Hefferlin v. Sinsinderfer

By the Court,

Croziek, C. J.

On tbe fifth dáy of May, A. D. 1853, Hefferlin, tbe plaintiff in error, at Weston, in tbe State of Missouri, made bis promissory note, payable to defendants in error in one day after date. On tbe first day of August, 1859, a suit was brought on this note in tbe District Court of tbe then Territory of Kansas, sitting in Leavenworth County, and a judgment was, on tbe 13th of December of tbe same year, rendered against Hefferlin. Upon this judgment an execution was, on tbe 31st of July, 1860, issued to tbe sheriff of Leavenworth County, who levied upon a quarter section of land as tbe property of Hefferlin, and having bad tbe same appraised at $1,500,- sold it to defendant, Sinsinderfer, for $116; which sale was, by an order of tbe Court, at December Ternq 1860, confirmed, and the sheriff ordered to execute á deed for the lands to tbe purchaser. Tbe plaintiff in error now seeks to have this order reversed, for several reasons, among which is: that tbe land was sold for less than two-thirds of its appraised value; or, in other words, was sold without appraisement.

Tbe position taken by tbe Court below was, that inasmuch as tbe contract upon which tbe judgment was rendered bad b'een executed before tbe passage in this State of any law requiring an appraisement of real estate upon a sale under execution, tbe law, as announced by tbe Supreme Court of tbe United States, did not require or authorize an appraisement; referring to tbe cases of Bronson v. Kinzie, 1 Howard’s Rep., 311, and McCracken v. Haywood, 2 do., 608.

The case at bar differs from those cases in á very important particular. In each of those cases tbe contract bad been made in- the State of Illinois, the Jaw, at tb§ *404time of their execution, not requiring an appraisement; and. upon an attempt to enforce them in that State, the Supreme Court of the United States held, that to require property sold to satisfy judgments rendered thereon, to bring two-thirds of an appraised valtie, would operate to impair the obligation of the contracts.

. That conclusion was arrived at upon the theory that the law in force at the time the contract was.made, became a part of it, and could not be changed to the prejudice of the party seeking to enforce it.

But in this case the, contract was not made, in Kansas. It was made before there was a State of Kansas, or even a Territory of Kansas. ■ It was made in Missouri, It could not be said that the law of Kansas became a part of the contract. There was no Kansas law- to become a part of it; and if there had been any local law here, this contract, having been made in Missouri, could not be said to have been made with reference to ■ it, The law of Missouri, only, became a part of it; and then only so far as to determine its construction when its enforcement was sought in another State. Each State may prescribe what property of its citizens may be subjected to sale under the process of its Courts; and may prescribe, and from time to time change, the manner of the sale, subject only to the limitation that the obligation of a contract shall not there-' by be impaired;- and when a contract executed under another jurisdiction is brought here for enforcement, the law here, for the time being, governs the remedy. Any change in the law regulating the remedy here, cannot affect the obligation of such a contract, because the law of the remedy here forms no part of the contract. Any change in the law of the former does not change any ingredient or stipulation of the contract. The lex loci contractus at the time the contract was made, determines what the contract was; the lex fori at the time the enforcement is sought, prescribes the remedy. -

*405Tlie plaintiffs in tlie Court below were tlie bepeficiaries .of a contract executed in Missouri. The laws of that State furnish the rules of construction, and had a suit been brought on it there, the law of the remedy at the time of its execution, if it had been subsequently changed to their prejudice, might have been invoked to aid in its enforcement. But upon going to another jurisdiction in pursuit of their remedy, they cannot complain if the law of the remedy, at that place, is less efficient when this suit is brought than where the contract was made. They contracted wholly without regard to that law; no part of it entered into the contract, and the obligation thereof is in no sense impaired by a change in that law,

The order of the Distrjpf Courf confirming the sale apd ordering a deed, is vacated, and the Court directed to set aside the sale that was made; leavipg the plaintiff below to pursue his remedy as if no sale had beep made.

All the Justices concurring.