Alford v. Burke
This text of 21 Ga. 46 (Alford v. Burke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
By the Court,
delivering the opinion.
The action in this case is brought under the act of the Legislature to simplify and curtail pleadings at law. The bill of particulars shows that it was instituted to recover five hundred dollars, paid into the hands of the defendant, as stakeholder, upon a bet on a dog fight which did not take place. The defendant pleads:
1st. The general issue.
2d. That the contract is illegal and void.
3d. That, by the terms of the deposit with defendant (if made at all,) the said sum of money belongs to another and different person.
The Judge of the City Court charged the juiy on the- trial, that the contract between the original parties was illegal, as. contrary to law and public policy, and that the law would leave them as it found them; and that the principle was applicable to the parties before the Court, equally as if both were original parties to the act; and that, according to law, [48]*48the plaintiff nor either of the original parties were entitled to recover from the stakeholder the sums deposited by them in his hands; and that in the case before the Court, the plaintiff Avas not entitled to recover. The jury, under this charge, found for the defendant, and the plaintiff carried the case, by Avrit of certiorari, to the Superior Court, alleging error in the charge of the City Court.
The Judge of the Superior Court sustained the certiorari, and ordered a neAV trial; and on this judgment the case is brought, by Avrit of error, to this Court.
If the acts of the Legislature are to be referred to as evidence of what public policy is in such cases, there can be no doubt in this case. The great .rule of public policy estab[50]*50lished by our Legislature is, that the winner shall not be protected in his unlawful gains, and that the loser, though a party to an illegal wager, may sue and recover back his money. Cobb’s new Dig. 726, 727. It is true that these Statutes give remedies only in the cases mentioned in them, but it strengthens the positions maintained by the Courts, in regard to the right of either party to recover the money deposited by him with a stakeholder, before it has been paid over.
Judgment affirmed.
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