Bizzel v. Bedient
Bizzel v. Bedient
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
We cannot perceive any satisfactory reason why the plaintiff, who resides in this State, should not have a right to recover his debt out of any of his debtor’s property found here, which is not bound by a prior lien. If it be objected that the debtor’s property, wherever situated, had been previously assigned, by a law of the State of which he was a citizen—that such assignment was for the benefit of all his creditors, and that no one of them, in the event of a deficiency, should recover his whole debt, to the injury of the rest—we answer, let the assignment bind all the citizens of New-York, and let it have full effect even here, when it does not conflict with the rights of our own citizens. Upon all questions arising between persons, resident in New-York, its laws should in justice operate; but they ought not to have extra territorial force in binding the rights of residents of this State, who have no share in forming them, and are destitute of the means of ascertaining what they are. A creditor who, availing himself of the laws of his own country, attaches the property of his debtor found in this State, ought not to be turned round to seek payment under an assignment in another State. In one of the latest cases to be found in the books, it is held that a discharge under a foreign bankrupt law, will not bar an action for a debt arising in England, to a creditor residing there also.-1 East 6. Though if a debt contracted in a foreign country had also been discharged by the laws of that country, this would have been a discharge every where. The laws of foreign counties must be recognized as binding on personal property in a variety of instances—but the general rule must be taken with the exception of such laws interfering with the rights of our citizens here. Wherever one or the other must yield, our own law is entitled to the preference.-5 East 131.
It is also to be considered, that an insolvent law of this State would not discharge a debt contracted in New-York, to a creditor resident there—this has been decided in their courts there, as appears in several of the books of reports. Upon the whole, we are of opinion, that so much of the money in the garnishee’s hands should be condemned, as is sufficient to satisfy the plaintiff’s judgment.
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