Burke v. Shaver

23 S.E. 749, 92 Va. 345, 1895 Va. LEXIS 123
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 5, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 23 S.E. 749 (Burke v. Shaver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burke v. Shaver, 23 S.E. 749, 92 Va. 345, 1895 Va. LEXIS 123 (Va. 1895).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to a judgment of the Circuit Court of Rockingham county. The action is for a breach of promise of marriage brought by the defendant in error against the plaintiff in error, the declaration alleging, in aggravation of damages, the seduction of the defendant in error, birth of child, &c.; and at the trial the jury awarded damages in the sum of $1,000.

The first assignment of error is to the refusal of the trial court to give the following instructions asked for by the defendant (plaintiff in error):

Instruction 1. “ The jury are instructed that if the plaintiff yielded to the request of the defendant to have sexual intercourse with her, upon the promise of the defendant if the plaintiff got into trouble he would marry her, that such contract did not constitute a legal contract of marriage.”

Instruction 2. The jury are instructed that upon an [347]*347agreement between a single man and a single woman to have illicit intercourse, and that, if pregnancy of the female shall follow, the man agrees to marry the woman, such an agreement is against morality, and does not create a legal contract of marriage.”

The first question to be determined is whether these instructions correctly propound the law applicable to the case. A contract for marriage is the mutual agreement of a man and a woman to marry each other, or become husband and wife in the future, and must satisfy the legal requirements as to parties, consideration, &c., as other contracts must.

'Whárton, in his work on the Law of Contracts, Vol. L, sec. 373, states the law thus: “An agreement is void when the consideration is future illicit cohabitation, no matter what other considerations may unite, or how skillfully the illegal object might be clothed. * * * A promise of marriage on consideration of sexual intercourse also is void.”

Chancellor Kent, in his Commentaries, Vol. II. (ed. 13), p. 467, in discussing what constitutes a valuable consideration of a contract, says: “ The consideration must not only be valuable; but it must be a lawful consideration, and not repugnant to law, or sound policy, or good morals. Ex turpi contractu, actio non oritur ; and no person, even so far back as the feudal ages, was permitted by law to stipulate for iniquity. The reports in every period of English jurisprudence and our American reports equally abound with cases of contracts held illegal on account of the illegality of the consideration ; and they contain certain striking illustrations of the general rule that contracts are illegal when founded on a consideration contra honos mores, or against principles of sound policy, or founded in fraud, or in contravention of the positive provisions of some statute law. • If the contract grows immediately out of, or is connected with, an illegal or immoral act, a court of justice will not enforce it.”

[348]*348In the case of Saxon v. Wood, 30 N. E. Rep. 797, where the complaint alleged “ that defendant, who was a suitor of plaintiff, an unmarried woman, solicited her to have sexual intercourse with him, and, on her refusal, agreed that if she should yield to hi.s wishes, and thereby became pregnant, he would at once marry her; that in consideration of such agreement, to which she consented, plaintiff yielded to defendant’s solicitations, and did have sexual intercourse with the defendant, from which pregnancy resulted, and from which a child was born to plaintiff, and the defendant, on her request to fulfil his agreement, refused to marry her,” it was held that the action would not lie, the contract being based on an immoral consideration.

Judge Black, in delivering the opinion of the appellate court of Indiana in that case, cites with approval what has been above quoted from Kent’s Commentaries, and a number of other authorities on the same line.

. In the case of Hanks v. Nagle, decided by the Supreme Court of California (54 Cal. 51), which was an action for a breach of promise of marriage similar in many respects to the case at bar, the plaintiff testified, in effect, that the defendant promised to marry her if she would surrender her person to him, and that she thereupon consented. The court held that the promise was void on account of the immorality of the consideration, the court saying in its opinion that, “upon well-settled principles, the plaintiff should not have recovered on a contract of this character, as, being a contract for illicit cohabitation, it is tainted with immorality.” Citing Story on Contracts, sec. 458, and Steinfelt v. Levy, 16 Abb. N. S. 26. In the latter case, which was decided by the Supreme Court of New York, Chief-Justice Neilson, in discussing the nature of the contract sued on, says : “ It is hardly necessary to say that a contract thus grossly immoral would not support the action.” “ The learned presiding judge [of the [349]*349court below] seems to have had in view the rule that where a contract is founded on two considerations, one of which is merely void, but not vicious, and the other good, the contract is binding to the extent of the good consideration. He ruled that if in fact mutual concurrent provisions to marry were a part of the consideration, the plaintiff could recover. It does not seem to have occurred to him that such a rule would tend to legalize contracts for prostitution, or that the principle in view is never applied to a contract tainted with immorality. Courts of justice will not aid the illicit or corrupt arrangement, or sift one part of it to save the other part.”

' The learned counsel for defendant in error cites this case as authority for his contention that Instructions 1 and 2 were not applicable to the case at bar, because there was a promise of marriage independent of the promise made in consideration of sexual intercourse; but the case of Steinfelt v. Levy sustains the doctrine laid down in Hanks v. Hagle, and the other authorities above cited. Moreover, we shall see later on that the evidence does not show a promise in the case at bar by the plaintiff in error to marry the defendant in error, independent of the promise to marry her if she would have sexual intercourse with him, and became pregnant. The case of Kurts v. Franks, 40 Amer. Rep. 275, and Clark v. Pendleton, 20 Conn. 495, are also cited by counsel for defendant in error, but they do not apply to the case at bar. In the first of these cases the man promised to marry the woman in September or October, if they could agree and get along and be true to each other, and that if she became pregnant from their intercourse he would marry her 'immediately. She became pregnant in July, but he then refused to marry her. The court held, upon the particular facts in that case, that the illicit intercourse did not so enter into the consideration as to render the agreement void; that an action for the breach accrued at once. The real point decided was that the plain[350]*350tiff could maintain her action upon the defendant’s refusal to marry her after pi-egnancy, without waiting until the time fixed upon for the marriage by the original agreement.

¥e think that Instructions Hos. 1 and 2 correctly propounded the law. It only remains to be determined whether the instructions are relevant to the testimony in the case.

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.E. 749, 92 Va. 345, 1895 Va. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-v-shaver-va-1895.