Aycock v. . Gill

111 S.E. 342, 183 N.C. 271, 24 A.L.R. 1449, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 257
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 5, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 111 S.E. 342 (Aycock v. . Gill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aycock v. . Gill, 111 S.E. 342, 183 N.C. 271, 24 A.L.R. 1449, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 257 (N.C. 1922).

Opinion

*273 Walker, J.

Tbe defendant, it is true, denied that there was any duress employed in obtaining the note in question, or that the consideration of it was against public policy, and also denied that he had done anything to stifle a criminal prosecution, and in support of this general denial, he stated what was done, which is above set forth. It will not be necessary to inquire if there was any legal duress exercised by the defendant to procure the note, as if the note is void, because the consideration of it is illegal, being against public policy, it is not enforceable whether obtained by duress or not.

The cases in this Court have settled the general principle involved in this case. Blythe v. Lovinggood, 24 N. C., 20; Garner v. Qualls, 49 N. C., 223; Vanover v. Thompson, 49 N. C., 485; Lindsey v. Smith, 78 N. C., 328; Corbett v. Clute, 137 N. C., 546. In Thompson v. Whitman, 49 N. C., 48, it is decided that the concealment of a felony is an indictable offense, and that the offense is greatly aggravated by compounding the felony, that is, “by an agreement not to prosecute or make known what has come to the knowledge of the party.” In offenses less than felony, this compounding or concealment is not indictable, but it is nevertheless against the policy of the law and the due course of justice, and a court of law will not lend its aid to enforce any such contract or agreement. In Garner v. Qualls, 49 N. C., 223, the same doctrine is held, the Court declaring that no executory contract, the consideration of which is contra bonos mores, or against the public policy, or the laws of the State, ean be enforced in a court of justice. The consideration there was the compounding or suppressing, a prosecution for an alleged forgery. The bond was declared void, although the act may never have been, in the view of the law, a forgery. In Ingram v. Ingram, 49 N. C., 188, the Court declared that an agreement among persons interested in an estate, not to bid against each other at the administrator’s sale, is void, as being against the public policy. It may be now, therefore, pronounced a settled principle “that all contracts founded upon agreements to compound felonies, or to stifle prosecutions of any kind,” are void, and cannot be enforced. The Court said, by Pearson, J., in Thompson v. Whitman, supra: “His Honor was of opinion that the consideration of the bond sued on was not against public justice. In this there is error. According to the view we take of the case, Taylor was not at liberty to take care of his private interest by accepting an indemnity, and thereby depriving the State of an active prosecutor; which is one of the means relied on for the conviction of offenders. The testimony of Taylor, when contrasted with that of Martin before the committing magistrates, in reference to the same transaction, suggests the fear that this douceur had taken effect. When the person directly interested is appeased before the trial, he is under *274 strong temptation to favor the offender.” There are many cases decided by this Court to like effect as those already cited, which it is not necessary to consider, as they all settle the principle above stated in the same way.

The defendant contends that his admissions do not bring this case within the principle above stated, as he did not agree to stifle a criminal prosecution or to do anything contrary to the public policy, but only agreed, as the consideration for the note given by the plaintiff to him, that he would intercede with the court in behalf of the plaintiff’s nephew and induce it to be lenient with him. But we are of opinion that even that consideration was illegal, and rendered the note void. It has been held that agreements to use influence, or tending to encourage the use of influence, with the prosecuting attorney in respect to criminal prosecutions is illegal. 9 Cyc., 502, and note 33, where the cases will be found. Merwin v. Huntington, 2 Conn., 209; Rhodes v. Neal, 64 G.a., 704; Shaw v. Reed, 30 Me., 105; Wildey v. Collier, 7 Md., 273; Ormerod v. Dearman, 100 Pa. St., 561; Barron v. Tucker, 53 Vt., 338; Wight v. Rindskopf, 43 Wis., 344. Bonds or promises in consideration'of “ease or favor” to prisoners held under criminal process are illegal. The case of Buck v. Bank, 27 Mich., 293, is so much like this case, and the decision of it was made by a Court of such eminence, the opinion being by Judge Cooley, that we may well rest our decision of this case upon it, as it covers fully the questions we have here to determine. The syllabus of that case thus states the substance of the decision: “B. having robbed the plaintiff, the defendant, a relative of B.’s, was induced to exebute to plaintiff promissory notes in consideration of a promise by the plaintiff to petition the court to mitigate the punishment of B.: Held, that the notes were against public policy, and not enforceable by the plaintiff.” After reciting the evil tendencies of a contrary rule, Judge Cooley says: “If the real inducement to the defendants to give the notes was the assurance of the officers that they would sign, or be more likely to sign, a petition in favor of R. M. Buck, then it is obvious that the transaction, stripped of whatever, in a legal point of view, was immaterial, was simply this: one party was to give a pecuniary consideration, and the equivalent was that another would sign, or promise to sign, or be more likely to sign, a petition for the mitigation of a criminal punishment. It is too plain for argument that such a transaction is not only wanting in the requisites of a legal contract, but that in its tendency it is immoral and pernicious. ... As consequences can only be precluded by an inflexible rule of law, that services or assistance of any kind or any description, calculated or intended to influence the action of a court, except in the open and public modes of argument and evidence which the. law provides for and allows, can never be a legal *275 consideration for the promise of a pecuniary return. We do not stop to point out that assistance from pecuniary motives to lighten the punishment of a criminal is the same in nature and only different in degree from assistance from the like, motives to shield him from punishment entirely. We prefer to put this case entirely upon the tendency such an understanding as the defendants set up must have to encourage deception of the judge, and to mislead him in the facts upon which his judicial action should be based. . . . The highest considerations of public policy demand that the pecuniary interests of individuals should not. be recognized as legitimate motives to influence the action of official persons, and that in the ease of courts most especially, every avenue should be carefully guarded against the intrusion of such motives. Caution is especially required in the case of parties injured by crime, who apply to avert or mitigate the penalty, because the court would be likely to give exceptional weight to their suggestions.”

It was said in Lindsay v. Smith, 78 N. C., at p.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.E. 342, 183 N.C. 271, 24 A.L.R. 1449, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aycock-v-gill-nc-1922.