Page images
PDF
EPUB

Precisely the same arguments hold good with regard to infant

marriages.

law.

The general result seems to be that the question of domicil Suggested does not arise except where the Christian law, should the summary of the domicil be in a Christian country, imposes impediments either to the actual fact of the marriage, as in the case of incest, infant marriages, or to the second of a series of polygamous marriages; or to the principle on which the marriage rests, as in the case of the first of a polygamous series, though there be no second marriage; or that it is dissoluble at will, though in fact the marriage be undissolved, and although the State demands some official confirmation of the dissolution.

question.

The law both as to marriage and divorce in an oriental Effect of foreign country has been considered irrespective of the question how it jurisdiction on the may be affected by the existence of foreign jurisdiction. The principle of recognition, where the law sanctions it, has been said to be based on the fulfilment of the requirements of the lex loci. But among an exterritorial community what is the lex loci? Is it the national law, or the English law introduced by the Order in Council?

loci?

Here, again, we must go back to first principles. When it is What is the lex said that a certain act must conform to the law of the place where it is done, it means the law of the place applicable to the actor. Now in an oriental country the law of the place as it affects British subjects between themselves is the law of England. As we have already seen, the consequence of this is that as between themselves British subjects must conform their conduct to English law. Therefore, with regard to two domiciled British subjects residing in an oriental country, the lex loci to which the ceremonies of their marriage must conform is the law of England, and a marriage according to the native customs would be invalid.

With regard to mixed marriages the question is more complicated, because, as we have already seen, no regular rule of conduct can be laid down, the law governing any case which arises depending on the nationality of the defendant. This point will be more fully considered in the next Section, when we come to consider the law applicable to contracts.

In its application to marriages the point was not argued in

Brinkley v. Alt
Gen., 15 P.D. 76.

Adoption.

Adoption by native wife.

Brinkley v. The Attorney General, it being assumed in that case that the lex loci was the law of Japan. The question is a particularly delicate one, and, in the present state of the law, it is sufficient to say that it would seem more reasonable that the doubt should be resolved in this way; though a marriage by the law of England would also be valid.

The last point which arises in this connection is the recognition of adoption.

As a general principle, the recognition of adopted children may be put upon a par with the recognition of children legitimated by subsequent marriage; and as to this the law is clear. The legitimation is recognised if it is sanctioned by the law of the domicil at the time of the child's birth--recognised, that is, for all purposes, with a possible exception only as to succession to real estate in England.

The law of the domicil is to govern the question, and this probably would be construed to mean, in the case of adoption, the domicil both of the person adopting and of the person adopted.

Adopted children of native orientals will be recognised as such by the English Courts, and all questions as to their rights will be determined by the law of their nation.

With regard to adoption by English subjects, it is impossible so long as the adopter retains his English domicil: it is possible when he has acquired a domicil in a country whose laws allow it.

But in oriental countries the domicil of British subjects is never national, and no question of adoption can therefore arise.

Further, by English law the wife's nationality and domicil follow her husband's. An adoption by her, though valid by the native law, would probably not be recognised in England, even though by the native law the woman did not lose her nationality by her marriage.

XIII

The Effect of Foreign Furisdiction
on Contracts and Torts.

Fudgments of Consular Courts.

IT is inevitable that the consequences of so artificial a system as that under which foreign jurisdiction is exercised should extend beyond the actually defined limits of the system into those branches of the law wherein locality occupies a definite place. How, for example, in the law of contracts are we to indicate the The necessity for locus in order to determine the lex loci contractus and the lex loci determining the locus with regard solutionis when it is necessary to do so: or in the law of torts, in to Europeans in oriental countries. order to apply the maxim locus regit actum? For, to take a concrete instance, the place where a contract made in England or Singapore is to be performed may be Shanghai: or the place where a wrongful act in respect of which an action is brought in Hong Kong may be Canton. Unless Chinamen are concerned, Chinese law is in no circumstances applicable, and in the Treaty Ports there are as many laws in force as there are nationalities engaged in commerce. It is clear that in some contracts arising out of the commercial dealings with the Chinese, or where a tort is committed by a Chinaman, the rights and liabilities of the parties must be governed by Chinese law. To such cases the ordinary principles which determine what law is applicable will apply as in the case of any other foreign country; and if these principles point to Chinese law, it must be ascertained in the usual way, by the evidence of those competent to interpret it. As has been pointed out, it could not be ascertained through the Consular Court under either the British Law, or the Foreign 22 & 23 Vict.c.63. Law Ascertainment Acts. 24 & 25 Vict. c. 11. cf. pp. 95, 97.

We must now ascertain therefore what the locus is in respect of Europeans in the same circumstances in which the locus is China in respect of Chinese.

The question, though it must often arise in the Consular Courts, is obviously one which may arise in any other Court, British or foreign, in the world.

Contracts between British subjects;

and between British subjects and foreigners.

General rules as to law governing

contracts.

Contracts.

In the case of a contract made between two British subjects in Shanghai, for example, the question introduces no difficulty; the law of the place where the contract was made is the law which governs British subjects in China-the English law as established by Order in Council; if the place of performance is China, and the law of the place of performance has to be resorted to, this again is the English law; and the law of the forum, if that has to be resorted to, is the law of the Consular Court.

But how are these three terms to be interpreted in the case, say, of a contract made and to be performed in Shanghai, between an Englishman and a Frenchman, or between an Englishman and a Chinese?

It will be advisable in the first place to have before us a concise statement of the general law of contracts on these points.

"The general rule," said Lord Mansfield, "established ex comitate et jure gentium, is that the place where the contract is made, and not where the action is brought, is to be considered in expounding and enforcing the contract. But this rule admits of an exception where the parties at the time of making the contract had a view to a different kingdom". "It is generally agreed that the law of the place where the contract is made is, prima facie, that which the parties intended, or ought to be presumed to have adopted as the footing upon which they dealt, and that such law ought therefore to prevail in the absence of circumstances indicating a different intention . . . . which intention is inferred from the subject matter and from the surrounding circumstances, so far as they are relevant to construe and determine the character of the contract". The place of performance is necessarily in many cases the place where the obligations of the contract will have to be enforced, and hence, as well as for other reasons, has been introduced another canon of construction, to the effect that the law of the place of fulfilment of a contract determines its obligations. But this maxim, as well as the former, must of course give way to any inference that can legitimately be drawn from the character of the contract and the

66

nature of the transaction." These quotations are taken from Lord Justice Bowen's judgment, citing Lord Mansfield and Mr. Jacobs v. Credit Justice Willes, in Jacobs v. Credit Lyonnais.

Lyonnais, 12
Q.B.D. at p. 600.

The law as established in this case may, I think, be summarised thus. Prima facie, in some cases the lex loci contractus prevails, in others the lex loci solutionis; but in either case the prima facies may be rebutted by showing that the intention of the parties was to adopt the law of another country as the footing upon which they dealt. This obviously allows the proposition to be stated in a different way, as was in fact done in re Missouri re Missouri Co., Steamship Company. In solving the question as to what law 42 Ch. D. 321. ought to prevail, the general principle is that the rights of the parties to a contract are to be judged of by that law by which they intended to bind themselves. If the intention is not ex

pressed or to be inferred from surrounding circumstances, it is to be presumed from other circumstances.

These principles are interchangeable. It is obviously im- The alternative principles. material whether we say that a contract is to be governed by the law of the place where it was made unless the intention of the parties points to another law; or, that the law governing a contract is that law which the parties intended should govern it, and in the absence of any express intimation, or of any legitimate inference, the intention will be presumed to be in favour of the law of the place where the contract was entered into.

As examples of inferences we may take a case where the contract is to be entirely performed at some place abroad the inference is that the law of that place is intended to govern; or the case of a contract of affreightment, when the inference is that the law of the flag must govern. Both of these inferences would be legitimate if no other circumstances rebutted them.

"exterritorial

In applying these principles to the case of a contract between Application of an Englishman and a Frenchman entered into and to be per- principles to formed in Shanghai, it is useless to start with the prima facie rule contracts." that a contract is to be governed by the law of the place where it is made or to be performed, for there is no "place" which can furnish us with the necessary law. We must therefore fall back on the alternative statement of the rule, that the intention of the parties as to the law which is to govern the contract must be ascertained. It is true that in this statement of the rule there is an ultimate presumption in favour of the law of the place where the contract

« PreviousContinue »