Levine v. Taylor
Levine v. Taylor
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was commenced after the declaration of war by the United States against Great Britain, in June, 1812, and the defendants pleaded in bar, that the plaintiff is an alien, and a subject of the enemy. We have not found it necessary to consider the matter replied in avoidance of the plea, as we are satisfied that it is insufficient as a plea in bar.
y/"That the plaintiff is an alien enemy may be pleaded in disability of his person. As long as the war continues, he cannot maintain any action in our courts. This disability resembles that arising from the outlawry of the plaintiff; as to which, if pleaded in disability, it is decided, that, if the cause of action accrues, or, perhaps, if the action is commenced, whilst the plaintiff is thus disabled, the plea quite overthrows the writ; and, after a pardon or reversal of the outlawry, the plaintiff must begin de nova. But, if the disability occurs after the commencement of. the action, it o_nly suspends the proceeding quousque, &c. ; and, after the disability is removed, the plaintiff may recontinue the suit by resummons or reattachment.
It is true, that the plea of alien enemy might, by the common law, be also pleaded in bar ; because the debt itself was considered as forfeited to the sovereign, as a reprisal for the damages committed by the enemy.
But, with respect to Great Britain, it is expressly agreed, in the tenth article of our treaty of amity, commerce, and navigation with that nation, that no debts, due from individuals of one nation to those of the other, shall ever, in any event of war, be sequestered or confiscated ; and it is declared by both nations to be unjust and impolitic that such debts and engagements should ever be destroyed or impaired by national authority, on account of national differences. This, being a stipulation to be executed in the event of a war, was not cancelled by the war.
It is not necessary now to consider what would have been the proper course to pursue with regard to this action, if the war had still continued, and it had appeared from all the facts before the Court, that the plaintiff was an alien enemy, who might have been disabled to maintain the action. The Court of King’s Bench, in a
Faulkland vs. Stanion, 12 Mod. 400
Gill. Hist and Pract. of the Common Pleas, 205.
Co. Lit. 128. — L. Raym. 1056.
L. Raym. 282.
Vattel, B. 3, c. 10, § 175.
4 East, 502.
1 Chitty, 514. — 3 Chitty, 911, 7th ed. —15 East, 260.— Harmon vs. Kingston, 3 Camp. 153. — Hutchinson vs. Brock, 11 Mass. Rep. 119. — Langdon et al. vs. Potter, ib. 113. — Parkinson vs. Wentworth, ib. 26.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Benjamin L. Levine versus David Taylor and Others
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- 2 cases
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- Published