The defendant in the court below, contended that one of the bonds was invalid, because it wanted the stamp required by the law of Maryland; and of this opinion was his Honor, whereupon the plaintiff submitted to a nonsuit, and appealed to the Supreme Court.
Other points were made in the court below, but as they are not necessary to the understanding the opinion of the Supreme Court, they are omitted. The courts of this State will not enforce the revenue laws of Maryland. In support of the proposition that they will do so, will be cited Story on Prom. Notes. One only of the authorities he cites sustains him — viz., Clegg v. Levy, 3 Camp., 166. The others are all against the proposition. Chit. on Bills, 57; 6 T. R., 425; 4 T. R., 467; James v.Catherwood, 3 Dowl. and R'y, 190 (16 Eng. C. L. R., 165); Wynne v.Jackson, 2 Russ., 351; Trust. of Randall v. Van Ransellaer, 1 Johns., 94. (315) The first objection urged by the defendant against the plaintiff's right to recover is, that by the laws of the State of Maryland, where the bond was executed, it was void because not written upon stamped paper. If upon consideration this objection be found to be valid, it will dispose of the case and make it unnecessary to consider any other question discussed by the counsel.
The act of Maryland upon which the defendant relies, is entitled. "An act imposing duties on promissory notes, bills of exchange, specialties, and other instruments of writing, to aid in paying the debts of the State." It was passed in the year 1844, and in the 1st section imposes certain duties upon every sheet or piece of paper, etc., upon which shall be written or printed any bond, obligation, single bill, or promissory note, etc. In the 8th section it is declared, "that no instrument of writing whatsoever charged by this act, with the payment of a duty as aforesaid, shall be pleaded or given in evidence in any court of this State, or admitted in such court to be available for any purpose whatsoever, unless the same shall be stamped or marked as aforesaid," etc. The question is, whether, as the bond was executed in the State of Maryland upon unstamped paper, and could not therefore be made available for any purpose in the courts of that state, it can be enforced in the courts of this State by the obligee or his assignee. In the English cases upon this subject there seems to have been a direct conflict of opinion among judges of great eminence. In Alvis v. Hodgson, 7 Term Rep., 241, LordKenyon held that the plaintiff could not recover upon a written contract made in Jamaica, which by the laws of that island was void for want of a stamp. Lord Ellenborough ruled the same way in Clegg v. Levy. 3 Camp. N. P. Rep., 166, with regard to an agreement not valid for the same cause by the laws of Surinam. In Wynne v. Jackson, 2 Russ. Rep., 351 (3 Eng. Con. Ch., 144), the Vice-Chancellor held the contrary upon certain bills drawn in such form in France, that no (316) recovery could be had upon them in the courts of that country. Lord Chief Justice Abbott held the same in the case of James v.Catherwood, 2 Dowl. and R'y Rep., 190 (16 Com. Law. Rep., 165). The English elementary writers attempt to reconcile these apparently conflicting decisions by making this distinction; if the bill, note, or agreement be drawn or made in a foreign independent state, it may be enforced in England, though requiring a stamp in the country where drawn or made, but not if drawn or made in any part of the British Empire. Chitty on Bills, 57; Byles on Bills, 302 (61 Law Lib., 295). On the other hand,Story, J., both in his commentaries on promissory notes, section 158, and on the conflict of laws, section 260, contends with much force of reasoning that "if by the laws of a foreign country a *Page 297 contract is void unless it is written on stamp paper, it ought to be held void everywhere; for unless it be good there, it can have no obligation in any other country. It might be different if the contract had been made payable in another country, or if the objection were not to the validity of the contract, but merely to the admissibility of other proof of the contract in the foreign court." In the 261st section of his work on the conflict of laws, a book universally recognized as one of the highest authority, he states the grounds of his opinion, as follows: "The ground of this doctrine as commonly stated, is that every person contracting in a place is understood to submit himself to the law of the place, and silently to assent to its action on the contract. It would be more correct to say that the law of the place of the contract acts upon it independently of any volition of the parties in virtue of the general sovereignty possessed by every nation to regulate all persons, property and transactions within its own territory. And in admitting the law of a foreign country to govern in regard to contracts made there, every nation merely recognizes from a principle of comity the same right to exist in other nations, which it demands and exercises for itself." This course of reasoning commends itself strongly to our judgments, and we think that it is especially applicable to the several states of our confederacy, which, though foreign to each other in some respects, are united for all great national purposes under one government, and ought, therefore, whenever they can, to aid rather than hinder each other in carrying out each its own peculiar policy; and to do this is nothing more than in regard to its revenue laws. In doing this, we shall be supported (317) by the authority of the course pursued by the English courts, towards those provinces of the British Empire which are governed by their own domestic laws. Byles on Bills, ubi supra. We have not been referred to, nor have we been able to find any case, decided in our own State, directly upon this point. But our courts have several times recognized the doctrine that "the law of the country where a contract is made, is the rule by which its validity, its meaning, and its consequences are to be determined." Watson v. Orr, 14 N.C. 161. This doctrine was supplied in Anderson v. Doak, 32 N.C. 295, to the support of a bill of sale for slaves without a subscribing witness, executed in Virginia where no such formality is required. And in Drewry v. Phillips, ante, 81, decided at the last term, it was admitted by counsel, that a bill of sale for slaves executed in Virginia where all the parties resided, was good though not attested, nor proved and registered as required by the laws of North Carolina, because by the laws of Virginia no such attestation, proof, and registration were necessary. We can see no reason for a distinction between a formality made requisite to the *Page 298 validity of a contract by the law of a state in aid of its revenue, and a formality required for any other cause. In every such case, the lex locicontractus ought to determine the rights of the parties everywhere. We therefore think that his Honor committed no error in holding that the present action could not be sustained, and the judgment of nonsuit must be affirmed.
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
Cited: Keesler v. Insurance Company, 177 N.C. 397.
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