Douglass' Administrator v. Stevens
Douglass' Administrator v. Stevens
Opinion of the Court
William S. Douglas, the intestate, a citizen of the State of Delaware became bound by his bill obligatory, dated March 6, 1813, in the sum of $320, to be paid to Robert Stephens, a citizen of the State of Maryland. William S. Douglass was also indebted at the time of his death to Walter Douglass, his administrator, a citizen of this state, the plaintiff in this court, in a large sum of money, on a book account. Stephens brought a suit in the Court of Common Pleas on this bill, against Douglass, the administrator. To this action the defendant below pleaded debts of prior and superior dignity, and insisted that the Act of Assembly directing the priority of payment of debts within this government (1 Del.Laws 81) entitled him to retain his debt, in preference to Stephens, a creditor residing out
“That where
The plaintiff below, Stephens, on the other hand relied upon the provision in the second section of the same Act of Assembly, and on the second section of the fourth article of the Constitution of the United States, as entitling him to a recovery of his debt in preference to the inhabitants of the state, whose debts are of an inferior order. The Act prescribes the payment of debts of a deceased person by an executor or administrator as follows. First, funeral expenses. Secondly, debts due to the Crown, and to the Proprietary, now to the State. Thirdly, debts due by judgment obtained in the lifetime of the party deceased. Fourthly, debts due by recognizances and for rent. Fifthly, debts due by obligation. Sixthly, debts due by bill. Seventhly, servants and workmen’s
The Court of Common Pleas rendered a judgment in favor of Stephens. To avoid that judgment is the object of this writ of error.
Before the Declaration of Independence, the colonists of Great Britain in America, and before and since, the subjects of the King of England in every part of the world, could, and can, acquire, inherit, and hold land in any of his dominions, as fully as an Englishman can in England. This doctrine was carried so far in Galvin’s Case that after the union of the crowns of England and Scotland, in the person of James I of England, a Scotchman born after the union was adjudged to be a natural born subject of England, and entitled to the same remedies in the courts of England as an Englishman. And after the conquest of Ireland by Henry II, and the extension of the British laws to that country, those who were bom in Ireland were not aliens to the realm of England. Even those who were born in Calais, from the reign of Edward III until it was lost in Queen Mary’s time, were capable and inheritable to land in England. See Calvin’s Case, 7 Co. 1.
Impressed with these established principles, the people of the United States associated in the year 1774 to resist the oppressive and unconstitutional pretensions of the British King and Parliament. They united and acted in concert, as one people. Far from being aliens to each other, they knew that they were practically, as well as legally, fellow citizens, holding lands by purchases and inheritance in the respective governments, and enjoying every right and privilege indiscriminately with the inhabitants, only as the same were curtailed in this state by this Statute. Indeed so far was this sentiment of community of interest carried, that the people of this state were often represented in their own legislature, and in Congress, by persons who resided in Pennsylvania. After the Declaration of Independence and the adoption of our Constitution of 1776, Mr. McKean, though resident in Philadelphia, was a member of our General Assembly, and General Dickinson of Jersey and Mr. [-]
After the Declaration of Independence, and before the signing the Articles of Confederation, each state possibly had the power to declare the citizens of other states aliens, but such an exercise of power would have been viewed with a most suspicious unfriendly eye, and would have violated the great principles of our Union. The Articles of Confederation, however, sufficiently restrained any such attempt. In the fourth article it was agreed :
“The better to secure and perpetuate mutual friendship and intercourse among the people of the different states, in this Union,
This article operated in favor of persons not included within the-expression or meaning of the present Constitution, if the words., “free inhabitants” were intended, as I presume they were, to include all the inhabitants of a state, except slaves. They comprehend aliens, free negroes, and every possible description of' persons not slaves, with the exception of paupers, vagabonds, and. fugitives from justice, and enlarged the privileges and immunities of such free inhabitants, equal to the privileges and immunities of the citizens of a state.
Nay, the inhabitants of a state might have been entitled to-greater privileges in another state than they could enjoy in their own, and to greater than the mere inhabitants themselves were-entitled to in such other state. A state might have qualified the
It is most evident from a consideration of this article that the idea never was entertained that the people of one state could be taken to be aliens in another. The article was made the better to secure and perpetuate what then existed. It conferred no new right, but legalized and preserved such as were then fully enjoyed. It is true that the legislatures of the several states might have restricted the privileges previously possessed by the citizens of the other states, and they might have violently made the people aliens to each other, but from the date of the ratification of the Confederation, their power in this respect was completely limited, and without a dissolution of the Confederacy, inhabitance alone in one state entitled the inhabitants to all privileges and immunities of free citizens in the several states.
Thus stood our Union before the adoption of the present Constitution of the United States. The second section of the fourth article was designed, if we judge from the words of it, and from the whole scope of the Constitution, to restrain to a more definite class of persons the privileges and immunities secured to them, and to extend to the citizens of the several states, in each state,
The word “citizen” imports the same as the word “freeman” in our old Acts of Assembly, and means every white man, who by birth or naturalization is or may be qualified to exercise and enjoy, under like circumstances, all the rights which any native-born white inhabitant of the state does or can enjoy. And every white man, born or naturalized in any other state, is such a citizen of such other state as to be entitled in this state to all the civil rights of citizenship, and by residence and other qualifications, to all the political rights.
See 1 Bl. Comm.Book 1, c. 1. When men entered into a state they yielded a part of their absolute rights or natural liberty, for political or civil liberty, which is no other than natural liberty restrained by human laws, so far as is necessary and expedient for the general advantage of the public. The right of enjoying and defending life and liberty, of acquiring and protecting reputation and property, and in general of attaining objects suitable to their condition, without injury to another, are the rights of a citizen and all men by nature have them. But unless some method had been provided to secure their actual enjoyment they would be in vain declared, claimed or asserted. There are, therefore, established certain other subordinate rights of the citizens, which serve principally as barriers to protect and maintain inviolate these great and primary rights. The preservation of these original rights includes the preservation of the subordinate rights, the privileges and immunities, which it was intended by the constitution of this state to preserve to its citizens, and by the Constitution of the United States to preserve in each state to the citizens of the other states for the protection of the primary rights before mentioned.
The right of enjoying and defending life consists in a person’s legal and uninterrupted enjoyment of his life, his limbs, his body, his health, and in resisting even to the commission of homicide, when such resistance is necessary to save one’s own life. The right of enjoying and defending life, without the. privilege of protecting it by all the means which the law, as well as nature in extreme cases, furnishes, would be illusory to the last degree. Therefore, this privilege belongs to us, and by the Con
And so as to the enjoyment and defense of liberty. To exercise this right every individual entitled to it must have the privilege of locomotion, of changing situation, or removing his person to whatsoever place his inclination may direct, without imprisonment or restraint, unless by due course of law. To secure this right more effectually, our Constitution, Article 1, Section 13, has declared that the privilege of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in cases of rebellion or invasion, the public safety may require it. But as our Constitution was established for the government of the people of this state, it might be contended that the legislature may limit its operation to its own citizens, and that the privilege may be withheld from citizens of another state. And certainly the argument would be as sound as to assert that the legislature may suspend the privilege of recovering a debt except on terms of inequality which amount to a prohibition in some instances.
The right of acquiring and protecting reputation and property includes all the privileges incident to such right. Property cannot be acquired and protected without the privilege of applying to courts of justice. No man can be his own arbiter. Our constitution has declared that “all courts shall be open, and every man for an injury done him in his reputation, person, moveable or immoveable possessions, shall have remedy by due course of law, without sale, denial or unreasonable delay or expense.” This is the assertion of a general right, the right of all men, and it would be ineffectually declared, were not the redress of wrongs, and the means of enforcing contracts, by which property is acquired, secured and protected. The acquisition of property is effected by contract. A right to property, or the acquisition of property may be derived either from the act of another, or by virtue of some positive institution. When it is derived from another it is generally effected by contract, and it becomes the privilege of every citizen to apply to courts of justice to enforce contracts, or to obtain redress for their violation. It is a privilege which grows out of the right of acquiring property, and is as necessary to its preservation, as the air we breathe is to life. Suppose an horse is lent, and the borrower refuses to restore him, or suppose an horse to be wrongfully taken, the owner can have remedy by law only. By redressing the injury or wrong the property is protected. So if an horse is sold, and instead of receiving the price, the seller leaves the money in the hands of the purchaser, and takes a bond for its payment at a future day, the recovery of this money by a suit at law even
To what purpose are all privileges and immunities reserved to the citizens of each state, in the several states, if a state can discriminate between its own citizens and the citizens of another state in the privileges of a citizen, and unless the same method to protect their property is allowed to them? If we may cut and carve, and limit and restrain other citizens in the exercise of our privileges as citizens, it is evident that they are not entitled to all privileges and immunities of citizens in this state. To recover a debt is a privilege, but unless he can recover it equally, or as freely as a citizen of this state, something is withheld, and he has not the privilege of a citizen in this state, unless indeed more than the privilege of a citizen is bestowed on our own citizens. In the great question on the suability of states, Mr. Jay, in his clear and luminous argument, said, “The citizens of America are equal as fellow citizens, and as joint-tenants in the sovereignty.” 2 Dall. 472.
The clause in the Constitution is as general as words can make it, and the exception contended for would contradict, and do violence, not only to this section, but to the leading principles of a free and national government, one great object of which is to ensure justice equally to all. It establishes the faith and credit to be given to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of each state. It provides for the apprehension of fugitives from justice, from one state to another; and it secures to those entitled to the service or labor of another, such service or labor, even against the laws or regulations of a state into which such
The difficulty is to discover in what instance any privilege or immunity of a citizen of one state may be abridged in another. He may purchase and hold land by any of the several modes by which real estate may be acquired. He may take by descent, where the title is vested in him by the operation of law. He may obtain goods and chattels in all the forms and varieties peculiar to personal property. He may be an executor, administrator, or witness. He may prosecute every species of suit both at law and in equity, and in short, as to every civil right, I know of no difference between him and a citizen of the state, unless this Act of Assembly makes one. If this be an exception to this article of the Constitution of the United States, and the intention was only to prevent citizens of other states being declared aliens, the legislature might abolish all the rights, privileges, and immunities of the citizens of other states. They might forbid the recovery of debts upon any terms, the privilege of habeas corpus might be disallowed them, and they might be subjected to perpetual imprisonment. The descent of land might be regulated differently from the descent of land generally. Immunity from arrest in suitors and witnesses during their attendance on courts of justice might be withdrawn. Extraordinary and excessive taxes might be imposed upon the lands of non-residents, and all the ties by which we are united as one people, so far as they depend upon our own internal state government, might be dissolved. Why should the citizens of another state be made aliens as to the recovery of debts, and not to all other purposes? Thus indirectly might be done what it cannot be pretended the state could directly do.
The only reasonable construction to be given to this section is that of placing all citizens of the United States on the same footing, and extending to them a perfect equality in their rights, privileges and immunities. If one citizen has a privilege to which others are not entitled, then they are not entitled to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the several states, which is directly contrary to this provision. The legislature may certainly prescribe different grades for the payment of debts by executors and administrators, and in so doing no violation will be done
As to political rights the citizens of this and of other states have equal privileges under like circumstances. If a citizen of Maryland, a white man, of the age of 21 years, shall have resided in this state two years next before a general election, and within that time paid a state or county tax, which shall have been assessed at least six months before the election, he is as fully an elector, in his proper county, as any citizen of the state. And so, with the same qualifications of age, freehold, property, residence, inhabitance, he may be elected Representative, Senator, or Governor. A citizen of Maryland can be appointed to no office within a county, but let him become an inhabitant therein one year, and qualify himself to vote for representatives, and he will be eligible in the same manner as a citizen of this state. In short, with the same qualifications, and under the like circumstances, every white man who is a citizen of another state is entitled to all the rights civil and political, and to all privileges and immunities of citizens of this state.
There is another view that may be taken of the first section of this Act of Assembly [1 Del.Laws 81]. The preference given is not confined to citizens only, but it comprehends the inhabitants generally, citizens and aliens. It places an alien, if he should be an inhabitant of this state, upon higher ground than any citizen of the United States who does not reside in this state. An alien, who never intends to become a citizen, has a preference given by this Act. This law was enacted in 1721. In the year 1682, and in 1700, Acts of Naturalization were passed, and according to the provision of those acts an alien could not become a freeman, one entitled to the rights, privileges, and im
Upon the whole I am of opinion that this first section of the Act of the General Assembly entitled, “An Act directing the priority of payment of debts of persons dying within this government,” is inconsistent with the Constitution of the United States, and therefore void, and that the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas should be affirmed.
I confine this opinion entirely to the first section of that Act. It possibly may be supposed to have some bearing on the first clause of the second section, which authorizes administrators appointed out of the state, to recover upon certain terms debts due to their intestates, but it is not my intention to express a sentiment upon that part of the Act. The clause directing the order of payment of debts by executors and administrators is not in any manner affected by the Constitution of the United States, and stands in full force. This clause is necessarily connected with this cause, and gives priority to Stephens, the plaintiff below, and to all other citizens of this and of other states, in the recovery of debts due by obligation, or bill, over or before accounts of merchants and others. Should any question of this kind arise between a citizen, or an inhabitant, of this state, and an inhabitant, not being a citizen, of another state the opinion here given would leave it uninfluenced by any thing here expressed. I have considered the case between citizens of this state and citizens of another state, and none other.
The question in this case is whether the Act of Assembly giving a preference to state creditors, 1 Del.Laws 81, contravenes the Constitution of the United States, and is incompatible with it. By the second section of the fourth article of the Constitution of the United States the citizens of each state shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities of the citizens in the several states. The words “privileges” and “immunities” are nearly synonymous. Privilege signifies a peculiar advantage, exemption, immunity. Immunity signifies exemption, privilege.
The great object to be attained was to prevent a citizen in one state from being considered an alien in another state, to secure the right to acquire and hold real property. Our situation antecedent to the formation of the first general government in 1778 rendered such a provision necessary, and accordingly a similar clause was inserted in the Articles of Confederation then adopted, from which the second section of the fourth article of the Constitution of the United States was probably taken. The privileges and immunities etc. are not enumerated or described, but they are all privileges common in the Union, which certainly excludes those privileges which belong only to citizens of one or more states, and not in every other state. It is more easy to ascertain whether the municipal law of this state giving a preference to state creditors is a law incompatible with the privileges secured by the second section of the fourth article of the Constitution of the United States, than it is to define all the privileges and immunities which the section was intended to secure to the people of the United States, and this will be sufficient for the purpose of deciding the present case.
By the Constitution of the United States all power, jurisdiction, and rights of sovereignty, not granted by that instrument, or relinquished, are retained by the several states. Uniformity of laws in the states is contemplated only in two cases, on the
But it is to be ascertained whether the Act of Assembly is incompatible with the second section of the fourth article of the Constitution of the United States, and this must depend on the question whether the right to recover debts out of assets in the hands of an executor or administrator is a privilege intended to be secured by this section. And I am of opinion that the privileges designed to be secured cannot be construed to be any right which a creditor has to recover a debt from the administrator of a deceased person. This must depend on the laws of each state. It is neither a right nor a privilege, which, according to the words of the section, the citizens of each state are entitled to in the several states.
There is no rule as to the distribution of assets which is the same in all the states; nor is this a subject for Congress to legislate on, and the mies can only be made by the state legislatures. If the Maryland creditor has the privilege of commencing and prosecuting a suit for the recovery of his debt, to be regulated by the municipal laws of this state, he enjoys a privilege which this article intended to secure to him. The lex loci must govern as to the distribution of the fund for payment of debts. To recognize the principle on which the incompatibility is attempted to be supported will abridge the powers of the states to legislate on many subjects not contemplated by the Constitution. The extent of the operation of the principle to repeal state laws, it will be difficult to ascertain, and would leave us without
It would be mischievous and produce much inconvenience to sanction this new rule as to the settlement of deceased’s estates. Executors and administrators would be involved in difficulties. The practice has been to pay state debts in preference to debts due to non-residents, according to the Act of Assembly, and I am of opinion the Act is not repealed by the Constitution of the United States. The policy and liberality of its continuance must rest with the legislature. We can only say, ita lex scripta est. I am therefore of opinion the judgment .in the court below is erroneous, and ought to be reversed.
Davis and Batson, Justices of the Supreme Court, concurred with Chief Justice Johns.
Judgment reversed.
The following is the form in which judgment was entered in this Court:
June 17, 1818, this cause came to be heard in the presence of counsel on both sides, and the record and proceedings aforesaid being inspected and examined by the Court, and the assignment of errors and all and singular the premises being heard, and the matters being debated by counsel on both sides, the Court did continue the same under advisement from term to term until this day. And now to wit, on October 23, 1821, because it appears to the Court that there is manifest error in the record and proceedings aforesaid in this, to wit, that for the matter set forth in the second error assigned, the court below ought not to have rendered an absolute judgment in the case aforesaid, but a judgment of assets. It is therefore considered by the by the Court here, that the said Matthew Driver, adminisCourt here that the judgment aforesaid, for the error aforesaid, be reversed and annulled, and it is farther considered
Note. Stephens had died since this cause was brought into this Court, and Driver administered, and was made party in the cause. It was necessary to remand the record that Driver might proceed against any assets which should hereafter come into the hands of Douglass, the administrator.
Manuscript reads “Where any debts”; “any" does not appear here in the Act.
At this point, Ridgely’s Notebook II, 425, the account of this case is interrupted ; it is resumed at III, 547.
Blank in manuscript.
Manuscript reads “the people of the several states in this Union, that the-free inhabitants” ; the article reads as printed above.
Manuscript reads “to.”
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.