The time during which the courts in the lately rebellious states
were closed to citizens of the loyal states is, in suit brought by
them since, to be excluded from the computation of the time fixed
by statutes of limitation within which suits may be brought, though
exception for such cause be not provided for in the statutes. And
this independently of the Act of Congress of June 11, 1864.
Page 73 U. S. 533
J. & E. Abbott, of New Hampshire, sued Hanger, of Arkansas,
in assumpsit. The latter pleaded the statute of limitations of
Arkansas, which limits such action to three years. The former
replied the rebellion, which broke out after the cause of action
accrued and closed for more than three years all lawful courts. On
demurrer and judgment against it and error to this Court, the
question here was simply whether the time during which the courts
in Arkansas were closed on account of the rebellion was to be
excluded from the computation of time fixed by the Arkansas statute
of limitations within which suits on contracts were to be brought,
there being no exception by the terms of the statute itself for any
such case.
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
The declaration was in assumpsit, and the plaintiffs alleged
that the defendant, on the tenth day of April, 1865, was indebted
to them for divers goods, wares, and merchandise and also for money
had and received in the sum of ten thousand dollars. Defendant
appeared and pleaded two pleas in answer to the declaration:
(1) That he never promised as the plaintiffs have alleged.
(2) That the cause of action did not accrue at any time within
three years next before the commencement of the suit.
Issue was joined by the plaintiffs on the first plea, and in
answer to the second they filed seven replications, but particular
reference need only be made to the fifth and sixth of the
series.
Substance of the fifth replication was that the defendant, from
the sixth day of May, 1861, to the first day of January,
Page 73 U. S. 534
1865, was an actual resident of Arkansas, and that the
plaintiffs were at the same time actual residents of New Hampshire,
and that during the whole of that period they were prevented, by
reason of resistance to the execution of the federal laws and the
interruption of the ordinary course of judicial proceedings in the
former state from instituting their action and from having the
defendant served with proper process, and so they aver that they
did commence their suit within three years next before the cause of
action accrued.
Sixth replication alleges that the parties respectively had been
for more than three years before the commencement of the suit
actual residents of their respective states and that the cause of
action accrued before the twenty-fifth day of October, 1859, and
that after the same had so accrued, to-wit, on the sixth day of
May, 1861, all the lawful courts of the state where the defendant
resided were closed by reason of the insurrection and rebellion
which then and there arose against the lawful authority of the
United States; that the courts so remained closed from that day to
the first day of January, 1865, and so the plaintiffs say that the
period during which the courts were not open for the reasons stated
should not be deemed and taken as any part of the three years'
limitation, as pleaded, and they in fact say that they did commence
their suit within three years next before the cause of action
accrued.
Demurrers were filed by the defendant to the replications, and
the court gave judgment for the plaintiffs in the sum of nine
thousand four hundred eighty-three dollars and twenty-six cents
damages and costs suit, whereupon the defendant sued out this writ
of error.
Proclamation of blockade was made by the President on the
nineteenth day of April, 1861, and on the thirteenth day of July in
the same year, Congress passed a law authorizing the President to
interdict all trade and intercourse between the inhabitants of the
states in insurrection and the rest of the United States. [
Footnote 1]
Page 73 U. S. 535
War, when duly declared or recognized as such by the war-making
power, imports a prohibition to the subjects, or citizens, of all
commercial intercourse and correspondence with citizens or persons
domiciled in the enemy country. [
Footnote 2] Upon this principle of public law, it is the
established rule in all commercial nations that trading with the
enemy, except under a government license, subjects the property to
confiscation or to capture and condemnation. [
Footnote 3]
Partnership with a foreigner is dissolved by the same event
which makes him an alien enemy, because there is in that case an
utter incompatibility created by operation of law between the
partners as to their respective rights, duties, and obligations,
both public and private, which necessarily dissolves the relation,
independent of the will or acts of the parties. [
Footnote 4] Direct consequence of the rule as
established in those cases is that as soon as war is commenced, all
trading, negotiation, communication, and intercourse between the
citizens of one of the belligerents with those of the other,
without the permission of the government, is unlawful. No valid
contract therefore can be made, nor can any promise arise by
implication of law from any transaction with an enemy. Exceptions
to the rule are not admitted, and even after the war has
terminated, the defendant, in an action founded upon a contract
made in violation of that prohibition, may set up the illegality of
the transaction as defense. [
Footnote 5] Various attempts, says Mr. Wheaton, [
Footnote 6] have been made to evade the
operation of the rule and to escape its penalties, but they have
all been defeated by its inflexible rigor. All foreign writers on
international law concur in the opinion that the immediate and
necessary consequence of a declaration of war is to interdict all
intercourse or dealings between the
Page 73 U. S. 536
subjects of the belligerent states. Hostilities once commenced,
any attempt at trading on the part of the subjects of either state,
unless by permission of the sovereign, is prohibited and becomes
ipso facto a breach of the allegiance due to their
respective sovereigns, as such is forbidden by the public law of
the civilized world. [
Footnote
7]
Executory contracts also with an alien enemy, or even with a
neutral, if they cannot be performed except in the way of
commercial intercourse with the enemy, are dissolved by the
declaration of war, which operates for that purpose with a force
equivalent to an act of Congress. [
Footnote 8]
In former times, the right to confiscate debts was admitted as
an acknowledged doctrine of the law of nations, and in strictness
it may still be said to exist, but it may well be considered as a
naked and impolitic right, condemned by the enlightened conscience
and judgment of modern times. [
Footnote 9] Better opinion is that executed contracts such
as the debt in this case, although existing prior to the war, are
not annulled or extinguished, but the remedy is only suspended,
which is a necessary conclusion on account of the inability of an
alien enemy to sue or to sustain, in the language of the civilians,
a
persona standi in judicio. [
Footnote 10]
Trading, which supposed the making of contracts and which also
involves the necessity of intercourse and correspondence, is
necessarily contradictory to a state of war, but there is no
exigency in war which requires that belligerents should confiscate
or annul the debts due by the citizens of the other contending
party.
We suspend the right of the enemy, says Mr. Chitty, to the debts
which our traders owe to him, but we do not annul the right. We
preclude him during war from suing to recover his due, for we are
not to send treasure abroad for the direct supply of our enemies in
their attempt to destroy us, but with the return of peace, we
return the right and the
Page 73 U. S. 537
remedy. [
Footnote 11]
During war, says Sir William Scott, there is a total inability to
sustain any contract by an appeal to the tribunals of the one
country on the part of the subjects of the other. [
Footnote 12] Views of Mr. Wheaton are, and
they are undoubtedly correct, that debts previously contracted
between the respective subjects, though the remedy for their
recovery is suspended during war, are revived on the restoration of
peace unless actually confiscated in the meantime in the rigorous
exercise of the strict rights of war, contrary to the milder rules
of recent times. He says, in effect, that the power of confiscating
such debts theoretically exists, though it is seldom or never
practically exerted; that the right of the creditor to sue for the
recovery of the debt is not extinguished, that it is only suspended
during the war, and revives in full force on the restoration of
peace. [
Footnote 13]
Under the thirty-fourth section of the Judiciary Act, the
statutes of limitations of the several states, where no special
provision has been made by Congress, form the rule of decision in
the courts of the United States, and the same effect is given to
them as is give to the courts of the state. [
Footnote 14]
Grant that the law of nations is that debts due from individuals
to the enemy may, by the rigorous application of the rights of war,
be confiscated, still it is a right which is seldom or never
exercised in modern warfare, and the rule is universally
acknowledge that if the debts are not so confiscated, the right to
enforce payment revives when the ware has terminated. [
Footnote 15] Vattel says the
sovereign may confiscate debts
Page 73 U. S. 538
due from his subjects to the enemy if the term of payment
happens in time of war, or at least he may prohibit his subjects
from paying while the war continues, but at present a regard to the
advances and safety of commerce induces a less rigorous rule.
[
Footnote 16]
Where a debt has not been confiscated, the rule is undoubted
that the right to sue revives on the restoration of peace, and Mr.
Chitty says that with the return of peace, we return to the
creditor the right and the remedy. Unless we return the remedy with
the right, the pretense of restoring the latter is a mockery, as
the power to exercise it with effect is gone by lapse of time
during which both the rights and the remedy were suspended.
When our ancestors immigrated here, they brought with them the
statute of 21 Jac. I, c. 16, entitled "An act for limitation of
actions, and for avoiding of suits in law," known as the statute of
limitations. Proceedings in courts of justice are usually
determined by the
lex fori of the place where the suit in
pending, including the statutes of limitations, which are those of
the country where the suit is brought, and not those of the
lex
loci contractus. [
Footnote
17]
Such statutes exist in all the states, and with few exceptions
they have been copied from the one brought here in colonial times.
They are statutes of repose to quiet title, to suppress fraud, and
to supply the deficiency of proofs arising from the ambiguity and
obscurity or antiquity of transactions. They proceed also upon the
presumption that claims are extinguished whenever they are not
litigated in the proper forum within the prescribed period, and
they take away all solid ground of complaint, because they rest on
the negligence or laches of the party himself. [
Footnote 18]
Persons within the age of twenty-one years,
femes covert,
non compos mentis, persons imprisoned or beyond the seas, were
excepted out of the operation of the third section of
Page 73 U. S. 539
the act, and were allowed the same period of time after such
disability was removed. Just exceptions indeed are to be found in
all such statutes, but when examined, it will appear that they were
framed to prevent injustice, and never to encourage laches or to
promote negligence. Cases where the courts of justice are closed in
consequence of insurrection or rebellion are not within the express
terms of any such exception, but the statute of limitations was
passed in 1623, more than a century before it came to be understood
that debts due to alien enemies were not subject to confiscation.
Down to 1737, says Chancellor Kent, the opinion of jurists was in
favor of the right to confiscate, and many maintained that such
debts were annulled by the declaration of war. Regarding such debts
as annulled by war, the lawmakers of that day never thought of
making provision for the collection of the same on the restoration
of peace between the belligerents. Commerce and civilization have
wrought great changes in the spirit of nations touching the conduct
of war, and in respect to the principles of international law
applicable to the subject.
Constant usage and practice of belligerent nations from the
earliest times subjected enemy's goods in neutral vessels to
capture and condemnation as prize of war, but the maxim is now
universally acknowledged that "free ships make free goods" which is
another victory of commerce over the feelings of avarice and
revenge. Individual debts, as a general remark, are no longer the
subject of confiscation, and the rule is universally admitted that
if not confiscated during the war, the return of peace brings with
it both "the right and the remedy." [
Footnote 19]
Total inability on the part of an enemy creditor to sustain any
contract in the tribunals of the other belligerent exists during
war, but the restoration of peace removes the disability, and opens
the doors of the courts. Absolute suspension of the right, and
prohibition to exercise it, exist during war by the law of nations,
and if so, then it is clear that
Page 73 U. S. 540
peace cannot bring with it the remedy if the war is of much
duration, unless it also be held that the operation of the statute
of limitation is also suspended during the period the creditor is
prohibited, by the existence of the war and the law of nations,
from enforcing his claim. Neither laches nor fraud can be imputed
in such a case, and none of the reasons on which the statute is
founded can possibly apply, as the disability to sue becomes
absolute by the declaration of war, and is a conclusion of law.
[
Footnote 20] Ability to sue
was the status of the creditor when the contract was made, but the
effect of war is to suspend the right not only without any fault on
his part, but under the circumstances which make it his duty to
abstain from any such attempt. His remedy is suspended by the acts
of the two governments and by the law of nations not applicable at
the date of the contract, but which comes into operation in
consequence of an event over which he has no control.
Old decisions, made when the rule of law was that war annulled
all debts between the subjects of the belligerents, are entitled to
but little weight, even if it is safe to assume that they are
correctly reported, of which, in respect to the leading case of
Prideaux v. Webber, [
Footnote 21] there is much doubt.
Miller v.
Prideaux, [
Footnote 22]
Lee v. Rogers, [
Footnote 23]
Hall v. Wybourne, [
Footnote 24]
Aubrey v. Fortescue,
[
Footnote 25] are of the
same class, and to the same effect. All of those decisions were
made between parties who were citizens of the same jurisdiction,
and most of them were made nearly a hundred years before the
international rule was acknowledged that war only suspended debts
to an enemy and that peace had the effect to restore the remedy.
The rule of the present day is that debts existing prior to the
war, but which made not part of the reasons for undertaking it,
remain entire, and the remedies are revived with the restoration of
peace. [
Footnote 26]
The suspension of the remedy during war is so absolute
Page 73 U. S. 541
that courts of justice will not even grant a commission to take
testimony in an enemy's country. [
Footnote 27] But when the reason for the suspension
ceases, the right to prosecute revives, and the fact that the right
had been suspended constitutes no disability. [
Footnote 28]
When the courts of justice are open, and judges and ministers of
the same may by law protect men from wrong and violence and
distribute justice to all, says Lord Coke, it is said to be time of
peace, but when by invasion, insurrection, rebellion or such like,
the peaceable course of justice is disturbed and stopped, so as the
courts of justice be, as it were, shut up,
et silent leges
inter arma, then it is said to be time of war, and having
described the conditions both of war and peace, he adds
emphatically that if a man is disseized in time of peace and the
descent is cast in time of war, this shall not take away the entry
of the disseizee, which is a direct authority for the plaintiffs in
this case. [
Footnote 29]
Text writers usually say, on the authority of the old cases
referred to, that the nonexistence of courts or their being shut is
no answer to the bar of the statute of limitations, but Plowden
says that things happening by an invincible necessity, though they
be against common law or an act of Parliament, shall not be
prejudicial. That therefore to say that the courts were shut is a
good excuse on voucher of record. [
Footnote 30] Exceptions not mentioned in the statutes
have sometimes been admitted, and this Court held that the time
which elapsed while certain prior proceedings were suspended by
appeal should be deducted, as it appeared that the injured party in
the meantime had no right to demand his money or to sue for the
recovery of the same, and in view of those circumstances, the court
decided that his right of
Page 73 U. S. 542
action had not accrued so as to bar it, although not commenced
within six years. [
Footnote
31] But the exception set up in this case stands upon much more
solid reasons, as the right to sue was suspended by the acts of the
government, for which all the citizens are responsible. Unless the
rule be so, then the citizens of a state may pay their debts by
entering into an insurrection or rebellion against the government
of the Union, if they are able to close the courts, and to
successfully resist the laws until the bar of the statute becomes
complete, which cannot for a moment be admitted. Peace restores the
right and the remedy, and as that cannot be if the limitation
continues to run during the period the creditor is rendered
incapable to sue, it necessarily follows that the operation of the
statute is also suspended during the same period.
Reference is made to the remarks of the judge who gave the
opinion in the case of
Alabama v. Dalton, [
Footnote 32] but the case then before the
Court involved no such question as is presented in this case, and
those remarks are more than counterbalanced by those made by the
Chief Justice in
McIver v. Ragan, [
Footnote 33] where he admits that the case would
be within the exceptions to the statute if it appeared that the
courts of the country were closed so that no suits could be
instituted.
Viewed in any light, we think the decision of the circuit court
overruling the demurrer to the fifth and sixth replications of the
plaintiffs was correct.
Plaintiffs also rely upon the Act of Congress of the eleventh of
June, 1864, as being sufficient to take the case out of the
operation of the statute, but it is not necessary to decide that
point in this case, and we express no opinion upon the subject.
Judgment affirmed with costs.
[
Footnote 1]
12 Stat. at Large 1258-257.
[
Footnote 2]
The William
Bagaley, 5 Wall. 405;
Jecker
v. Montgomery, 18 How. 111; Wheaton on Maritime
Captures 209.
[
Footnote 3]
The Rapid, 8
Cranch 155;
The Hoop, 1 Robinson Admiralty 196.
[
Footnote 4]
Maclachlan on Shipping 475; Story on Partnership § 316;
Griswold v. Waddington, 15 Johnson 57;
Same Case,
16
id. 438.
[
Footnote 5]
Williamson v. Patterson, 7 Taunton 43.
[
Footnote 6]
On International Law, by Lawrence, 551, 556.
[
Footnote 7]
Bynkershoek, B. 1, c. 3; Vattel, B. 3 c.4;
Potts v.
Bell, 8 Term 561.
[
Footnote 8]
Exposito v. Bowden, 4 Ellis & Blackburne 963;
Same Case, 7
id. 778.
[
Footnote 9]
Kent's Com. (11th ed) 73.
[
Footnote 10]
1
id. (11th ed),
Flint v. Waters, 15 East
260.
[
Footnote 11]
Chitty on C. & M. 423.
[
Footnote 12]
The Hoop, 1 C. Robinsons' Adm. 200;
Alcinous v.
Nigreu, 4 Ellis & Blackburne 217.
[
Footnote 13]
Wheaton's International Law, by Lawrence, 541-877;
Furtado
v. Rogers, 3 Bosanquet & Puller 191;
Ex Parte
Boussmaker, 13 Vesey Jr. 71;
Signora, Edward's Adm.
60;
Brown v. United
States, 8 Cranch 110;
Ware v.
Hilton, 3 Dall. 199; Upton, Maritime W. & P.
42; Halleck's International Law 358.
[
Footnote 14]
Angell on Limitations § 24;
McCluny v.
Sillman, 3 Pet. 270;
Bank of
United States v. Daniels, 12 Pet. 32;
Porterfield v.
Clark, 2 How. 125.
[
Footnote 15]
Manning, International Law 130; Bynkershoek, B.1, c.8.
[
Footnote 16]
Vattel, B. 3, c. 5, § 77.
[
Footnote 17]
Townsend v.
Jamison, 9 How. 407; Wheaton's International Law,
by Lawrence, 187-288; Story Conflict of Laws § 577.
[
Footnote 18]
Story Conflict of Laws § 576; Chitty on Contracts (10th Am
ed). 907.
[
Footnote 19]
Wolf v. Oxhold, 6 Maull & Selwyn 92.
[
Footnote 20]
2 Wildman's International Law 17.
[
Footnote 21]
1 Levinz 31.
[
Footnote 22]
1 Keble 157.
[
Footnote 23]
1 Levinz 110.
[
Footnote 24]
2 Salkeld 420.
[
Footnote 25]
10 Modern 205.
[
Footnote 26]
1 Kent's Com. (11th ed) 169; Grotius, b. 3, c. 20, §§
16-18
[
Footnote 27]
Barrick v. Buba, 32 English Law & Equity 465;
Wood v. Allen,
2 Dall. 102.
[
Footnote 28]
Foxcraft v.
Galloway, 2 Dall. 132;
Wall v. Robson, 2
Nott & McCord 498;
Hopkins v.
Bell, 3 Cranch 458;
Higginson v. Air, 1
Desaussure 427.
[
Footnote 29]
2 Co.Litt. 249 b; Bracton, lib. 4, fol. 240; 1 Hale's P.C.
347.
[
Footnote 30]
Brooke, tit. Failure of Record; Blanshard on Limitations 163; 6
Bacon's Ab. 395; 1 Plowden 9 b.
[
Footnote 31]
Montgomery v.
Hernandez, 12 Wheat. 129.
[
Footnote 32]
50 U. S. 9 How.
522.
[
Footnote 33]
15 U. S. 2 Wheat.
29.