2 U.S. 302, 2 Dall.
302, 1 F.Cas. 1140, 1 L.Ed. 391, No. 543 Circuit Court, D.
Pennsylvania. Armstrong v. Carsons
Executors April Term, 1794 [*1140] HEADNOTE: A judgment having been obtained in the Supreme
Court of the State of New Jersey, an action of debt was brought upon it here;
and the defendants pleaded nil debent. But Bradford contended, that, consistently with the Federal
Constitution Art. 4. s. 1; and the act of Congress of 26 May, 1790 (1 Vol.
Swifts Ed. p. 115) the plea was inadmissible. The Constitution
declares that full faith and credit shall be given in each State to
the public acts, records and judicial proceedings of every other State:
And the act provides, that those records and judicial proceedings, being
authenticated in the mode prescribed, shall have such faith and
credit given to them in every Court within the United States, as they have by
law or usage in the Courts of the State, from whence the said records are, or
shall be, taken. It is a general principle, that a debt cannot be
denied, without denying the instrument on which it is founded: and the only
question left open, by the act of Congress, is whether the Courts of New Jersey
would sustain any other plea than nul tiel record, if the present action had
been brought there. Ingersoll declined arguing the point for the defendant, thinking
it clearly against him. JUDGE: Wilson, Justice: There can be no difficulty in this case. If the plea would be bad
in the Courts of New Jersey, it is bad here: for, whatever doubts there might
be on the words of the Constitution, the act of Congress effectually removes
them; declaring in direct terms, that the record shall have the same effect in
this Court, as in the Court from which it was taken. In the courts of New
Jersey no such plea would be sustained; and, therefore, it is inadmissible in
any Court sitting in Pennsylvania. Bradford then proposed settling the interest; but Wilson, Justice,
observed, that he had had more than one occasion to object to the Courts
interposing, in any form, to assess damages. In some States, he said, it had,
indeed, grown into a practice; and the Courts had in that, and, perhaps, in
many other instances, done the business which ought to go to a Jury. Lewis
referred to a case in the Supreme Court of the United States, in which this
point had been made, tho not directly, decided; but the Judge said,
it was not the foundation of the judgment of the Court; and that, in his
opinion, a Writ of Enquiry was the regular mode of proceeding. [FN*] FN* But see Brown v. Van Braam [3
U.S. 334 (1797)] in the Supreme Court of the United States. It being suggested, however, that the usage in the State Courts
was to enter the judgment generally; and that the plaintiff must ascertain the
debt, and issue execution at his own peril; that mode was adopted on the
present occasion. Judgment for the Plaintiff. |