Supreme Court of Canada
Duke v. Andler, [1932] S.C.R. 734
Date: 1932-10-11
George E.
Duke and Another (Defendants) Appellants;
and
Josephine
Andler and Others (Plaintiffs) Respondents.
1932: April 29; 1932: October
11.
Present: Duff, Rinfret,
Lamont, Smith and Cannon JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF
APPEAL FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA
Conflict of laws—Jurisdiction
over foreign immoveables—Decrees in rem and in personam—Actions on foreign
judgments.
A judgment of a court of the
state of California on a question of title and ownership of real property
situate in British Columbia cannot be recognized as final and be enforced by
the courts of that province, in accordance with the general rule that the
courts of any country have no jurisdiction to adjudicate on the right and title
to lands not situate in such country.
APPEAL from the Court of
Appeal for British Columbia , varying the judgment of the trial judge, W. A.
Macdonald J. .
The material facts of the case
and the questions at issue are fully stated in the judgment now reported.
Geo. F. Henderson K.C. and
D. K. MacTavish for the appellants.
Alfred Bull K.C. for the
respondents.
The judgment of the court was
delivered by
SMITH J.—On the 25th day of
September, 1925, the appellant, G. E. Duke, entered into a contract with
Josephine Promis, Augusta Col, Sophia, Sophia Promis, Mary Gillespie and Oscar
Promis for the purchase of certain real
[Page 735]
estate in the city of Victoria, in
the province of British Columbia.
The contract reads:
We the undersigned (naming
the above vendors) have this day granted, transferred, sold and conveyed to G.
E. Duke the following described real property situated in Victoria
city, B.C., Dominion of Canada.
Then follows the particular
description, the price, $55,000 payable $10,000 cash and a note for $45,000 to
be secured by a mortgage on certain property in the city of Berkeley, in California,
the said mortgage to be
subject to an existing encumbrance now of record in the sum of $22,150 as a
first lien on the property.
There is then the following
provision:
Upon evidence of good
merchantable title being vested in G. E. Duke, he will immediately cause to be
paid in to the Alameda County Title Insurance Company the sum of ten thousand
($10,000) dollars U.S. lawful money, together with note and mortgage to be
delivered to the vendors.
All the parties to the contract
were, at the time, residents of California, and the survivors and executors of the two vendors,
who died shortly after the date of the contract, have continued to be residents
of that state.
This contract or another
conveyance was placed in the hands of the Alameda County Title Insurance
Company, it is claimed in escrow, which company handed over the contract or the
other conveyance to the defendant George E. Duke, who registered same and thus
became the registered owner of the Victoria property, which he conveyed to his
wife, the defendant Margaret E. Duke, who mortgaged it for $30,000.
The vendors brought action in the
Superior Court of the state of California in and for the county of Alameda,
against the defendants, to rescind and cancel the contract and the mortgage,
and to require the defendants to re-convey to the plaintiffs the Victoria
property, alleging that George E. Duke obtained possession of the conveyance
without the knowledge of the plaintiffs and without complying with the terms of
the agreement, and in violation of the escrow agreement, " in this,"
that he delivered the mortgage stipulated for subject to an encumbrance of
$9,605 in addition to the encumbrance of $22,150 mentioned in the agreement.
The defence to the complaint
about the $9,605 encumbrance, stated shortly, was that the vendors falsely
represented to defendant G. E. Duke that the Victoria property was then
producing net earnings of $6,775 per year, and that the then tenants were ready
and anxious to obtain new
[Page 736]
leases on the same terms as the
existing leases, whereas in fact the net earnings were not greater than $3,903
per year, and the then tenants were unwilling to renew their leases on the same
terms, but were preparing to quit unless extensive repairs were made, and that,
to retain them, repairs costing $11,525 had to be made, which sum defendant G.
E. Duke claimed as damages for false representations inducing him to make the
contract, and which he was entitled to set off against the $9,605 encumbrance.
The defence further alleged that
the Alameda County Title Insurance Company was authorized by the plaintiff to
cause the deed to be recorded, vesting the title to the Victoria
property in defendant G. E. Duke before any part of the consideration therefor
was to be paid or delivered by the defendant to the plaintiffs, " all in
conformity to said contract."
I take it that this means that
such is the proper construction to be put on the terms of the contract.
The learned trial judge in the
California court found that defendant G. E. Duke agreed to deliver the $45,000
mortgage free and clear of the $9,605 encumbrance before taking title to the
Victoria property, and that there were no false representations, and no set
off, as alleged.
He also finds that the defendant
G. E. Duke got possession of the deed without paying the $10,000, though there
is no such claim in the plaintiff's pleadings, the only noncompliance with the
terms of the agreement alleged being that referred to above.
The judgment entered in the
Superior Court of California, omitting the style of cause, is as follows :
The Court having made and
filed its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law herein, now, therefore, in
accordance therewith,
It is ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED
that the defendants, G. E. Duke and Margaret E. Duke, execute, acknowledge and
deliver, and cause to be recorded and registered according to the forms and
laws of British Columbia, Dominion of Canada within thirty (30) days of notice
of entry hereof, a deed of conveyance of said " Victoria Property "
to Josephine Promis, Augusta Col, Mary Gillespie, A. G. Col and Josephine
Andler, plaintiffs herein, and vesting in them the title thereto, subject to an
encumbrance of Thirty Thousand ($30,000) Dollars now of record, and subject to
no other liens or encumbrance whatsoever, and to do and perform, or cause to be
done or performed such other act or acts as may be necessary or proper in the
premises, to the end that the plaintiffs may be restored to the ownership and
possession of said "Victoria Property"—which said "Victoria
Property" is described as follows, to wit :
[Page 737]
All and singular these
certain parcels or tracts of land and premises situate, lying and being
Lots Three and Four, Block
Seventy-five, Victoria City, recorded in Absolute Fees Book Fol. 22, Vol.
22, (Date of Registration May 10, 1904,
11, 10 a.m.).
Lots Eleven (11) and Twelve
(12) Block Seventy-five (75) Map 219, Victoria City; recorded in Absolute Fees Book Fol. 30, Vol.
23. (Date of Registration, February 21, 1906,
10 a.m.).
Together with all
improvements thereon.
It is further ORDERED AND
ADJUDGED that in the event of the failure or refusal of G. E. Duke and/or
Margaret E. Duke, defendants herein, to so convey said " Victoria Property
" within said time, George E. Gross, Clerk of this Court, be, and he is
hereby, appointed as Commissioner of this Court; and said George E. Gross, as
such Commissioner, is hereby ordered and empowered to make, execute and deliver
such deed, and cause the same to be so recorded and registered, and to do and
perform any and all other acts as may be necessary or proper, to effect and
perfect a conveyance of said " Victoria Property " to the plaintiffs
herein named, as and for said G. E. Duke and Margaret E. Duke, defendants
herein, as their act and deed.
It is further ORDERED,
ADJUDGED AND DECREED that that certain instrument in writing designated as
" contract of sale " dated the 25th day of September, 1925, and
attached to Plaintiffs' complaint herein as Exhibit " A," wherein and
whereby Josephine Promis, Augusta Col, Sophia Promis, Mary Gillespie and Oscar
Promis, agreed to grant, transfer, sell and convey to G. E. Duke, one of the
defendants herein, the said " Victoria Property " for certain
considerations therein mentioned, be, and the same is hereby, cancelled and
rendered null and void and of no effect whatsoever.
It is further ORDERED,
ADJUDGED and DECREED, that the plaintiffs herein named do have and recover of
and from the defendants G. E. Duke and Margaret E. Duke the sum of $16,804.11,
together with plaintiffs' costs and disbursements incurred herein, taxed in the
sum of $
Dated this 30th day of July,
1928.
(Sgd.) JOHN J. ALLEN,
Judge.
The defendants refused to execute
a conveyance, as ordered by this judgment, and a conveyance was executed in
their name by George E. Gross, County Clerk and Commissioner of the Superior Court,
pursuant to the terms of the judgment.
The plaintiffs then brought the
present action in the Supreme Court of British Columbia for a declaration that,
by virtue of the conveyance referred to, or, alternatively, by virtue of the
conveyance and of the judgment referred to, and in the further alternative by
virtue of the judgment alone, the plaintiffs are the owners of and entitled to
be registered as owners in fee simple of the Victoria property in question,
subject to the mortgage of $30,000 and interest, mentioned above.
[Page 738]
There is the further claim that
the court, in the exercise of its jurisdiction to implement the judgment of the
Superior Court of the State of California, do vest the property in the plaintiffs.
Judgment was given, declaring
that, by virtue of the judgment of the Superior Court of California and of the
conveyance made in pursuance of it, the plaintiffs are the owners of the
property in Victoria subject to the $30,000 mortgage and a certain registered
lease, and that the property vest in the plaintiffs, subject to these charges.
On appeal, the Court of Appeal of
British Columbia, by a majority of three to one, varied this judgment
by striking out the first adjudicating paragraph and substituting a paragraph
in different language, vesting the property in the plaintiffs.
Mr. Justice McPhillips,
dissenting, would have allowed the appeal and dismissed the action.
From this judgment of the
majority, the present appeal is taken.
The question involved is whether
or not the judgment of the foreign court on the question of title and ownership
of this real property situate in British Columbia is to be recognized as final
and to be enforced by the courts of British Columbia.
The general rule that the courts
of any country have no jurisdiction to adjudicate on the right and title to
lands not situate in such country is not disputed.
Considering the operation of
foreign law in regard to real and immovable property, Story's Conflict of Laws
(8th ed.), p. 591, says:
And here the general
principle of the common law is, that the laws of the place where such property
is situate, exclusively govern, in respect to the rights of the parties, the
modes of transfer, and the solemnities which should accompany them. The title
therefore to real property can be acquired, passed and lost only according to
the lex rei sitae. This is generally, although (as we shall see) not
universally, admitted by courts and jurists, foreign as well as domestic.
Then, at page 757, paragraph 543,
dealing with the jurisdiction of a nation over a person in its domain, there is
the following:
A suit cannot, for instance,
be maintained against him, so as absolutely to bind his property situate
elsewhere, and, a fortiori, not so as absolutely to bind his rights and
titles to immovable property situate elsewhere.
[Page 739]
Dicey's Conflict of Laws (4th
ed.), p. 393, citing Story and Piggott (3rd ed.), has the following :
The courts of a foreign
country have no jurisdiction—(1) to adjudicate upon the title, or the right to
the possession, of any immovable not situate in such country; or (2) (semble)
to give any redress for any injury in respect of any immovable not situate in
such country.
The undoubted rule, in
short, is that, if a court pronounce a judgment affecting land out of the
jurisdiction, the courts of the country where it is situated—and, it is
presumed, also the courts of any other country—are justified in refusing to be
bound by it, or to recognize it; and this even if the judgment proceed on the lex
loci rei sitae.
This rule is merely an
application of a more general principle that no court ought to give a judgment
the enforcement whereof lies beyond the court's power, and especially if it
would bring the court into conflict with the admitted authority of a foreign
sovereign, or what is the same thing, the jurisdiction of a foreign court.
There is, however, a long line of
cases in which it has been held that English courts will enforce rights
affecting real estate in foreign countries if such rights are based on
contract, fraud or trust, and the defendant resides in England.
An early case of this kind is Penn. v. Lord
Baltimore,
where an agreement in reference to lands in Pennsylvania made in England was
sought to be enforced, the residence of the parties being in England. It
was held that there was jurisdiction. The Lord Chancellor says, p. 447:
The conscience of the party
was bound by this agreement, and, being within the jurisdiction of this Court,
which acts in personam, the court may properly decree it as an
agreement, if a foundation for it.
See also Deschamps v. Miller.
In numerous decisions, however,
besides Penn. v. Lord Baltimore
, it has been pointed out that, in exercising jurisdiction in such cases, the
courts act in personam.
In the case of Lord Cranstown
v. Johnston
, defendant, being a creditor of the plaintiff, obtained judgment in the Island
of St. Christopher, and at the sale under the execution, of which the plaintiff
had no notice, purchased the plaintiff's interest in lands of plaintiff there
at much less than the value. Both parties residing in England, it
was held there was jurisdiction, and the defendant was ordered to reconvey on
payment of the amount owing.
In Norton v. Florence , Jessels, M.R., states that the decision in Lord
Cranstown v. Johnston must be understood as limited to jurisdiction in
personam.
[Page 740]
In Paget v. Ede, it was held than an equity of redemption is not an
estate but merely a right, and that a decree of foreclosure, being a decree in
personam, could be made in England as the mortgagor and mortgagee resided in England,
though the lands were not in England.
In Re Pollard, Ex. P. In re
Thomas Courtney and George
Courtney
, there is the following passage in the judgment :
It is true that in this
country contracts for sale or (whether expressed or implied) for charging
lands, are in certain cases made by the courts of equity to operate in rem;
but in contracts respecting lands in countries not within the jurisdiction of
these courts, they can only be enforced by proceedings in personam,
which courts of equity are constantly in the habit of doing, not thereby in any
respect interfering with the lex loci rei sitae.
In Angus v. Angus
:
To a bill brought for
possession of lands in Scotland and for discovery of the rents and profits and of
deeds and fraud in obtaining them, it was pleaded that the matter was out of
the jurisdiction.
The Lord Chancellor says:
" This court acts upon
the person as to the fraud and discovery, therefore the plea must be over-ruled.
To have made this a good plea, there ought to have been a further averment,
that the defendant was resident in Scotland. This had been a good bill as to fraud and discovery
if the land had been in France, if the persons were resident here, for the
jurisdiction of the court as to fraud is upon the conscience of the party.
" I am in doubt as to
parts of the bill for relief; for I cannot give the plaintiff possession any
other way than by compulsion on the defendant's person whilst it is within the
jurisdiction of the court."
In British South Africa
Company v. Companhia de Moçambique
, it was held by the Queen's Bench Division that the courts in England had
no jurisdiction to entertain an action for a declaration of title to lands in South Africa;
and by the House of Lords, no jurisdiction to entertain an action for damages
in such lands. Lord Herschell, p. 624, says:
No nation can execute its
judgments, whether against persons or movables or real property in the country
of another. On the other hand, if the courts of a country were to claim, as
against a person resident there, jurisdiction to adjudicate upon the title to land
in a foreign country, and to enforce its adjudication in personam, it is
by no means certain that any rule of international law would be violated ***.
And, at p. 626:
Whilst courts of equity have
never claimed to act directly upon land situate abroad, they have purported to
act upon the conscience of persons living here.
[Page 741]
Lord Halsbury, at p. 631, says :
There is a concurrence of
opinion of most jurists, if not all, as to the difference between what we call
realty and personalty, by whatever words those things are distinguished in the
jurisprudence of foreign countries, which affects very materially the right to
try. Vattel distinguishes the questions which may properly be tried when
defendant has his settled place of abode, but always subject to this, that, if
the matter relates to an estate in land or to a right annexed to such an estate
(quoting Vattel) " in such a case, inasmuch as property of the kind is to
be held according to the laws of the country where it is situated, and as the right
of granting it is vested in the ruler of the country, controversies relating to
such property can only be decided in the state in which it depends."
In Henderson v. Bank of
Hamilton
, in this court it is pointed out that courts of equity held that where personal
equities existed between parties over whom they had jurisdiction, though such
equities might have reference to lands situate without the jurisdiction, they
would give relief by a decree operating not directly upon the lands, but
strictly in personam, and that such decrees would have been
unenforceable in the foreign jurisdiction, and might have brought the courts
decreeing them into collision with the former, within whose local jurisdiction
the lands were situated. British South Africa Co. v. Companhia de Moçambique,
just referred to, is
cited and relied on.
The title to real property
therefore must be determined by the standard of the laws relating to it of the
country where it is situated. The grounds upon which, and the circumstances
under which a conveyance would be set aside under the law of California
may differ from those under which it would be set aside under the law of British Columbia. The conveyance from appellant G. E. Duke to his wife, the appellant
Margaret E. Duke, could only be set aside in British Columbia by virtue of
the statute law of that province, and the courts of one country are not
presumed to know the laws of another country.
In Norris v. Chambres
, a claim was made for a lien on real property in Prussia.
After stating a certain manner in which a lien on land may be acquired in England, the
decision proceeds:
Assuming this to be so, this
is purely a lex loci which attaches to persons resident in England and
dealing in land in England. If this be not the law of Prussia, I
cannot make it so, because two out of three parties dealing with the estate are
Englishmen, and I have no evidence before me that this is the Prussian law on
this subject, and, if it be so, the Prussian courts of justice are the proper
tribunals to enforce these rights.
[Page 742]
An adjudication as to title to
the lands in question, to have any effect in British Columbia, must be an
adjudication on the basis of British
Columbia law relating to real property
applied to the facts.
The objection to accepting the judgment
of a foreign court as conclusive on a question of title to land is shewn by
what is laid down by Lord Cottingham, L.C., in Ex Parte Pollard, cited
above , in
the following language:
If, indeed, the law of the
country where the land is situate, should not permit or not enable the
defendant to do what the court might otherwise think it right to decree, it
would be useless and unjust to direct him to do the act, but where there is no
such impediment, the courts of this country, in the exercise of their
jurisdiction over contracts made here, or in administering equities between
parties residing here, act upon their own rules, and are not influenced by any
consideration of what the effects of such contract might be in the country
where the lands are situate, or of the manner in which the courts of such
countries might deal with such equities.
The courts of California
therefore must be assumed to have based their judgments on California law,
without being influenced by any consideration of the effect on the title, of
the contract and of equities arising from it and what followed, according to
the law of British Columbia, and without any regard to the statute law of
British Columbia bearing on the conveyance from George E. Duke to his wife.
It may be that on the facts as
found, the courts of British Columbia, in applying the laws of British Columbia, would reach the same conclusion as the California courts, but it is to
be remembered that findings of fact may in some cases be based on the
particular law to be applied to them. For instance, a finding of fraud depends
on what constitutes fraud under the particular law to be applied.
In any event, we must deal with
the question as a general proposition, and not merely from the point of view of
the facts in this particular case.
The question at issue here has
come before the Supreme Court of the United
States in a number of cases, but it is
to be noted that there is a special clause in the constitution of the United States
dealing with the credit to be given by the courts of one state to the judgments
of the courts of another. It appears, however, that this clause does not make
judgments of the courts of one state dealing with lands in another binding on
the courts of the latter.
[Page 743]
In Carpenter v. Strange,
the Court of New York State, where the parties resided, decreed that a
conveyance of land in Tennessee alleged to be fraudulent was absolutely null and
void. The courts of Tennessee refused to recognize this part of the judgment, and
were upheld by the Supreme Court. The following is a passage from the judgment:
The courts of Tennessee
were not obliged to surrender jurisdiction to the courts of New York over
real estate in Tennessee, exclusively subject to its laws and the
jurisdiction of its courts (p. 106).
Again, in Fall v. Eastin,
in the judgment of the same court there is the following passage:
A court of chancery, acting in
personam, may well decree the conveyance of land in any other state and may
well enforce its decree by process against the defendant. But neither the
decree itself nor any conveyance under it, except by the person in whom the
title is vested, can operate beyond the jurisdiction of the court (p. 9).
Respondents put much reliance on
the case of Houlditch v. Donnegal.
Upon a bill in chancery in England by creditors a decree was made to execute the trusts
of a deed by which lands in Ireland were vested in trustees for payment of debts. A
receiver was appointed and an injunction granted, and a bill was filed in the
Court of Chancery in Ireland to carry the former decree into execution. The Irish
court held that it had no jurisdiction. It was held, reversing this judgment,
that there was jurisdiction. The basis of this decision was that a foreign
judgment is only prima facie evidence, and the propriety of the English
decree might be enquired into in the Irish court.
This doctrine, that a foreign
judgment is only prima facie evidence, is now considered erroneous.
Dicey's Conflict of Laws, 4th ed., 449, and cases there cited.
Mr. Justice Martin places
reliance on the cases of Law v. Hansen
; Nouvion v. Freeman
, and, in the House of Lords ; and
a number of others of similar import.
The remarks that he quotes from
these decisions are the enunciation of the general rule that the judgment of a
foreign court of competent jurisdiction having the force of res judicata
in the foreign country has the like force in England.
[Page 744]
The question here is whether or
not the judgment of the foreign court in question, adjudicating on the right
and title to real property in British
Columbia, is one of the exceptions to
this general rule.
The numerous decisions referred
to above seem to establish beyond question that such a judgment is in
personam only, and affects the conscience of the parties within the
jurisdiction of the court, and stands on an entirely different footing in the
courts of the country where the land is situated from the ordinary judgment
coming within the general rule, such as a foreign judgment for debt.
In the present case the plaintiffs
sue in British Columbia to enforce a judgment of the California
courts deciding that the plaintiffs are the owners of the British Columbia land in question, rather than the defendants, one of whom is the
registered owner. In California, it must be conceded that that judgment has
effect only in personam, but if the courts of British Columbia were
obliged to enforce it between the same parties, without question, there would
be no practical difference, in effect, between such a judgment and a judgment
for a debt, and the distinction so much insisted on in the authorities referred
to would be of no real consequence.
In my opinion the rule stated by
Dicey quoted above, that the courts of a foreign country have no jurisdiction
to adjudicate upon the title or the right to the possession of any immovable
not situate in such country, and the statement in the authorities referred to,
that controversies in reference to land can only be decided in the state in
which it depends, and that judgments of foreign courts purporting to deal with
the title and with rights to lands in another country can only be enforced by
proceedings in personam, shew that the judgment of the court of
California here in question does not, in British Columbia, affect the title to
the lands in question, and is not a judgment that should be enforced by the
courts of British Columbia as binding there on the parties.
The appeal should be allowed, and
the action dismissed, with costs to defendants throughout.
Appeal allowed with
costs.
Solicitors for the
appellants: Crease & Crease.
Solicitors for the
respondents: Walsh, Bull, Housser, Tupper & Molson.