De Forth v. Wisconsin & Minnesota Railroad

9 N.W. 17, 52 Wis. 320, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 148
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 9 N.W. 17 (De Forth v. Wisconsin & Minnesota Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Forth v. Wisconsin & Minnesota Railroad, 9 N.W. 17, 52 Wis. 320, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 148 (Wis. 1881).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

The allegations of the complaint show that it was necessary to have nineteen signatures of resident taxpayers of the town to the petition in order to justify the issuing of the bonds, and that only six of these signatures were made on any secular day; all the others were made on Sunday. The real and material question in this case is, whether a petition signed by the resident tax-payers on Sunday is a lawful petition, under the provisions of section 946, and would justify the issuing of the bonds of the town under said section. Sec[328]*328tion 4595, N. S., makes it unlawful “to do any manner of labor, business or work, except only works of necessity and charity,” on the first day of the week, or Sunday. It was held by this court in Troewert v. Decker, 51 Wis., 46, that the loaning of money and giving a note therefor was business, within the meaning of this statute; and it appears to us perfectly clear that going about and procuring the signatures to a petition of the tax-payers of a town, upon the presentation of which, properly signed, to the clerk of such town, the board of supervisors thereof would be authorized to execute and deliver to a railroad company the bonds of the town for a large sum of money, and pledge the credit thereof for the payment of the same and the interest thereon, is a very important business, so far as the railroad company and the town are concerned. "We also think that when the tax-payer subscribes his name to such petition he is doing business within the meaning of such statute. He is doing that which,, if lawfully done, would authorize the incurring of a large indebtedness on the part of the town, and the granting of a large pecuniary benefit to the railroad company soliciting such signatures. One of the definitions of the word “business,” given by Webster, is a “ transaction.” The signing of the petition was a very important part of a very important transaction between the railroad company and the town — so important that unless the signatures were obtained there would be no authority for the board of supervisors to issue the bonds, and no right on the part of the. company to demand their issue. Without it the board would be devoid of any power to bind the town for the payment of any bonds they might issue in its name in aid of the railroad company. The fact that there was a petition signed by the proper number of resident tax-payers, is made, by the provisions of section 946', the very foundation of the authority of the town officers to bind the town by issuing its bonds.

The defendant company having violated the law in procur[329]*329ing the signature of the tax-payers to the petition, and the petitioners having also violated the law by signing the same on Sunday, it would seem to follow as a legal consequence that the company can derive no rights through or by virtue of such illegal action on its part. Rut the learned counsel for the appellant argues with much earnestness and ability, that because the petition was presented on a secular day, signed with the names of a sufficient number of the tax-payers of the town, the town board not only had the power to act upon such petition without inquiry as to the time when the signatures were made, but that the company had the right to compel their action if they refused. The argument seems to go the length of holding that if the proper number of genuine signatures are attached to the petition when presented to the clerk, neither the town board nor any one else can question the methods by which such signatures were obtained. This, we think, is clearly a mistaken view of the question. It seems very clear to us that the sufficiency of the petition might be impeached by showing that the signatures were obtained by force or fraud; and there does not appear to us any good reason why its validity cannot be impeached by showing that the signatures were obtained in violation of the Sunday law. If a man gives his note on Sunday as the consideration for goods sold or money loaned, he may show the fact as defense, in an action to recover upon such note. He does not deny his promise or his signature; he admits that he has had the goods sold or the money loaned; and yet the law says the holder of the instrument cannot recover, because it was given in violation of the statute. In both the giving and taking of the note the statute was violated; and because the person taking the note was equally guilty with the maker of the same, the courts will not aid him in enforcing his contract so made. The contract in itself is not illegal, but because the making of it on Sunday was a violation of a criminal statute, it cannot be enforced.

[330]*330Will a court of equity permit a party to make use of a petition which, is in the nature of a request or power of attorney, authorizing the town authorities to issue to him the bonds of a town, which shall he a charge upon the property of the petitioners and ail other tax-payers of the town, when it appears that such party obtained the signatures of the petitioners by an act which was a violation of the criminal laws of the state? If the appellant were proceeding against the officers of the town to compel the issuing of the bonds, there would not seem to be any doubt as to the right of the town authorities to set up the unlawful act of the appellant in procuring the signatures, as a defense to the action. The law having required the appellant to procure the signatures of the tax-payers to the petition before it is authorized to call upon the authorities to issue the bonds, the petition is the very foundation of the appellant’s right; and when it is shown that the appellant violated the law in procuring the signatures, he is not in a position to ask the aid of a court to enforce a claim against the town founded upon such petition. In such case, the right depending upon the validity of the petition, it is no answer that in the first instance the appellant could make out a case without showing that it had violated any law. In such action the appellant’s right to relief would rest upon the petition, and it being shown that the petition was obtained by an act which violates the criminal laws of the state, the court cannot grant the relief any more than in favor of the payee of a note made on Sunday. The payee, in his action, can make out his case without showing any violation of the law. He introduces his note, and he has made a case. The note may or may not show on its face that it was made on Sunday, and even though the date might show that fact, yet in favor of the legality of the con-. tract the court, in the absence of other proofs, would probably presume that, notwithstanding the date, it was in fact delivered on a secular day. The proof of the illegal act of the [331]*331payee comes from the defendant; but when made it shows that he cannot recover except by virtue of the contract which was made in violation of law, and his case fails.

This question was discussed and disposed of in the case of Myers v. Meinrath, 101 Mass., 366. Upon this question Justice Wells, who delivered the opinion, says: “The plaintiff concludes that the rule does not apply, because he does not seek to enforce any rights which depend at all upon the illegal transaction ; that both the legal title which he asserts, and the proofs by which he maintains that title, not only omit to disclose, but utterly disregard the unlawful sale; whereas it is the defendant who is obliged to set up the illegal conduct of himself and the plaintiff alike, in order to justify his retention of the plaintiffs property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 N.W. 17, 52 Wis. 320, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-forth-v-wisconsin-minnesota-railroad-wis-1881.