's attorney insists that the contract was to be
performed in Maryland, and governed by the laws of Maryland, and
that the judgment must be to exempt the future acquisitions of the
defendant from execution."
"2. That at all events the judgment must be so entered as to
exempt the defendant's person from arrest."
"J. GLENN,
for Defendant"
"
Judgment for the Plaintiffs upon the Case
stated"
"Whereupon, all and singular the premises being seen, heard, and
by the Court here fully understood, for that it appears to the
court, that the said John L. Moffat and Joseph Curtis are entitled
to recover in the plea aforesaid. Therefore it is considered by the
Court here that the said John L. Moffat and Joseph Curtis recover
against the said William G. Cook, as well the sum of twelve
thousand dollars, current money, the damages in the declaration of
the said John L. Moffat and Joseph Curtis mentioned, as the sum of
seventeen dollars and twenty-five cents adjudged by the Court here
unto the said John L. Moffat and Joseph Curtis on their assent, for
their costs and charges by them about their suit in this behalf
laid out and expended. And the said William G. Cook in mercy
&c."
"
Memorandum. Judgment rendered in this cause on this 21
April, 1836, for the damages laid in the declaration and costs of
suit; the said damages to be released on payment of $7,335.57, with
interest from 21 April, 1836, and costs of suit."
"
Memorandum. That no execution against the person of
the defendant be issued in the above cause on said judgment without
the leave of the court. "
Page 46 U. S. 298
To review this judgment the case was brought up to this
Court.
Page 46 U. S. 307
MR. JUSTICE GRIER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Moffat & Curtis merchants in New York, sold goods to Cook,
who resided in Baltimore. On a settlement of their accounts, Cook
transmitted his notes to his attorney in New York, who delivered
them to the defendants in error. After the notes fell due, Cook
applied for and obtained the benefit of the insolvent laws of
Maryland. By these laws the debtor, on surrender of his property,
is discharged not only from imprisonment, but from his previous
debts.
On the trial of this case in the circuit court, the plaintiff in
error pleaded this discharge, insisting,
"that the contract was to be performed in Maryland, and governed
by the laws of Maryland in existence at the time it was made, and
that, therefore, his discharge under her laws was a good defense
the action."
The circuit court gave judgment for the plaintiffs, and the
defendant prosecuted this writ of error.
That the contract declared on in this case was to be performed
in Maryland, and governed by her laws, is a position which cannot
be successfully maintained, and was therefore very properly
abandoned on the argument here. For although the notes purport to
have been made at Baltimore, they were delivered in New York, in
payment of goods purchased there, and of course were payable there
and governed by the laws of that place.
See
Boyle v. Zacharie
& Turner, 6 Pet. 635; Story Confl. of L. §
287.
The only question, then, to be decided at present is whether the
bankrupt law of Maryland can operate to discharge the plaintiff in
error from a contract made by him in New York, with citizens of
that state.
In support of the affirmation of this proposition, it has been
contended:
1st. "That the State of Maryland having power to enact a
bankrupt law, it follows as a necessary consequence, that such law
must control the decisions of her own forums."
2d. "That the courts of the United States are as much bound to
administer the laws of each state as its own courts."
It has also been contended, that the case of
Ogden v.
Saunders, while it admits the first proposition, denies the
second, and that this Court ought to reconsider the whole subject,
and establish it on principles more consistent.
But we are of opinion that the case of
Ogden v.
Saunders is not subject to the imputation of establishing such
an anomalous doctrine, although such an inference might be drawn
from some remarks of the learned judge who delivered the opinion of
the Court in that case; the question whether a state court would be
justifiable in giving effect to a bankrupt discharge which the
courts of the United
Page 46 U. S. 308
States would declare invalid, was not before the Court, and was
therefore not decided. Nor has such a decision ever been made by
this Court.
The Constitution of the United States is the supreme law of the
land, and binds every forum, whether it derives its authority from
a state or from the United States. When this Court has declared
state legislation to be in conflict with the Constitution of the
United States, and therefore void, the state tribunals are bound to
conform to such decision. A bankrupt law which comes within this
category cannot be pleaded as a discharge, even in the forums of
the state which enacted it.
It is true that as between the several states of this Union,
their respective bankrupt laws, like those of foreign states, can
have no effect in any forum beyond their respective limits, unless
by comity. But it is not a necessary consequence that state courts
can treat this subject as if the states were wholly foreign to each
other, and inflict her bankrupt laws on contracts and persons not
within her limits.
It is because the states are not foreign to each other in every
respect, and because of the restraint on their powers of
legislation on the subject of contracts, and the conflict of rights
arising from the peculiar relations which our citizens bear to each
other, as members of a common government, and yet citizens of
independent states, that doctrines have been established on this
subject apparently inconsistent and anomalous.
Accordingly we find that when, in the case of
Sturges v.
Crowninshield, this Court decided "that a state has authority
to pass a bankrupt law, provided there be no act of Congress in
force to establish a uniform system of bankruptcy," it was
nevertheless considered to be subject to the further condition,
"that such law should not impair the obligation of contracts within
the meaning of the Constitution of the United States, art. 1, sec.
10."
It followed as a corollary from this modification and restraint
of the power of the state to pass such laws, that they could have
no effect on contracts made before their enactment, or beyond their
territory. Hence, at the same term, the court unanimously decided,
in the case of
McMillan v. McNeil, that a contract made in
South Carolina was not affected by a bankrupt discharge in
Louisiana, under a law made antecedently to the contract, although
the suit was brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for
Louisiana. That case was precisely similar in all respects to the
one before us.
In
Mechanics' Bank v. Smith, a discharge under a
Pennsylvania bankrupt law was held not to affect a contract between
citizens of that state, made previous to the passage of the
law.
Next followed the case of
Ogden v. Saunders, which has
been made the subject of so much criticism. In that case, Saunders
a citizen of New York, drew bills on Ogden in New York, which
Page 46 U. S. 309
were accepted and protested there. Ogden was afterwards
discharged under the insolvent laws of New York, passed previous to
the contract of acceptance, and pleaded this discharge to an action
brought against him in the district court for Louisiana. A majority
of the Court there decided:
1st "That a bankrupt or insolvent law of any state, which
discharges the person of the debtor and his future acquisitions, is
not a law impairing the obligation of contracts, so far as it
respects debts subsequent to the passage of such law."
2dly "That a certificate of discharge under such a law cannot be
pleaded in bar of an action brought by a citizen of another
state."
We do not deem it necessary, on the present occasion, either to
vindicate the consistency of the propositions ruled in that case
with the reasons on which it appears to have been founded, or to
discuss anew the many vexed questions mooted therein, and on which
the court were so much divided. It may be remarked, however, that
the members of the court who were in the minority in the final
decision of it fully assented to the correctness of the decision of
McMillan v. McNeil, which rules the present case.
The case of
Boyle v.
Zacharie, 6 Pet. 635, is also precisely parallel
with the present. The contract declared on was made in New Orleans;
the defendant resided in Baltimore, and, on suit brought in the
circuit court for Maryland, pleaded his discharge under the
Maryland insolvent laws, and his plea was overruled.
So far, then, as respects the point now before us, this Court
appear to have always been unanimous; and in order to meet the
views of the learned counsel for the plaintiff in error, we should
be compelled to overrule every case heretofore decided on this most
difficult and intricate subject. But as the questions involved in
it have already received the most ample investigation by the most
eminent and profound jurists, both of the bar and the bench, it may
be well doubted whether further discussion will shed more light, or
produce a more satisfactory or unanimous decision.
So far, at least, as the present case is concerned, the Court
does not think it necessary or prudent to depart from the safe
maxim of
stare decisis.
The judgment of the circuit court is therefore
Affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY.
I gave the judgment in this case in the Fourth Circuit, because,
sitting in an inferior tribunal, I felt myself bound to follow the
decisions of this Court, although I could not assent to the
correctness of the reasoning upon which they are founded. And I
acquiesce in the judgment now given, since a majority of the
Justices have determined not to consider the question upon the
operation of the insolvent laws of the states as altogether an open
one; and undoubtedly, according to the decisions heretofore given,
the judgment of
Page 46 U. S. 310
the circuit court ought to be affirmed. But in my opinion these
decisions are not in harmony with some of the principles adopted
and sanctioned by this Court, and therefore ought not to be
followed.
The opinion delivered by Judge Johnson is the case of
Ogden
v. Saunders was afterwards concurred in and adopted by a
majority of the Court in the case of
Boyle
v. Zacharie and Turner, 6 Pet. 643. And the subject
has not since been brought to the attention of this Court until the
case now under consideration came before it.
The opinion of Judge Johnson is stated by him in the following
words.
"The propositions which I have endeavored to maintain, in the
opinion which I have delivered, are these:"
"1. That the power given to the United States to pass bankrupt
laws is not exclusive."
"2. That the fair and ordinary exercise of that power by the
states does not necessarily involve a violation of the obligation
of contracts,
multo fortiori of posterior contracts."
"3. But when in the exercise of that power the states pass
beyond their own limits, and the rights of their own citizens, and
act upon the rights of citizens of other states, there arises a
conflict of sovereign power, and a collision with the judicial
powers granted to the United States, which renders the exercise of
such a power incompatible with the rights of other states, and with
the Constitution of the United States."
And afterwards, in delivering the opinion of the Court in the
case of
Boyle v. Zacharie & Turner, Mr. Justice Story
says:
"The ultimate opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Johnson in the
case of
Ogden v. Saunders, 12 Wheat.
213,
25 U. S. 358, was concurred
in and adopted by the three judges who were in the minority upon
the general question of the constitutionality of state insolvent
laws, so largely discussed in that case. It is proper to make this
remark, in order to remove an erroneous impression of the bar, that
it was his single opinion, and not of the three other judges who
concurred in the judgment. So far, then, as decisions upon the
subject of state insolvent laws have been made by this Court, they
are to be deemed final and conclusive."
To the first two propositions maintained in the opinion of Judge
Johnson thus sanctioned and adopted, I entirely assent. But when
the two clauses in the Constitution therein referred to are held to
be no restriction, express or implied, upon the power of the states
to pass bankrupt laws, I cannot see how such laws can be regarded
as a violation of the Constitution of the United States upon the
grounds stated in the third proposition. For bankrupt laws, in the
nature of things, can have no force or operation beyond the limits
of the state or nation by which they are passed, except by the
comity of other states or nations. And it is difficult,
Page 46 U. S. 311
therefore, to perceive how the bankrupt law of a state can be
incompatible with the rights of other states, or come into
collision with the judicial powers granted to the general
government. According to established principles of jurisprudence,
such laws have always been held valid and binding within the
territorial limits of the state by which they are passed, although
they may act upon contracts made in another country, or upon the
citizens of another nation; and they have never been considered, on
that account, as an infringement upon the rights of other nations
or their citizens. But beyond the limits of the state they have no
force, except such as may be given to them by comity. If,
therefore, a state may pass a bankrupt law in the fair and ordinary
exercise of such a power, it would seem to follow, that it would be
valid and binding, not only upon the courts of the state, but also
upon the courts of the United States when sitting in the state, and
administering justice according to its laws; and that in the
tribunals of other states it should receive the respect and comity
which the established usages of civilized nations extend to the
bankrupt laws of each other. But how far this comity should be
extended would be exclusively a question for each state to decide
for itself, by its own proper tribunals; and there is no clause in
the Constitution which authorizes the courts of the United States
to control or direct them in this particular. It would be a very
unsafe mode of construing the Constitution of the United States, to
infer such a power in the tribunals of the general government,
merely from the general frame of the government and the grant to it
of judicial power.
I propose, however, merely to state my opinion, not to argue the
question. For since the year 1819, when the validity of these state
laws was first brought into question in this Court, so much
discussion has taken place, and such conflicting opinions been
continually found to exist, that I cannot hope that any useful
result will be attained by further argument here. I content myself,
therefore, with thus briefly stating the principles by which I
think the question ought to be decided, and referring to Story
Confl. of L. (edit. of 1841) § 335, and several of the
sections immediately following, where the decisions in foreign
courts of justice, as well as in our own, upon this subject, are
collected together and arranged, and commented on with the usual
learning and ability of that distinguished jurist.
MR. JUSTICE McLEAN.
I assent to the affirmation of the judgment of the circuit
court. How an act which impairs the obligations of contracts can be
considered constitutional as regards subsequent contracts, and not
prior ones, is not within my comprehension. The notion, that such a
law becomes a part of the contract, is in my judgment fallacious.
Whatever constitutes a part of the contract is inseparably
connected
Page 46 U. S. 312
with and governs it wherever it may be enforced. All other forms
and modes of proceeding, which affect the contract, belong to the
remedy.
An unconstitutional law has the same and no greater effect on
subsequent than on prior contracts. If a state can, in the mode
supposed, disregard the inhibitions of the federal Constitution,
there is no limit to the exercise of its powers. It has only to
pass an act, however repugnant to the Constitution, and, according
to the doctrine advanced, it operates as a law upon all subsequent
transactions by a presumed assent to its validity. The principle,
if carried out, would effectually subvert all restriction on the
exercise of state powers in the federal Constitution.
MR. JUSTICE DANIEL.
In the decision just pronounced, so far as it affirms the
judgment of the circuit court, I readily concur. I concur too in
the opinion of the majority of the Court, so far as it maintains
the position, that the contracts sued upon in this case, being
essentially New York contracts, could not be discharged by the
insolvent laws of Maryland. But to any and every extent to which it
may have been intended to assume that these contracts, if properly
Maryland contracts -- that is, if they had been made in Maryland,
and designed to have been there performed -- should not have been
discharged by the insolvent laws of that state, enacted and in
force prior to the contracts themselves, I am constrained to
express my entire dissent. I hold it to be invariably just, that
the law of the place where a contract is made, or at which it is to
be performed, enters essentially into and becomes a part of such
contract; and should govern its construction, whenever a departure
from that law is not so stipulated as to establish a different rule
by the contract itself. This principle of interpretation I deem to
be in accordance with the doctrine of the writers upon the comity
of nations, as we find it extensively collated by the late Justice
Story in his learned researches upon the conflict of laws. This
rule, moreover, I hold to be in no wise in conflict with the eighth
section of the first article of the Constitution of the United
States, conferring upon Congress the power to establish uniform
laws on the subject of bankruptcy; nor with the tenth section of
the same article, which prohibits to the states the power of
enacting laws impairing the obligation of contracts. On the
contrary, it recognizes in the federal government, and in the
governments of the states, the correct and complete distribution of
powers assigned to them respectively by the Constitution.
By a reasonable rule of interpretation, and by repeated
adjudications of this Court, it is held, that the mere investiture
of Congress with the power to pass laws on the subject of
bankruptcy would not,
ipso facto, divest such a power out
of the states. The withdrawing of the power from the states would
be dependent upon
Page 46 U. S. 313
an actual exercise by Congress of the power conferred by the
Constitution, and upon the incompatibility between the modes and
extent of its exercise with an exertion of authority on the same
subject by the states. The mere grant of power to Congress, whilst
that power remained dormant, would leave the states in possession
of whatever authority appertained to them at the period of the
adoption of the Constitution. These conclusions are in entire
harmony with the decisions of this Court in the case of
Sturges
v. Crowninshield; in that of
Ogden v. Saunders so far
as the latter has been comprehended; for whilst it would be
presumptuous not to ascribe any perplexity in this respect rather
to my own infirmity than to a defect in the work of much wiser men,
I must be permitted to say, that I have great difficulty in
reconciling the case of
Ogden v. Saunders with other
decisions of this Court, or in reconciling it even with itself.
These conclusions, too, are in accordance with the very perspicuous
opinions of Justices Washington and Thompson in the case last
mentioned, and with the opinion of Justice Story in that of
Houston v. Moore. Yet if it be asked whether the states
can now enact bankrupt laws within the sense and meaning of the
power granted to Congress, I answer that they cannot. This reply,
however, is by no means a deduction from the terms of the grant of
Congress, as expressed in the eighth section of the first article
of the Constitution. That provision, I maintain, for aught that its
language imports, leaves the states precisely where it found them,
except so far as they might be affected by an actual exercise of
authority by Congress. The states were found in the habitual
practice of bankrupt systems, and as long as they should not be
controlled in that practice by the action of Congress, they would
have remained in possession of the right to continue their familiar
practice, so far as the mere language of the eighth section of the
first article of the Constitution would affect them. But the
Constitution has proceeded beyond the potential restriction of the
section just mentioned, and in so doing has abridged the power it
found in practice in the states. It has, in section tenth of the
same article, declared that no state shall have power to pass any
"law impairing the obligation of contracts"; and in this
inhibition, as I hold, is to be found the true limit upon the power
of passing bankrupt laws, previously exercised by the states.
Bankrupt laws, as understood at the time of adopting the
Constitution, and at all other periods of time, have been
interpreted to mean laws which discharge or annihilate the contract
itself, with all its obligations, and if the Constitution had
stopped short at providing for a discretionary power in Congress to
enact such laws, and should have omitted any restraint upon the
states, having found the latter exerting the power of passing
bankrupt laws, it would have left them, by the mere fact of this
omission, still with the power, by retroactive legislation, of
dissolving and abrogating contracts. By connecting the
Page 46 U. S. 314
power given to Congress to pass bankrupt laws with the
inhibition upon the states contained in the tenth section of the
first article, all power in the latter to enact bankrupt laws as
laws operating upon contracts previously existing has been taken
away. But a power to discharge a contract made under a system of
laws established and known to all, as public laws are inferred and
indeed are necessarily admitted to be -- laws which may permit, nay
which under certain circumstances may command, such discharge --
presents a wholly different aspect of things -- one implying no
bankrupt power, no power that is retroactive, and incompatible with
either the legal or moral obligations involved in the contract; an
aspect of things which, so far from authorizing an infringement,
insists upon a fulfillment, of the contract, an exact compliance
with its true obligations. To prevent this, then, would be to
impair the obligations of the contract, to set up some new and
retroactive rule for its interpretation, and thereby to inflict a
wrong on a portion, if not on all, of the contracting parties.
To carry into effect the obligations of parties is the perfect
right of communities of which those parties are members, and within
which their obligations are made, and within which it may have been
stipulated that they should be fulfilled; the enforcement of
obligations, when intended to be performed according to the laws of
other communities, constitutes a right and a duty recognized by the
comity existing amongst all civilized governments. The case under
consideration being one of a contract, which, though made in
Maryland, was to be performed in the State of New York, the circuit
court decided very properly that it could not be discharged by the
insolvent laws of Maryland. But to prevent a misapprehension of the
grounds on which this decision of the circuit court is approved, by
myself, at least, and that, by assenting to that judgment, I may
not hereafter be considered as concluded from an application of
what is deemed the correct principle, when a case proper for its
application may arise, the aforegoing explanation has been deemed
proper.
MR. JUSTICE WOODBURY.
The judgment which has just been pronounced meets with my
concurrence, but I have the misfortune to differ as to some of the
views that have been expressed in rendering it.
As a matter of fact, the merchandise which is set out as the
ground of action in the declaration in this case was sold in New
York, by a citizen resident and doing business there, and the note
given for it and offered in evidence was delivered to him there.
Consequently, in point of law, the contract must be deemed a
foreign one, or, in common parlance, a New York, and not a
Maryland, contract.
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
644;
16 U. S. 3 Wheat.
101,
16 U. S. 146; 3
Met. 207; 3 Johns.Ch. 587.
Page 46 U. S. 315
The
lex loci contract us, which must govern its
construction and obligations, is therefore the law of New York,
unless on its face the contract was to be performed elsewhere. This
is the rule in almost every country which possesses any civilized
jurisprudence. 16 Johns. 233; 3 Caines 154; Story Bills of Exch.
§§ 146, 158, 168; 2 Barn. & Ald. 301; 1 Barn. &
C. 16; Story Confl. of L. §§ 272-329; 5 Cl. & F.
1-13; 13 Mass. 1;
10 U. S. 6 Cranch
221;
31 U. S. 6 Pet.
172;
32 U. S. 7 Pet.
435;
33 U. S. 8 Pet.
361;
38 U. S. 13 Pet. 65;
Pet.C.C. 302; 4 Dall. 325 [omitted]; Baldw. 130, 537; 2 Mason 151.
See more cases in
Towne v. Smith, 1 Woodb. &
M. 115.
As a question, then, of international law, without reference to
any constitutional question, such a contract and its obligations
cannot be affected by the legislation of bankrupt systems of other
states. It is understood that the whole court concur in the
opinion, that this reasoning and these decisions would be
sufficient to dispose of the present case without going into other
questionable matters, and, accordingly, no expression of
approbation or disapprobation of former decisions in this tribunal,
concerning bankrupt discharges, seems to have been necessary on
this occasion.
But as the majority of the Court have deemed it proper to
express some opinions upon them, it devolves on me the necessity of
stating very briefly and very generally two or three of my own in
relation to this subject, which in some respects do not accord with
those of the majority.
What has been and what has not been decided heretofore in
respect to the operation of insolvent and bankrupt discharges, in
the various cases which have come before this Court, it is somewhat
difficult to eviscerate, amidst so many conflicting and diversified
views among its judges. But without going into an analysis of them
now, and without stating in detail how far my individual opinions
coincide or differ with what is supposed to have been adjudicated
in each case, I would say, that, independent of any binding
precedents, the true rules on this subject seem to me to be
these.
1. That the states possess a constitutional right to pass laws,
whether called insolvent or bankrupt, discharging contracts
subsequently made, provided no concurrent legislation by Congress
exists at the same time on the subject, and that such laws cannot
be considered as impairing the obligation of contracts, which are
made under and subject to them, and when Congress is expressly
empowered by the Constitution to pass similar laws.
25 U. S. 12
Wheat. 23;
Bronson v.
Kinzie, 1 How. 311;
43 U. S. 2 How.
612.
2. That such laws are to be regarded as if a part of the
subsequent contract, incorporated into it; and hence, that the
contract, being construed according to the
lex loci
contract us, should be discharged by a certificate of bankruptcy
given to the obligor in the state where the contract was made and
was to be performed.
Page 46 U. S. 316
And this whether the action on it is brought in that state or
another, or in the courts of the United States or those of the
states, and whether the obligee reside in that state or elsewhere.
Considered as a part of the contract itself, it is inseparable from
it, and follows it into all hands and all places. 5 Mass. 509; 13
id. 4, 13 Pick. 60; 3 Burge's Col. & For. Laws, 876, 3
Story Confl. of L. §§ 281-284; 2 Kent Com. 390; 2 Mason
175;
Towne v. Smith, 1 Woodb. & M. 115. And though in
other states and in other forums it may be a matter of comity
merely, in one sense of the word, to respect and enforce foreign
contracts and their obligations, yet courts will always do it as
right whenever the contracts are valid at home, and not immoral or
against public policy elsewhere.
1
U. S. 1 Dall. 229;
3
U. S. 3 Dall. 369; Story Confl. of L. §§
331-335; 3 Burge's Col. & For. Laws 876, 925; 2 Kent Com. 392;
4 T.R. 182; 5 East 124; 2 H.Bl. 553; 1 Knapp, 265;
Adams v.
Storey, Paine 79.
3. That the ancient state insolvent laws, which were often
called here "poor debtor's acts," and in England "lord's acts," and
usually discharged only the body from imprisonment, instead of the
contract, 2 Tidd Pr., 978; 6 T.R. 366, were and still are
constitutional, whether they apply to future or past contracts.
Because they do not interfere at all with the debt due, the
contract itself, or its obligations, but merely the remedy on it,
or the form of legal process, and thus they should govern in that
respect no foreign forums, but merely its own courts, as the local
and territorial tribunals who issue the precept or process. 4
Wheat. 112 [argument of counsel -- omitted],
17 U. S. 122,
17 U. S. 209;
19 U. S. 6 Wheat.
131;
25 U. S. 12 Wheat.
213,
25 U. S. 272; 2
Kent Com. 392;
Adams v. Storey, Paine 79;
Campbell v.
Claudius, Pet.C.C. 484; 4 Wash.C.C. 424.
Without feeling justified on this occasion in going more at
large into these questions, and some others of an interesting
character connected with them, I may be permitted to add, that
these rules seem to me to have in their favor over some others at
least this merit. They give full effect to state powers and state
rights over this important matter, when not regulated by Congress.
They produce uniformity among the state and the United States
courts. They conform to the practice in other countries, and are
easily understood and easily enforced.
Order
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 was argued by counsel, on consideration whereof, it
is now here ordered and adjudged by this Court, that the judgment
of the said circuit court in this cause be and the same is hereby
affirmed, with costs and damages, at the rate of six percentum per
annum.