March 1, 1910, Lackawanna Steel Company, predecessor of defendant Bethlehem Steel Company, issued a series of gold bonds payable March 1, 1950, in United States gold in the sum of $1,000 and also in pound sterling at £ 205.15.2, guilders at 2,480, marks at 4,200 and francs. If paid in francs in France, Belgium or Switzerland, the corporation promised to pay 5,180 francs and interest in the respective currencies. Each coupon contained a promise that, if paid in France, Belgium or Switzerland, the corporation would pay 129.50 francs for each six months' interest, and that they were payable not only at New York, but at London, Frankfort, Amsterdam, Basel and Zurich atSchweizerische Kreditanstalt.
Plaintiff, a Swiss corporation having its principal place of business in Switzerland, purchased 323 of these bonds. On July 16, 1936, it presented 1,132 coupons at SchweizerischeKreditanstalt at Zurich and demanded payment at the rate of 129.50 Swiss francs or an aggregate of 146,594 Swiss francs, and on September 7, 1936, it presented *Page 498 at the same place 323 coupons for payment at the same rate, or an aggregate of 41,828.50 Swiss francs. On both occasions payment in these amounts of Swiss francs was refused. The allegations in the complaint are that on July 15, 1936, the market value of 146,594 Swiss francs in Zurich was $48,009.54 in lawful money of the United States and that on September 7, 1936, the value of 41,828.50 francs was $13,631.90. The relief demanded in the complaint is judgment for $61,766.04 with interest. Judgment has been rendered in favor of plaintiff only for the sum of $36,375 and its complaint was dismissed in respect to its claim of right to receive 129.50 Swiss francs for each coupon. Such judgment resulted upon the theory that plaintiff is not entitled to receive more than the value in United States currency of present legal tender reduced by reason of the Joint Resolution of Congress June 5, 1933 (U.S. Code, tit. 31, § 463).
The question is whether, on the facts of this case, the Joint Resolution is applicable to this obligation to pay foreign currency to a foreign corporation in a foreign country. The courts below have held that it is. We are convinced of the correctness of the contrary result flowing from the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, inAnglo-Continentale Treuhand, A.G., v. St. Louis SouthwesternRy. Co. (81 Fed. Rep. [2d] 11 [1936]) wherein the facts were the same as at bar except that payment was made in guilders at Amsterdam instead of francs at Zurich. That court decided that damages recoverable in dollars were required to be calculated at gold par of the guilder and not at the rate of exchange prevailing in New York at the time of the judgment.
On the facts of this case, the obligation was not payable in "money of the United States" but in foreign currency, and, therefore, the Joint Resolution is not applicable. The obligation might have become payable at New York in United States money, but the fact is *Page 499 that it did become payable in Switzerland in Swiss currency.
The judgments should be reversed and plaintiff's motion for summary judgment granted, with costs in all courts.