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Page 639
174 U.S. 639
19 S.Ct. 839
43 L.Ed. 1117
McMULLEN
v.
HOFFMAN.
No. 271.
May 22, 1899.
Page 640
This action was originally
brought by the complainant, McMullen,
against one Lee Hoffman; and, he having died
before the trial, the action was revived
against the defendant, Julia E. Hoffman, as
the executrix of his will. When the
defendant is hereinafter spoken of, the
original defendant is intended.
The complainant filed his bill
against the defendant, seeking an accounting
of profits that he alleged had been made by
the defendant upon a certain contract for
the construction of what is termed the 'Bull
Run Pipe Line,' and which contract was
entered into between the city of Portland,
in the state of Oregon, and the defendant,
on or about March 10, 1893. The complainant
bases his right to share in the profits of
that contract by virtue of another contract
in writing between himself and the defendant
herein, executed March 6, 1893. That
agreement reads as follows:
'This agreement, made and
entered into by and between Lee Hoffman, of
Portland, Oregon, doing business under the
name of Hoffman & Bates, party of the first
part, and John McMullen, of San Francisco,
California, party of the second part,
witnesseth that, whereas said Hoffman and
Bates have, with the assistance of said
McMullen, at a recent bidding on the work of
manufacturing and laying steel pipe from
Mount Tabor to the head works of the Bull
Run water system for Portland, submitted the
lowest bid for said work, and expect to
enter into a contract with the water
committee of the city of Portland for doing
such work, the contract having been awarded
to said Hoffman and Bates on said bid:
Page 641
'It is now hereby agreed that
said Hoffman and said McMullen shall and
will share in said contract equally, each to
furnish and pay one-half of the expenses of
executing the same, and each to receive
one-half of the profits or bear and pay
one-half of the losses which shall result
therefrom.
'And it is further hereby
agreed that, if either of the parties hereto
shall get a contract for doing or to do any
other part of the work let or to be let by
said committee for bringing Bull Run water
to Portland, the profits and losses thereof
shall in the same manner be shared and borne
by said parties equally, share and share
alike.
'Witness our hands and seals
this 6th day of March, A. D. 1893.
'John McMullen. [Seal.]
'Lee Hoffman. [Seal.]'
The contract for manufacturing
and laying the steel pipe was awarded to the
defendant at a public letting of the whole
work at Portland, of which the manufacturing
and laying of the pipe was a part, and the
whole work was divided into classes, and
separate bids called for and received for
each class.
The defendant put in bids in
the name of Hoffman & Bates for several
classes, while the plaintiff, in the name of
the San Francisco Bridge Company, of which
he was an officer, put in separate bids for
the same classes.
The bids of complainant and
defendant for the several classes of the
work were as follows:
Conduit from head works to Mt.
Tabor of
wrought iron or steel, making
and laying pipe:
Hoffman & Bates..........
$465,722 00
San Francisco Bridge Company.
514,664 00
(The profits arising out of
this contract are
the subject of the
controversy herein.)
Head Works:
Hoffman & Bates...........
$17,800 00
San Francisco Bridge Company.
16,550 00
Page 642
Bridges:
Hoffman & Bates...........
$33,562 94
San Francisco Bridge Company.
31,279 07
Also for steel conduit for
head works to Mt. Tabor:
Hoffman & Bates..........
$359,278 00
San Francisco Bridge Company.
348,781 00
There were several other bids
by different bidders for these various
classes. The bid in the name of Hoffman &
Bates for the manufacture and laying of the
wrought iron or steel pipe from the head
works to Mt. Tabor, being $465,722, was the
lowest out of eight bids; the various bids
from the highest to the lowest being as
follows:
The Risdon Iron & Locomotive
Works. $600,737 00
The Bullon Bridge Company.
533,507 00
Oscar Huber..............
521,775 40
San Francisco Bridge Company.
514,664 00
Wolff, Buener & Zwicker..
495,682 00
Ferry Hinckle & Robert
Wakefield. 481,040 00
E. W. Jones & O. W. Wagner.
477,552 00
Hoffman & Bates..........
465,667 00
All these bids were before the
committee on the part of the city, and were
taken into consideration at the time the
award was made to the defendant. After the
acceptance of his bid for the manufacturing
and laying of the pipe, the defendant
entered into a contract with the city of
Portland to do the work mentioned in such
bid, and commenced the performance of the
contract as provided for therein. The work
was duly completed, and the city paid
defendant the contract price for the same;
retaining the percentage provided for
therein, as security that the terms of the
contract had been fully complied with.
The complainant alleges that
defendant, after securing the contract, went
on with the work thereunder, but refused to
permit him to participate in the profits
arising therefrom, or to examine the books
of the partnership, and that although he
(complainant) furnished some of the capital
and performed
Page 643
some of the services provided for in the
contract with the city, and participated in
some of the expenses of the execution of the
contract, and devoted some of his time and
attention to the proper performance thereof,
and was at all times ready to do everything
required of him by his agreement of
partnership, yet that the defendant received
all the moneys paid by the city, and
absolutely refused to account to him for any
part thereof, and denied that he had any
interest in or right to any portion of such
moneys. The complainant therefore asked for
an accounting between himself and defendant,
as partners, and for a decree for the
payment to him of one-half the profits
arising from the contract, the whole of
which he lleged amounted to $80,000 (the
courts below say the evidence shows they
were $140,000); that a receiver might be
appointed to take charge of the property of
the partnership, its records, books, papers,
etc.; and that the defendant might be
restrained during the pendency of the suit
from making sale or other disposition of the
tools, equipment, or other personal property
belonging to the partnership, and from
drawing from the city of Portland the moneys
withheld by it on account of the contract,
as well as any other money due for other
work done by the defendant under the
contract of partnership.
The answer of the defendant,
while denying many of the allegations of the
complaint, set up as a special defense the
making of an agreement between the parties
(of which the partnership agreement was a
portion), by the terms of which they were to
put in bids for the construction of the
work, the complainant in the name of the San
Francisco Bridge Company, and the defendant
in the name of Hoffman & Bates; that the
bids should not be in reality competitive,
but should be submitted to each other before
they were put in, and their terms should be
mutually agreed upon, the higher bids to be
merely formal, and the bids themselves, as
agreed upon, should be delivered to the
water committee; that, if either party
received the contract, they should both
share in the profit or loss resulting from
its performance, but that their mutual
interest in each other's bids should not be
made known when the bids were offered, so
that it would appear that they were
apparently
Page 644
competing for the various classes of the
work, and for furnishing the material, when
in fact they were not. This agreement, the
defendant alleged, was carried out, and the
contract secured by means thereof.
The court, upon motion of the
complainant, granted a temporary injunction
as prayed for in the bill. Exceptions were
taken to certain parts of the answer of the
defendant as being insufficient. Material
portions of these exceptions were overruled
by the court upon the ground that the answer
set up an illegal contract between the
parties, and one which could not be enforced
by either. 69 Fed. 509.
Upon the final hearing of the
case the same judge, becoming convinced that
he had erred in his former decision in
overruling the exceptions to the answer,
decided that the case, as made on the part
of the defendant, showed no defense to the
complainant's cause of action; and thereupon
he made a decree for an accounting,
substantially as asked for in the
complainant's bill. 75 Fed. 547.
An appeal from the decree of
the circuit court was taken to the United
States circuit court of appeals for the
Ninth circuit; and that court held that the
contract between the parties was illegal,
and that no action could be maintained
thereon by either, and the decree in favor
of the complainant was therefore reversed.
48 U.S. App. 596, 28 C. C. A. 178, and 83
Fed. 372. Complainant then applied to this
court for a writ of certiorari to review the
judgment of the circuit court of appeals,
which was granted May 9, 1898. 170 U. S.
705, 18 Sup. Ct. 950.
L. B. Cox and Wm. A. Maury, for
petitioner.
Rufus Mallory, for respondent.
Mr. Justice PECKHAM, after
stating the facts, delivered the opinion of
the court.
The foregoing statement shows
that there is a difference of opinion in the
courts below as to the law applicable to the
Page 645
case. The question is one of importance,
involving as it does the principles which
should control in regard to the procurement
of contracts at public lettings for work to
be awarded to the lowest bidder. Assuming
the same facts, the courts below have come
to opposite conclusions upon the character
of the contract, and upon the right of the
complainant to obtain redress for his
alleged wrongs.
It was on account of the
general importance of the question, and the
many lettings for public works by the
government and by municipal corporations
which are affected by the law relative to
bidding, that this court though it a proper
case to issue the writ of certiorari herein.
The cases upon the subject are not entirely
harmonious, and we think it well to again
consider some of them, and, so far as
possible, to remove the doubts which
seemingly have arisen in this branch of the
law.
Looking in the record before
us, we find that the pleadings and proofs
taken herein show that for some time prior
to the 6th of March, 1893, the city of
Portland intended to add to its water supply
by bringing to the city the water from a
creek or river called 'Bull Run,' some 30
miles distant, and for that purpose it had
issued, through its water committee,
proposals for bids to build the works, which
proposals were divided into several
different classes, as already stated.
The complainant, McMullen,
living in San Francisco, and being a large
stockholder in, and manager of, the San
Francisco Bridge Company, came to Portland
for the purpose of giving his attention to
the matter, and, if possible, to make an
arrangement with the defendant by which they
might together become bidders for the work.
He and the defendant had many interviews
before the time of delivering the bids
arrived, and they finally agreed that each
party should put in separate hids in his own
or his firm name, or in the name of his
company, for certain classes of the work,
but that they both should have a common
interest in each bid if any were accepted.
This community of interest was to be kept
secret and concealed from all persons,
including the water committee. Each was to
know the amount of the other's bid, and
Page 646
all bids were to be put in only after
mutual consultation and agreement. Bids for
the various classes of work were put in as
above set forth, and among them the bid for
the manufacture and laying of the pipe,
which was accepted by the water committee.
All of them were put in pursuant to this
agreement, part of them in the name of
Hoffman & Bates, and part in the name of the
San Francisco Bridge Company. The bid in the
name of the San Francisco Bridge Company for
the manufacture of the pipe was nearly
$50,000 higher than the amount bid in the
name of Hoffman & Bates, and was put in
after consultation with, and approval by,
the defendant. This last bid was put in, as
stated by Mr. McMullen in his evidence, as a
matter of form only, and to keep the name of
his company before the public, but it
appeared on its face to be a bona fide bid.
The water committee received the bids in
ignorance of the existence of this
agreement, and in the supposition that all
the bids which were received were made in
good faith, and they all received
consideration at the hands of the committee.
After the computations were made, by which
it appeared that the bid of the defendant
was the lowest for the manufacture and
laying of the pipe, the contract was awarded
him, and afterwards that portion of the
agreement which had been made between the
parties to this combination, viz. that
relating to the partnership, was reduced to
writing, and is set out in the foregoing
statement.
Upon these facts the question
arising is whether a contract between the
parties themselves such as is above set
forth is illegal. In order to answer the
question, we would first naturally ask, what
is its direct and necessary tendency? Most
clearly, that it tends to induce the belief
that there is really competition between the
parties making the different bids, although
the truth is that there is no such
competition, and that they are in fact
united in interest. It would also tend to
the belief on the part of the committee
receiving the bids that a bona fide bidder,
seeking to obtain the contract, regarded the
price he named, although much higher than
the lowest bid, as a fair one, for the
purpose of enabling him to realize
reasonable profits from its performance. A
bid thus made
Page 647
amounts to a representation that the sum
bid is not in truth an unreasonable or too
great a sum for the work to be done. We do
not mean it is a warranty to that effect, or
anything f the kind, but simply that a
committee, receiving such a bid, and
assuming it to be a bona fide bid, would
naturally regard it as a representation that
the work to be done, with a fair profit,
would, in the opinion of the bidder, cost
the amount bid. Hence it would almost
certainly tend to the belief that the lower
bid was not an unreasonably high one, and
that it would be unnecessary and improper to
reject all the bids and advertise for a new
letting. The fact that there were other
bids, even higher than that of the San
Francisco Bridge Company, for the
manufacture and laying of the pipes, does
not alter the tendency of the agreement,
when carried into effect, to create or to
strengthen the belief on the part of the
committee in the fact of an active
competiton and the bona fide character of
that competition, and that the lowest bid
would be in all probability a reasonable
one. It is in truth utterly impossible to
accurately or fully predict all the vicious
results to be apprehended as the natural
effect of this kind of an agreement. It
cannot be said in all cases just what the
actual effect may have been.
The natural tendency and
inherent character of the agreement are also
unaffected by any evidence produced on the
part of the complainant that the chairman of
the water committee had, when examined
nearly three years after the occurrence, no
recollection as to the bid of the bridge
company, or that it had any particular
effect upon his mind, and that he said that
the contract was awarded to the lowest
bidder simply because he was the lowest
bidder, and without reference to the bid of
the bridge company.
The question is not whether in
this particular case any member of the water
committee did or did not remember the fact
that the bridge company had made a bid, or
that such bid had no effect upon his mind.
The question is not as to the effect a
particular act in fact had upon a member of
the water committee, but what is the
tendency and character of the agreement made
between the parties; and that tendency
Page 648
or character is not altered by proof on
the part of a member of the committee, given
several years afterwards, that he had no
special recollection that such a bid had
been made. The evidence is that all the bids
that were given received the consideration
of the committee, and there can be no doubt
that the more bids there were, seemingly of
a bona fide character, the more the
committee would be impressed with the idea
that there was active competition for the
work to be done.
It might readily be surmised
that, if these parties had bid in
competition, one or both of the bids would
have been lower than their combined bid. It
was not necessary, however, to prove so
difficult a fact. The inference would be
natural.
Richardson
v. Crandall, 48 N. Y. 348, 362, the
court said: 'In all cases where contracts
are claimed to be void as against public
policy, it matters not that any particular
contract is free from any taint of actual
fraud, oppression, or corruption. The law
looks to the general tendency of such
contracts. The vice is in the very nature of
the contract, and it is condemned as
belonging to a class which the law will not
tolerate,' eiting
Atcheson v. Mallon, 43 N. Y. 147.
Although these remarks were
made when the court was dealing with the
case of a bond taken colore officii, yet the
principle applies equally to a case like the
one at bar; and, indeed, it is seen that
such was the view of the judge delivering
the opinion, since he cited Atcheson v.
Mallon, which, in its nature, is a case very
similar to the one now before us.
The vice is inherent in
contracts of this kind, and its existence
does not in the least depend upon the
success which attends the execution of any
particular agreement.
Tool
Co. v. Morris, 2 Wall. 45, 56, the court
said, in speaking as to illegal agreements:
'It is sufficient to observe,
generally, that all agreements for pecuniary
considerations to control the business
operations of the government, or the regular
ad inistration of justice, or the
appointments to public offices, or the
ordinary course of legislation, are void as
against public policy, without reference to
the question whether improper means are
contemplated or used in their execution.'
Page 649
And in Rex v. De Beringer, 3
Maule & S. 67, 72, cited in Scott v. Brown
(1892) 2 Q. B. Div. 724, 730, Lord
Ellenborough, C. J., said:
'A public mischief is stated as
the object of this conspiracy; the
conspiracy is by false rumors to raise the
price of the public funds and securities;
and the crime lies in the act of conspiracy
and combination to effect that purpose, and
would have been complete, although it had
not been pursued to its consequences, or the
parties had not been able to carry it into
effect. The purpose itself is mischievous.
It strikes at the price of a vendible
commodity in the market, and, if it gives it
a fictitious price by means of false rumors,
it is a fraud leveled against all the
public, for it is against all such as may
possibly have anything to do with the funds
on that particular day.'
Contracts of the nature of this
one are illegal in their nature and
tendency, and for that reason no inquiry is
necessary as to the particular effect of any
one contract, because it would not alter the
general nature of contracts of this
description, or the force of the public
policy which condemns them.
In the case at bar the illegal
character of the agreement is founded, not
alone upon the fact that it tends to lessen
competition, but also upon the fact of the
commission of a fraud by the parties in
combining their interests and concealing the
same, and in submitting different bids as if
they were bona fide, when they knew that one
of them was so much higher than the other
that it could not be honestly accepted, and
when they put it in for the sake of keeping
up the form and of strengthening the idea of
a competition which did not in fact exist.
The tendency of such agreements is bad,
although in some particular case it might be
difficult to show that it actually
accomplished a fraud, while its intention to
do so would be plain enough. Therefore, when
it is urged that these parties had no
intention of bidding for this work alone,
and that, unless they had combined their
bids, neither would have bid at all, and
hence the agreement between them tended to
strengthen instead of to suppress
competition, this answer to
Page 650
the illegality of the transaction is
insufficient. The evidence, however, does
not show that, if these parties had not
agreed upon a combination, neither would
have bid alone. It shows complainant came to
Portland to see the defendant, and to
conclude their arrangements to go into the
combination; but we are by no means of the
opinion that the evidence shows that, if
they had not combined, they would not have
bid at all. Complainant's company had bid
alone at a prior letting some time before,
and had then been the lowest bidder for the
contract, which the city did not award
because of a lack of means of payment for
the work, consequent upon a veto by the
governor of the bill providing for the
issuing of bonds to make such payment. And
it seems that the defendant himself was well
able to carry on the contract alone.
If it be granted that the fact
was proved that neither party would have bid
separately, and that by virtue of the
combination a bid was made which otherwise
would not have been offered, the
significance of the other facts in the case
is not thereby altered. Those other facts
are the concealment of the interest which
the parties had in each other's bids, and
the making of what were, under the
circumstances, nothing more than fictitious
bids for this and the other classes of work
for which both parties put in bids,
evidently for no other purpose than to
endeavor thereby to deceive the committee
into believing that there was real
competition between them, when in fact there
was none. If there had been competition, the
bid of each for the contract that was
obtained might very likely have been lower
than the one that was accepted. It is not
necessary to prove that fact in order to
show the nefarious character of the
agreement.
The reason given for the making
of these fictitious bids by the
complainantthat it was a formal matter, and
to keep the name of his company before the
publicis entirely inadequate. The bids
actually put in by them for the other
classes of work had the same tendency to
strengthen belief in the reality of the
competition which in fact did not exist
between these persons. The whole transaction
was intentionally presented to the water
committee in a false and deceptive light.
Page 651
Upon general principles it must
be apparent that biddings for contracts for
public works cannot be surrounded with too
many precautions for the purpose of
obtaining perfectly fair and bona fide bids.
Such precautions are absolutely necessary in
order to prevent the successful perpetration
of fraud in the way of combinations among
those who are ostensible rivals, but who in
truth are secretly banded together for the
purpose of obtaining contracts from public
bodies, such as municipal and other
corporations, at a higher figure than they
otherwise would. Just how the fraud is to be
successfully worked out by the combination,
it is not necessary to show. It is enough to
see what the natural tendency is. Public
policy requires that officers of such
corporations, acting in the interest of
others, and not using the sharp eye of a
practical man engaged in the conduct of his
own business, and not controlled by the
powerful motive of self-interest, should, so
far as possible, and for the sake of the
public whom they represent, be protected
from the dangers arising out of a concealed
combination and from fictitious bids.
To hold contracts like the one
involved in this case illegal is not to
create any new rule of law for the purpose
of affording the protection spoken of. It is
but enforcing an old rule, and applying it
to such facts as exist in this case because
it naturally fits them. Its enforcement here
is to but carry into effect the public
policy upon which the rule itself is
founded. People who have been guilty of the
conduct exhibited in this record cannot be
heard to say that, although their
arrangement was fraudulent and illegal, they
would nevertheless have obtained the
contract, even if they had not been guilty
of the fraud, because the bids show they
were the lowest bidders. The bids might have
been lower yet if there had been competition
where there was in fact combination. The
parties must accept the consequences
resulting from entering into the agreement
proved in this case, all of which they
carried out, and included in which, and as a
consequence thereof, was the agreement with
the city, and the written agreement of
partnership between themselves.
Hyer
v. Traction Co., 168 U. S. 471, 18 Sup. Ct.
114, in
Page 652
speaking as to the character of the
agreement in that case, Mr. Justice Brewer
remarked that the vice of a combination
'lies in the fact of secrecy, concealment,
and deception. The one applicant, though
apparently antagonizing the other, is really
supporting the latter's application; and the
public authorities are misled by statements
and representations coming from a supposed
adverse, but in fact friendly, source.'
In that case the demurrer
admitted the allegation of the complaint
that the combination of the two interests
asking for the concession from the common
council was known and announced to that body
before its decision was made. The case
simply shows the part which concealment
takes in a combination, being in fact one of
the great dangers springing therefrom.
Atcheson
v. Mallon, 43 N. Y. 147, 151, Judge
Folger, in delivering the opinion of the
court, said:
'But a joint proposal, the
result of honest co-operation, though it
might prevent the rivalry of the parties,
and thus lessen competition, is not an act
forbidden by public policy. Joint adventures
are allowed. They are public and avowed, and
not secret. The ris , as well as the profit,
is joint, and openly assumed. The public may
obtain at least the benefit of the joint
responsibility, and of the joint ability to
do the service. The public agents know then
all that there is in the transaction, and
can more justly estimate the motives of the
bidders, and weigh the merits of the bid.'
We have here nothing to do with
a combination of interest which is open and
avowed, which appears upon the face of the
bid, and which is therefore known to all.
Such a combination is frequently proper, if
not essential; and where no concealment is
practiced, and the fact is known, there may
be no ground whatever for judging it to be
in any manner improper.
But in this case there is more
even than concealment. There is the active
fraud in the putting in of these, in
substance, fictitious bids, in their
different names, but in truth forming no
competitive bids, and put in for the purpose
already stated. It is not too much to say
that the most perfect
Page 653
good faith is called for on the part of
bidders at these public lettings, so far as
concerns their position relating to the bids
put in by them or in their interest. The
making of fictitious bids under the
circumstances detailed herein is, in its
essence, an illegal and most improper act.
Indeed, it is a plain fraud, perpetrated in
the effort to obtain the desired result.
The evidence shows that this
written partnership agreement was only a
part of the entire agreement existing
between the parties. That agreement covered,
and was clearly intended to cover, their
whole action from the time they agreed to
put in their bids in a common interest up to
and including the execution and performance
of the contract obtained from the city. The
agreement (of which that for a partnership
was but a portion) was that they should
combine their interests; that they should
put in bids known to each; that they should
conceal the fact of their combination; that
they should put in fictitious bids, without
expectation or purpose of having them taken;
that, if the contract were procured, they
should perform the work as partners, and
share expenses and divide profits. No
division of that contract into two periods,
the one prior and the other subsequent to
the written agreement between the parties,
can be made. The complainant cannot count
only upon the contract of partnership as
evidenced by the writing of March, 1893.
That writing evidenced only a portion of the
agreement that had been made between these
parties, the result being that, although
their agreement was in the first instance by
parol, a portion of it was subsequently
reduced to writing.
The whole contract is none the
less one and indivisible, just as much as if
it had all been put in writing. If it had
been, it would scarcely be argued that
complainant might maintain an action by
relying on that part of it which was valid
and relating to the partnership between
them, and that he might discard or omit to
prove that portion which was illegal. If the
complainant did not, the defendant could,
prove the whole contract,as well the part
lying in parol as that which was reduced to
writing,so that the court might, upon an
inspection of the whole contract, determine
therefrom its character. The unity of the
Page 654
contract is not severed, or its meaning
or effect in any degree altered, by putting
part of it in writing and leaving the rest
in parol.
Concluding as we do that this
agreement between these parties is, as a
whole, of an illegal nature, and that the
portion thereof which is reduced to writing
cannot be separated from the balance of the
agreement, the question then arises as to
the result of such conclusion upon the
parties to the agreement.
There are several old and very
familiar maxims of the common law which
formulate the result of that law in regard
to illegal contracts. They are cited in all
law books upon the subject, and are known to
all of us. They mean substantially the same
thing and are founded upon the same
principles and easoning. They are: 'Ex dolo
malo non oritur actio;' 'Ex pacto illicito
non oritur actio;' 'Ex turpi causa non
oritur actio.' About the earliest
illustration of this doctrine is almost
traditional, in the famous case of The
Highwayman. It is stated that Lord Kenyon
once said, by way of illustration, that he
would not sit to take an account between two
robbers on Hounslow Heath, and it was
questioned whether the legend in regard to
the highwayman did not arise from that
saying. It seems, however, that the case was
a real one. He did file a bill in equity for
an accounting against his partner, although
it was no sooner filed, and its real nature
discovered, than it was dismissed, with
costs, and the solicitors for the plaintiff
were summarily dealt with by the court as
for a contempt in bringing such a case
before it. 1 Lindl. Partn. (5th Ed.) 94,
note n; 9 Law Quart. Rev. pp. 105, 197.
The authorities from the
earliest time to the present unanimously
hold that no court will lend its assistance
in any way towards carrying out the terms of
an illegal contract. In case any action is
brought in which it is necessary to prove
the illegal contract in order to maintain
the action, courts will not enforce it, nor
will they enforce any alleged rights
directly springing from such contract. In
cases of this kind the maxim is, 'Potior est
conditio defendentis.'
Page 655
The following are only a few of
the numerous cases upon the subject in
England and in this country: Holman v.
Johnson (1775) 1 Cowp. 341; Booth v. Hodgson
(1795) 6 Term R. 405; Thomson v. Thomson
(1802) 7 Ves. 468; Shiffner v. Gordon (1810)
12 East, 294; Sykes v. Beadon (1879) 11 Ch.
Div. 170; Scott v. Brown (1892) 2 Q. B. Div.
724; Belding v. Pitkins (1804) 2 Caines,
147a; Atcheson v. Mallon (1870) 43 N. Y.
147; Leonard v. Poole (1889) 114 N. Y. 371,
21 N. E. 707; Wheeler v. Russell (1821) 17
Mass. 258, 281; Snell v. Dwight (1876) 120
Mass. 9; Marshall v. Railroad Co. (1853) 16
How. 314, 334; McBlair v. Gibbes (1854) 17
How. 232; Coppell v. Hall (1868) 7 Wall.
542; Trist v. Child (1874) 21 Wall. 441,
448; Woodstock Iron Co. v. Richmond & D.
Extension Co. (1889) 129 U. S. 643, 9 Sup.
Ct. 402; 1 Lindl. Partn. (5th Ed.) 93, note,
giving the result of the American cases.
The general proposition is not
disputed, but certain explanations as to its
meaning and extent have been announced by
the courts in cases now to be referred to;
and the effort has been to show that the
case before us comes under some of the
exceptions to the rule, and ought not to be
governed by the so-called harshness of the
rule itself.
If the partnership agreement
that is contained in the writing above set
forth is in truth but part of an entire
agreement, which contains utterly illegal
provisions, then this action cannot be
maintained, within any of the authorities.
It is only by proving the
partnership agreement as an entire
agreement, separate and free from the
balance of the agreement between the
parties, that argument can be made in favor
of its validity. It has been sometimes said
that where a contract, although it be
illegal, has been fully executed between the
parties, so that nothing remains thereof for
completion, if the plaintiff can recover
from the defendant moneys received by him
without resorting to the contract the court
will permit a recovery in such case. The
cases cited as illustrating the exception
are, among others, Tenant v. Elliott (1797)
1 Bos. & P. 2; Farmer v. Russell (1798) Id.
295; Sharp v. Taylor (1849) 2 Phil. Ch. 801,
817;
Page 656
Armstrong v. Toler (1826) 11 Wheat. 258,
269;
McBlair v. Gibbes, 17 How. 232, 235;
Brooks v. Martin (1863) 2 Wall. 70;
Planters' Bank v. Union Bank (1872) 16 Wall.
483; Armstrong v. Bank (1890) 133 U. S. 433,
466, 10 Sup. Ct. 450.
Upon the point as to the
ability of the plaintiff to make out his
cause of action without referring to the
illegal contract, it may be stated that the
plaintiff, for such purpose, cannot refer to
one portion only of the contract upon which
he prop ses to found his right of action,
but that the whole of the contract must come
in, although the portion upon which he
founds his cause of action may be legal.
Booth v. Hodgson, 6 Term R. 405, 408;
Thomson v. Thomson, 7 Ves. 468;
Embrey v. Jemison, 131 U. S. 336, 348, 9
Sup. Ct. 776.
In the first of the above cases
the plaintiff sought to maintain his action
by referring to that part of the contract
which was not illegal, and to ask a recovery
upon that alone. Lord Kenyon, C. J.,
observed that it seemed to be admitted by
counsel for plaintiff 'that, if the whole
case were disclosed to the court, there was
no foundation for the demand. They say to
the court, 'Suffer us to garble the case, to
suppress such parts of the transaction as we
please, and to impose that mutilated state
of it on the court as the true and genuine
transaction, and then we can disclose such a
case as will enable our clients to recover
in a court of law.' Such is the substance of
this day's argument. It is a maxim in our
law that a plaintiff must show that he
stands on a fair ground when he calls on a
court of justice to administer relief to
him.'
Mr. Justice Ashhurst, in the
same case, said: 'The plaintiffs wish us to
decide this case on a partial statement of
the facts, thereby admitting that, if the
whole case be disclosed, they have no
prospect of success; but we must take the
whole case together, and upon that the
plaintiffs cannot recover.'
Mr. Justice Grose said: 'We
cannot decide on a part of the case; and
taking the whole together, an assumpsit
cannot be raised from one part of the case
when the other parts
Page 657
of it negative an assumpsit.' The
defendant therefore had judgment.
In Thomson v. Thomson, supra,
the plaintiff was not permitted to recover,
because he had no claim to the money except
through the medium of an illegal agreement.
The master of the rolls (Sir William Grant)
said: 'If the case could have been brought
to this, that the company had paid this into
the hands of a third person for the use of
the plaintiff, he might have recovered from
that third person, who could not have set up
this objection [the illegality of the
contract] as a reason for not performing his
trust. Tenant v. Elliott is, I think, an
authority for that. But in this instance it
is paid to the party, for there can be no
difference as to the payment to his agent.
Then how are you to get at it, except
through this agreement? There is nothing
collateral, in respect of which, the
agreement being out of the question, a
collateral demand arises, as in the case of
stock-jobbing differences. Here you cannot
stir a step but through that illegal
agreement, and it is impossible for the
court to enforce it. I must therefore
dismiss the bill.'
And in Embrey v. Jemison,
supra, although the action was upon four
negotiable notes, the court would not permit
a recovery to be had upon them, because the
consideration for the notes was based upon a
contract which was illegal. Mr. Justice
Harlan, in delivering the opinion of the
court, said that the plaintiff could not 'be
permitted to withdraw attention from this
feature of the transaction by the device of
obtaining notes for the amount claimed under
that illegal agreement; for they are not
founded on any new or independent
consideration, but are only written promises
to pay that which the obligor had verbally
agreed to pay. They do not, in any just
sense, constitute a distinct or collateral
contract based upon a valid consideration.
Nor do they represent anything of value, in
the hands of the defendant, which in good
conscience belongs to the plaintiff or to
his firm. Although the burden of proof is on
the obligor to show the real consideration,
the execution of the notes could not
obliterate the substantive fact that they
grew immediately out of, and are directly
connected
Page 658
with, a wagering contract. They must
therefore be regarded as tainted with the
illegality of that contract, the benefits of
which the plaintiff seeks to obtain by this
suit. That the defendant executed t e notes
with full knowledge of all the facts is of
no moment. The defense he makes is not
allowed for his sake, but to maintain the
policy of the law,'citing
Coppell v. Hall, 7 Wall. 542, 558.
In the latter case, Mr. Justice
Swayne, delivering the opinion of the court,
said:
'Whenever the illegality
appears, whether the evidence comes from one
side or the other, the disclosure is fatal
to the case. No consent of the defendant can
neutralize its effect. A stipulation in the
most solemn form to waive the objection
would be tainted with the vice of the
original contract, and void for the same
reasons. Wherever the contamination reaches
it destroys. The principle to be extracted
from all the cases is that the law will not
lend its support to a claim founded upon its
violation.'
These authorities uphold the
principle that the whole case may be shown,
and the plaintiff cannot prevent it by
proving only so much as might sustain his
cause of action, and then objecting that the
defendant himself brings in the balance,
which was not necessary for plaintiff to
prove.
The cases above cited as
illustrative of the exceptions to the
general rule also show what is meant by the
cause of action being founded on some new
consideration, or upon a contract collateral
to the original illegal one.
In Tenant v. Elliott, supra, it
was held that where two persons had entered
into an illegal contract in regard to
insurance, and, a loss having occurred, the
insurer paid the money to a third person, to
be paid to plaintiff, the third person could
not himself retain the money because it
arose out of an illegal contract. Eyre, C.
J., asked 'whether he who had received the
money to another's use on an illegal
contract can be allowed to retain it, and
that not even at the desire of those who
paid it to him.'
In such case, clearly, the
defendant had nothing whatever to do with
the illegality of the original contract. He
received
Page 659
the money to be paid to another, and,
when he received it for that purpose, he
promised, either expressly, or by
implication arising from the facts, that he
would deliver the money to the plaintiff;
and, when he refused to do it, the plaintiff
could recover upon this express or implied
contract without resorting in any manner to
the original contract between himself and
another, which in its nature was illegal,
but with which the defendant was in no wise
concerned.
Farmer v. Russell, supra, is to
the same effect. The defendant received the
money from a third person to deliver to the
plaintiff, and it was held that he was bound
to pay it to the plaintiff, although the
original consideration upon which the money
was to be paid the plaintiff by the third
person was illegal. Eyre, C. J., said:
'It seems to me that the
plaintiff's demand arises simply out of the
circumstances of money being put into the
defendant's hands to be delivered to him.
This creates an indebitatus, from which an
assumpsit in law arises, and on that action
on the case may be maintained. * * * The
case therefore is brought to this: that the
money is got into the hands of a person who
was not a party to the contract, who has no
pretense to retain it, and to whom the law
could not give it by rescinding the
contract. Though the court will not suffer a
party to demand a sum of money in order to
fulfill an illegal contract, yet there is no
reason why the money in this case should not
be recovered notwithstanding the original
contract was void. The difficulty with me is
that the contract with the carrier cannot be
connected with the contract between the
plaintiff and the man at Portsmouth, and in
that view I think the verdict is not to be
supported. However, I incline to a new trial
on another ground: It does not clearly
appear that the defendant was not himself a
party to the original contract, for there
was a circumstance in the report which gave
much countenance to the idea that the
carrier knew what he was doing, viz. that he
was lending his assistance to an infamous
traffic. In that case, th rule, 'Melior est
conditio possidentis,' will apply; for, if
the contract with him be stained by anything
illegal, the plaintiff shall not be heard in
a court of law.'
Page 660
The verdict in this case had
been for the defendant.
There was a question in the
case whether the defendant was privy to the
contract between the plaintiff and the man
at Portsmouth. The goods transported were
counterfeit pennies or half pence, and it
was the opinion of Eyre, C. J., that if the
defendant had been privy to the original
illegal agreement so that the whole thing
was but one transaction, the plaintiff could
not have recovered. Mr. Justice Rooke was of
opinion that it was not important whether
the defendant were privy or not; that, if
the contract were illegal, the plaintiff
could not recover from the defendant in any
event. The other two judges were of opinion
that, the money having been delivered to the
defendant for the purpose of being paid to
the plaintiff, the defendant was bound to
make such payment, without reference to the
illegality in the original transaction.
The difference in the principle
upon which a recovery was allowed in these
two cases and that upon which the defense in
this case is based is very clear. In the
case before us the cause of action grows
directly out of the illegal contract, and,
if the court distributes the profits, it
enforces the contract, which is illegal. But
where A. claims money from B., although due
upon an illegal contract, and B.
acknowledges the obligation, and waives the
defense of illegality, and pays the money to
a third party upon his promise to pay it to
A., the third party cannot successfully
defend an action brought by A. to recover
the money by alleging that the original
contract between A. and B. was illegal. This
is the principle decided, and we think
correctly decided, in the cases cited. It
was certainly no business of the third party
to inquire into the reasons which impelled
the person to give him the money to pay to
the plaintiff. That was a matter between
those parties, and if the party from whom
the money was due admitted his indebtedness,
and chose to pay it, the defendant, who
received it upon his promise to pay the
plaintiff, would have no possible defense to
an action by the plaintiff to compel such
payment. Such an action is in no sense
founded upon an illegal contract. That
matter was closed when the party
Page 661
owing the money under it paid it to a
third person, to be paid to the plaintiff.
The action by the plaintiff in such case is
founded upon a new contract, upon a totally
different consideration, and of a perfectly
legitimate character.
The next case cited by
complainant as an authority for the
maintenance of this action is Sharp v.
Taylor, supra. It was stated by the
chancellor in that case that, where one of
two partners had possessed himself of the
property of the firm, he could not be
allowed to retain it by merely showing that
in realizing it some provision of some act
of parliament, had been violated or
neglected, or that some provision of a
foreign statute relating to the registry of
vessels had not been complied with.
Lord Chancellor Cottenham, in
the course of his opinion, said:
'The violation of law suggested
was not any fraud upon the revenue, or
omission to pay what might be due, but, at
most, an invasion of a parliamentary
provision, supposed to be beneficial to the
shipowners of this country,an evil, if any,
which must remain the same, whether the
freight be divided between Sharp and Taylor,
according to their shares, or remain
altogether in the hands of Taylor. As
between these two, can this supposed evasion
of the law be set up as a defense by one
against the otherwise clear title of the
other? In this particular suit, can the one
tenant in common dispute the title common to
both? Can one of two partners possess
himself of the property of the firm, and be
permitted to retain it, if he can show that,
in realizing it, some provision in some act
of parliament has been violated r neglected?
Can one of two partners, in any import
trade, defeat the other by showing that
there was some irregularity in passing the
goods through the custom house? The answer
to this, as to the former case, will be that
the transaction alleged to be illegal is
completed and closed, and will not be in any
manner affected by what the court is asked
to do, as between the parties. Do the
authorities negative this view of the case?
The difference between enforcing illegal
contracts and asserting title to money which
has arisen from them, is distinctly taken in
Page 662
Tenant v. Elliott and Farmer v. Russell,
and recognized and approved by Sir William
Grant in Thomson v. Thomson. But the alleged
illegality in this case was not in the
freight being paid to English subjects
claiming as owners of the ship, as in
Campbell v. Innes. The importation of the
goods in a ship American built, and not
professing to have any English registry,
would not be illegal, and the American owner
might assign the freight to any one.
Assuming this to be so, I am of opinion
that, under the authorities referred to,
Taylor, who received the freight on account
of himself and Sharp, cannot set up this
defense to Sharp's claim. Upon these
grounds, therefore, independently of the
submission in the answer, this part of the
decree is, I think, right.'
These observations show that
the judgment did not go upon the illegality
arising from a mere violation or neglect of
a provision of an act of parliament relating
to vessels, and the agreement was not
classed among those contracts which are of
such an illegal nature that courts refuse to
enforce them. Some of the observations of
the chancellor, made by way of illustration
regarding the rule itself, have been since
doubted by the English courts, as in the
case of Sykes v. Beadon, supra, where
Jessel, M. R., in holding that an illegal
contract could not be enforced by one party
to it as against the other, directly or
indirectly, said that there were several
dicta of Lord Cottenham's in Sharp v. Taylor
which he thought were not good law; and the
master of the rolls remarked:
'It is no part of a court of
justice to aid either in carrying out an
illegal contract, or in dividing the
proceeds arising from an illegal contract
between the parties to that illegal
contract. In my opinion, no action can be
maintained for the one purpose more than for
the other.'
Continuing, the master of the
rolls observed:
'Then Lord Cottenham goes on,
in Sharp v. Taylor, to say: 'Do the
authorities negative this view of the case?
The difference between enforcing illegal
contracts and asserting title to money which
has arisen from them is distinctly taken in
Tenant v. Elliott and Farmer v. Russell,
Page 663
and recognized and approved by Sir
William Grant in Thomson v. Thomson.' Yes;
but not in that way. I have already
explained what those cases were. Those were
not cases in which one of the two parties to
an illegal contract sought to recover from
the other a share of the proceeds of the
illegal contract. Then he goes on to
distinguish Sharp v. Taylor, in a way which
probably distinguishes it from cases which
would be open to exception on the ground of
criminality. Those are all the authorities
to which I think it necessary to refer. I
think the principle is clear that you cannot
directly enforce an illegal contract, and
you cannot ask the court to assist you in
carrying it out. You cannot enforce it
directly; that is, by claiming damages or
compensation for the breach of it, or
contribution from the persons making the
profits realized from it.'
Sharp v. Taylor should not be
carried at all beyond the facts of the case
as set out in the report.
In McBlair v. Gibbes, supra,
the question was in relation to the validity
of an assignment by an assignor of his
interest in an illegal contract. The payment
of the money arising therefrom had been,
subsequently to the assignment, provided for
by the party owing it, and the dispute arose
between the representatives of the assignor
and those of the a signee as to which were
entitled to the share originally due to the
assignor. It was claimed on the part of the
representatives of the assignor that, the
original contract being illegal, the sale
and assignment of an interest therein from
him to the assignee were also illegal, and
consequently that such interest, equitable
or legal, passed to the assignor's
executors. Mr. Justice Nelson, however, in
delivering the opinion of the court, said:
'But this position is not
maintainable. The transaction out of which
the assignment to Oliver arose was
unaffected with any illegality. The
consideration paid was not only legal, but
meritorious,the relinquishment of a debt
due from Goodwin to him. The assignment was
subsequent, collateral to, and wholly
independent of the illegal transactions upon
which the principal contract was founded.
Oliver [the as-
Page 664
signee] was not a party to these
transactions, nor in any way connected with
them. It may be admitted that even a
subsequent collateral contract, if made in
aid and in furtherance of the execution of
one infected with illegality, partakes of
its nature, and is equally in violation of
law; but that is not this case. Oliver, by
the assignment, became simply owner in the
place of Goodwin, and, as to any public
policy or concern supposed to be involved in
the making or in the fulfillment of such
contracts, it was a matter of entire
indifference to which it belonged. The
assignee took it, liable to any defense,
legal or equitable, to which it was subject
in the hands of Goodwin. In consequence of
the illegality the contract was invalid, and
incapable of being enforced in a court of
justice. The fulfillment depended altogether
upon the voluntary act of Mina, or of those
representing him. No obligation existed,
except what arose from a sense of honor on
the part of those deriving a benefit from
the transaction out of which it arose. Its
value rested upon this ground, and this
alone. The demand was simply a debt of
honor. But, if the party who might set up
the illegality chooses to waive it and pay
the money, he cannot afterwards reclaim it.
And, if even the money be paid to a third
person for the other party, such third
person cannot set up the illegality of the
contract on which the payment has been made,
and withhold it for himself.'
What is meant by a collateral
contract, or a cause of action arising
therefrom, which does not require reference
to the principal illegal contract or
transaction, is still further illustrated
Armstrong v. Toler, 11 Wheat. 253. In
the course of his opinion, Mr. Chief Justice
Marshall assumed the facts to be that the
plaintiff, during a war between this country
and Great Britain, contrived a plan for
importing goods on his own account from the
country of the enemy, and goods were also
sent to B. by the same vessel. The
plaintiff, at the request of B., became
surety for the payment of the duties which
accrued on the goods of B., and was
compelled to pay them; and the question was
whether he could maintain an action on the
promise of B. to return this money, and the
Page 665
court held that such an action could be
sustained. The court said:
'The case does not suppose A.
to be concerned or in any manner
instrumental in promoting the illegal
importation of B., but to have been merely
engaged himself in a similar illegal
transaction, and to have devised the plan
for himself, which B. afterwards adopted.'
And again: 'The questions
whether the plaintiff had any interest in
the goods of the defendant, or was the
contriver of, or concerned in, a scheme to
introduce them, or consented to become the
consignee of the defendant's goods, with a
view to their introduction, were left to the
jury. The point of law decided is that a
subsequent independent contract, founded on
a new consideration, is not contaminated by
the illegal importation, although such
illegal importation was known to Toler when
the contract was made, provided he was not
interested in the goods, and had no previous
concern in their importation.'
And at page 274: 'In most of
the cases cited by the counsel for the
plaintiff in error, the suit has been
brought by a party to the original
transaction, or on a contract so connected
with it as to be inseparable from it, as
where a vendor in a foreign country packs up
goods for the purpose of enabling the vendee
to smuggle them, or where a suit is brought
on a policy of insurance on an illegal
voyage, or on a contract which amounts to
maintenance, or on one for the sale of a
lottery ticket, where such sale is
prohibited, or on a bill which is payable in
notes issued contrary to law. In these and
in all similar cases the consideration of
the very contract on which the suit is
brought is vicious, and the plaintiff has
contributed to the illegal transaction.'
The case of Armstrong v. Bank,
supra, is similar to the cases of Tenant v.
Elliott and Farmer v. Russell, and was
decided upon the same principle.
Counsel for the complainant
also refer to a case where a plaintiff had
let his horse to the defendant on Sunday,
and the defendant had injured the horse by
his recklessness and negligence, and a
recovery against him was had for the damages
Page 666
occasioned by such negligence,
notwithstanding the illegality of the
contract of hiring, because in violation of
the law relating to the Sabbath day.
Hall v. Corcoran, 107 Mass. 251.
In that case the court held the
cause of action was not founded upon the
contract, but defendant was held liable by
reason of his improper and neglectful
conduct in regard to the horse in his
possession, and which conduct was a
violation of the legal duty he owed to the
owner of such horse, irrespective of
contract. The case was a clear instance of a
proper recovery based upon collateral facts,
and not founded upon any original illegal
contract.
The same principle was held in
Welsh v. Wesson, 6 Gray, 505, as the damage
done plaintiff by the willful act of
defendant in running into him with his
sleigh had nothing to do with the race they
were engaged in.
To the same effect is Woodman
v. Hubbard, 5 Fost. (N. H.) 67. The act of
damage to the horse upon which the liability
rested was not connected with or part of the
illegal Sunday hiring.
We think it clear that these
cases cited as authority for a recovery in
this case upon the ground of completion of
the illegal contract, or of a new contract
upon a good consideration, do not touch the
case before us, with the possible exception
of Sharp v. Taylor, supra, and that case
ought not to be extended.
In the case at bar the action
depends upon the entire contract between the
parties, part of which we hold was illegal.
The partnership part of the agreement cannot
be separated from the rest. The
complainant's claim to profits rests upon
the entire contract. His right is based upon
that which is illegal and utterly void, and
he cannot separate his cause of action from
the illegal part, and claim a recovery upon
the written portion providing for and
evidencing the partnership.
We come now to a consideration
of the two cases upon which the counsel for
the complainant specially rely for the
maintenance of this action. They are
Brooks v. Martin, 2 Wall. 70, and
Planters'
Bank v. Union Bank, 16 Wall. 483. Of the
Page 667
two cases, Brooks v. Martin is the more
like this one, although the cases are by no
means precisely similar. The partnership in
that case was stated by the court, in its
opinion, to have been really engaged,
probably with the full knowledge of all its
members, in dealing in soldiers' claims,
long before any scrip or land warrants were
issued by the government, and contrary to
the ninth section of the act of February 11,
1847, providing for the granting of land
warrants to be issued to the soldiers.
The main object of the ninth
section of the act was, as the court stated,
to protect the soldiers against improper
contracts of the precise character of those
shown in the record. It was further said
that the traffic for which this partnership
was formed was il egal, and that if a
soldier who had sold his claim to these
partners had refused to perform his
contract, or to do any act which was
necessary to give them the full benefit of
their purchase, no court would have
compelled him to do it or give them any
relief against it, or if one of the
partners, after the signing of the articles,
had said to the other, 'I refuse to proceed
with this partnership because the purpose of
it are illegal,' the other partner would
have been entirely without remedy. And if,
on the other hand, one of the partners had
said, 'I have bought one hundred soldiers'
claims, for which I have agreed to pay a
certain sum, which I require you to advance,
according to your contract,' the other
partner might have refused to comply with
such demand, and no court would have given
either of the partners any remedy for such
refusal.
The court further stated that,
upon the facts existing, all the claims
purchased by the partner having been turned
into land warrants, and the warrants having
been sold or located, and where the purchase
of the claim had been made prior to the date
of the warrant, assignments having been
subsequently made by the soldiers, and the
portion of the lands located having been
sold partly for cash and partly on mortgage,
and the assets of the partnership consisting
then almost wholly of cash securities or of
lands,all these facts appearing,the
partner in whose possession the profits of
the partnership
Page 668
were could be compelled to account by the
other partner, and that the fact that such
partner had given a release procured from
him by fraud was no bar to his action for
such an accounting.
The action was sustained upon
the theory that the purpose of the
partnership agreement had been fully closed
and completed, substantially all the profits
arising therefrom had been invested in other
securities or in lands,and that, therefore,
it did not lie in the mouth of the partner
who had, by fraudulent means obtained
possession and control of these funds, to
say to the other that the original contract
was illegal. The wrong originally done or
intended to the soldier had been wiped out
by the acts of the soldier, and his waiver
of any claim by reason of the illegal
contract. The transactions which were
illegal, the court said, had become
accomplished facts, and could not be
affected by any action which the court might
take. The cases of Sharp v. Taylor, Tenant
v. Elliott, Farmer v. Russell, Thomson v.
Thomson, and McBlair v. Gibbes were cited as
authority for the proposition.
We have already adverted to
each of them, and we admit it is quite
difficult to see how, with the exception of
Sharp v. Taylor, the principle upon which
they were decided could be applied to the
case then before the court.
There is a difference between
the case before us and that of Brooks v.
Martin, because in the latter case the fact
existed that the transactions, in regard to
which the cause of action was based, were
not fraudulent, and they related in some
sense to private matters, while in the case
before the court the entire contract was a
fraud and was illegal, and related to a
public letting by a municipal corporation
for work involving a large amount of money,
and in which the whole municipality was
vitally interested. It may be difficult to
base a distinction of principle upon these
differences. We do not now decide whether
they exist or not. We simply say that,
taking that case into due and fair
consideration, we will not extend its
authority at all beyond the facts therein
stated. We think it should not control the
decision of the case now before us.
Page 669
In Planters' Bank v. Union
Bank, supra, Confederate bonds had been sent
by one party to the other for sale, and the
bonds had been sold by such party as agent
of the plaintiff, and their price paid to
such agent of the party selling; and the
court held that an action would lie to
recover the proceeds of that sale thus paid
to the plaintiff's agent, although no suit
could have been maintained by plaintiff
again t the purchaser for the purchase price
of the bonds, because their sale was an
illegal transaction. But, when the purchase
price of the bonds was paid, it certainly
did not rest with the person who received
the money upon an express or implied promise
to pay it over to set up the illegality of
the original transactions. When the bank
received the funds, there was raised an
implied promise to pay them to their owner,
and a recovery could be sustained upon the
same ground taken in Tenant v. Elliott and
the other cases above mentioned.
It is impossible to refer to
all the cases cited from the various state
courts regarding this question. Some of them
we should hesitate to follow. The cases we
have commented upon we think give no support
for the claim that the case now before us
forms any exception to the rule which, as we
believe, clearly embraces it. We must take
the whole agreement, and remember that the
action is between the original parties to
it; that there is no collateral contract,
and no new consideration, and no liability
of a third party. The partnership is but a
portion of the whole agreement.
We must therefore come back to
the proposition that to permit a recovery in
this case is, in substance, to enforce an
illegal contract, and one which is illegal
because it is against public policy to
permit it to stand. The court refuses to
enforce such a contract, and it permits
defendant to set up its illegality, not out
of any regard for the defendant who sets it
up, but only on account of the public
interest. It has been often stated in
similar cases that the defense is a very
dishonest one, and it lies ill in the mouth
of the defendant to allege it, and it is
only allowed for public considerations, and
in order the better to secure the public
against dishonest transactions. To refuse to
grant either party to an illegal
Page 670
contract judicial aid for the enforcement
of his alleged rights under it tends
strongly towards reducing the number of such
transactions to a minimum. The more plainly
parties understand that when they enter into
contracts of this nature they place
themselves outside the protection of the
law, so far as that protection consists in
aiding them to enforce such contracts, the
less inclined will they be to enter into
them. In that way the public secures the
benefit of a rigid adherence to the law.
Being of the opinion that the
contract proved in this case was illegal, in
the sense that it was fraudulent, and
entered into for improper purposes, the law
will leave the parties as it finds them.
The judgment of the circuit
court of appeals was right, and must be
affirmed.
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