A statute of Mississippi, passed in 1846, declares that no
record of any judgment recovered in a foreign court against a
citizen of that state shall be received as evidence after the
expiration of three years from the time of the rendition of such
judgment without the limits of the state.
This statute has no application to judgments rendered before its
passage. Hence, where it was pleaded as a defense in a suit brought
upon a judgment recovered in Louisiana, in 1844, the plea was bad
and a demurrer to it sustained.
The case is fully stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 56 U. S. 422
MR. JUSTICE DANIEL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question adjourned for our consideration on this record
cannot be more clearly or succinctly disclosed than it has been by
the certified statement of the pleadings upon which the judges of
the circuit court were divided in opinion. That statement is in the
following words:
"
May Term 1851"
"This day came on this cause for trial before Judges Peter V.
Daniel and Samuel J. Gholson, presiding."
"The declaration is an action of debt, brought on the 16th May,
1850, and founded on a judgment rendered on the 29th day of
November, 1844, in the District Court of the Parish of Madison, in
the Ninth Judicial District of the State of Louisiana, against the
defendant, and in favor of the plaintiff. To this action the
defendant pleaded a number or pleas, of which the 7th plea is in
the words and figures following:"
" And for further plea in this behalf the said defendant says,
that the said defendant was, at the time of the commencement of the
suit in the District Court of the Parish of Madison, in the State
of Louisiana, and also at the time of the rendition of the judgment
in the plaintiff's declaration mentioned, and ever since has been,
and now is, a citizen of the State of Mississippi, residing in the
County of Hinds, and that more than three years expired, and were
complete and ended, from and after the time of the rendition of
such judgment, without the limits of this state, to-wit, in the
Parish of Madison, in the State of Louisiana, before the
institution of this suit, and this he is ready to verify; wherefore
&c."
"JOHNSON, MAYS & CLIFFTON,
For defendant"
"To said plea the plaintiff filed a general demurrer."
"Among other matters to be tried, the question occurred before
the court whether the demurrer of the plaintiff to the defendant's
plea above copied ought to be sustained. And after argument by
counsel, the opinions of the two judges aforesaid are opposed and
disagree upon the question aforesaid; one of said judges being of
opinion that said plea is a good and sufficient bar to the
plaintiff's action, and that said demurrer should be overruled; and
the other of said judges being of opinion that said plea is not a
good or sufficient bar to the plaintiff's action, and that said
demurrer should be sustained."
"And thereupon, at the request of the counsel for both parties
to said suit, the point aforesaid upon which said disagreement
happens is hereby stated under the direction of the judges
aforesaid, and is by them, upon the request of said counsel,
signed
Page 56 U. S. 423
and sealed, and ordered to be enrolled, and made part of the
record in said cause."
"And the court orders and directs that said point by duly
certified, under the seal of said court, to the Supreme Court of
the United States of America, at the next session of said supreme
court hereafter to be held."
"P. V. DANIEL [SEAL]"
"S. J. GHOLSON [SEAL]"
Upon an examination of the defendant's seventh plea and of the
law to which it has reference, it is obvious that the purpose of
the defendant was to interpose, as a bar to a recovery upon the
judgment rendered by the court in Louisiana, the provision of the
statute of Mississippi, enacted on the 5th of March, 1846, and to
be found in Hutchinson's Digest of the statutes of that State of
1848, Art. 8, 833. The language of the provision is as follows:
"No record of any judgment, recovered in any court of record
without the limits of this state, against any person who was, at
the time of the commencement of the suit on which the judgment is
founded, or at the time of the rendition of such judgment, a
citizen of this state, shall be received in any court of this state
as evidence to charge such citizen with liability, after the
expiration of three years from the time of the rendition of such
judgment without the limits of this state."
As a general rule for the interpretation of statutes, it may be
laid down, that they never should be allowed a retroactive
operation where this is not required by express command or by
necessary and unavoidable implication. Without such command or
implication they speak and operate upon the future only. Especially
should this rule of interpretation prevail, where the effect and
operation of a law are designed, apart from the intrinsic merits of
the rights of parties, to restrict the assertion of those rights.
The peculiar language of the provision of the Mississippi statute,
if taken in its literal acceptation, would not only evince the
force and propriety of the rule above mentioned, but might suggest
a serious doubt as to the compatibility of that provision with the
principles of common right, or with the mandate of the federal
Constitution; for by the literal terms of that statute, the rights
of the citizen of a different state seem to be made dependent, not
upon his diligence in the institution or prosecution of his suit,
but upon an event over which he can have no control, viz. the trial
of the action brought upon the previous judgment. From these
difficulties, which would seem to flow from the letter of the
statute, the court of Errors and Appeals for the State of
Mississippi have relieved that law by the interpretation they have
placed upon it.
Page 56 U. S. 424
Thus, in the case of
Boyd v. Barringer, reported in the
23d volume of Mississippi Reports by Cushman, page 270, they have
declared that the statute of the 5th of March, 1846, has no
application to judgments rendered before its passage; and in the
24th volume of Mississippi Reports page 377, in the case of
Garrett v. Beaumont, they have affirmed the same position.
In a decision, pronounced on the 2d Monday of December, 1853, in
Moore v. Lobbin, a manuscript copy of which has been
certified and submitted by consent of counsel, the same court have
expounded that provision of the statute of 1846 which declares
"That no record of any judgment recovered in any court of record
without the limits of the state, against any person who, at the
commencement of the suit on which the judgment was recovered, or at
the time of the rendition of said judgment, was a citizen of the
State of Mississippi, should be received in any court of that state
as evidence to charge such citizen with liability after the
expiration of three years from the time of the rendition of such
judgment without the limits of the state."
In expounding this proviso, the court said,
"The phraseology of this statute renders it not free from
difficulty of construction. It is an amendment of the general
statute of limitations, and the legislature must have had in view
that general principle governing all statutes limiting actions,
that the periods prescribed have reference to the commencement of
the action. We cannot suppose that the legislature intended to do
more than to debar a party of any right to maintain an action
commenced on such judgment after the lapse of the time mentioned,
or that any reference was had to the time of trial of a suit which
might be commenced long before the expiration of the time limited.
Such a construction would involve the most unjust and unreasonable
consequences."
The court, after more extended views of the subject, arrived at
the following conclusion:
"We are therefore led to sanction such a construction of the
statute as is most consistent with reason and justice, and not in
conflict with the Constitution of the United States, and we are
accordingly of opinion that this is a statute of limitations
affecting the commencement of the suit, and that if an action on
such judgment be instituted before the expiration of three years
from the date of its rendition, a transcript of the record of it is
admissible in evidence on the trial, though more than three years
have elapsed at the time it is offered in evidence."
Such is the construction placed by the highest court of
Mississippi upon the statute of 1846, which the seventh plea of the
defendant sought to interpose as a bar to the action against
him.
According to that construction, the statute of 1846 could
operate no such bar, because the judgment in Louisiana, on
which
Page 56 U. S. 425
the action was founded, was recovered on the 29th of November,
1844, more than a year previously to the passing of the statute in
question, and by the same interpretation the right of the plaintiff
to count upon and to adduce in evidence, in support of his action,
the record of that judgment, was in no wise affected by the period
of the trial, but that the law had reference exclusively to the
interval of time between the first judgment and the institution of
the action founded thereon.
It is the practice of this Court to adopt the interpretation
given by the highest tribunals of the several states to their
respective acts of legislation where such interpretation does not
conflict with the paramount authority of the Constitution, or laws
of the United States binding upon their own courts, or with the
fundamental principles of justice and common right. Perceiving in
the case before us no conflict whatsoever between such authority
and the decisions of the Supreme Court of Mississippi herein
referred to, but, on the contrary, an entire coincidence between
them, we approve and adopt those decisions, and in conformity
therewith we order it to be certified to the circuit court that the
7th plea of the defendant pleaded in this case is not sufficient to
bar the action of the plaintiff, and that the demurrer of the
plaintiff to that plea ought to be
Sustained.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern
District of Mississippi, and on the question or point on which the
judges of the said circuit court were opposed in opinion, and which
was certified to this Court for its opinion, agreeably to the acts
of Congress in such case made and provided, and was argued by
counsel. On consideration whereof, it is the opinion of this Court
that the plea pleaded by the defendant is not a good or sufficient
bar to the plaintiff's action, and that the demurrer of the
plaintiffs should be sustained. Whereupon it is now here ordered
and adjudged by this Court that it be so certified to the said
circuit court.