Dodson v. McCurnin

178 Iowa 1211
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 15, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 178 Iowa 1211 (Dodson v. McCurnin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodson v. McCurnin, 178 Iowa 1211 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Salinger, J.

I. Appellee makes the avoidance point that a failure to object to submitting whether the contract alleged had been entered into, works an estoppel to object to the fact that that question was submitted. While we have carefully examined what is cited in support, we shall not stop to declare whether they sustain the point. This, be[1212]*1212cause we hold the point to be irrelevant to our decision of this appeal.

lidity: public mentt'op?ye deputies unauthorized saiBy answer, motion to direct verdict, and motion for new trial, defendant urged that the contract sued on was against public policy. The charge of the court ignored this contention, and allowed recovery if the jury found the contract was made, performed by plamtiff, and breached by defendant. The charge was duly excepted to. Hence, we have the question whether the contract relied on by plaintiff is void for being against public policy.

II. Appellee is in no position to deny that the instructions fairly analyze what the alleged agreement is, and what may be recovered thereunder. This is what the charge says of them: The claimed agreement is that the extra $25 a month paid to defendant by plaintiff for the year 1911 should be repaid by defendant in case the board should refuse to allow her therefor, and require her to pay said sum of $25 a month herself. If plaintiff has paid in an accounting or settlement with the county to the board a reimbursement for the $25 a month paid by plaintiff to defendant, and defendant has on demand refused to reimburse her, he is liable. If the agreement was one wherein and whereby plaintiff agreed to pay defendant for his services as deputy recorder the sum of $25 per month—

“In excess of the sum of $900 allowed for such services by law, for the year 1911, but upon the condition that if the board of supervisors of Polk County would not in an accounting or settlement with the plaintiff as county recorder for the year 1911 allow her in said accounting or settlement for such sums as she, the plaintiff, had paid to the defendant for the year 1911 as salary in excess of $900, that then the defendant would repay her said amount paid in excess of $900 for the year 1911 as salary, and if you find that such agreement was made, and if you further find that plaintiff did pay to defendant $300 in excess of the $900 allowed by law [1213]*1213as salary of the deputy recorder of Polk County during the •year 1911, and if you further find that in an accounting or settlement between the plaintiff and the board of supervisors of Polk County for the year 1911 said payments made by plaintiff to defendant as salary for the year 1911 in the aggregate of $300 over and above the $900 allowed the defendant by law, were disallowed by the said board of supervisors of Polk County, and the plaintiff was required to account therefor, and pay the said sum of $300 to Polk County in her final settlement with Polk County for the year '1911, notwithstanding her payment of said sum to defendant as salary for the year 1911, then you will find for the plaintiff. ’ ’

Further, if plaintiff is entitled to recover, her damages will be the amount paid defendant during 1911 “as salary in excess .of $900” with interest “on the aggregate amount ■of such excess payments from the date of the final settlement with Polk County and the plaintiff, wherein she was required to and did pay to Polk County the amount she had theretofore paid defendant as salary for the year 1911 in excess of $900.”

Is this an agreement and transaction that is violative of our public policy?

2a.

So far as express words go, the appellant grounds his claim that it does violate it almost wholly upon the proposition that any agreement that a public officer shall be paid either less or more compensation than is provided by law is void as against public policy. ¥e will not dwell upon this claim now, because we think the text and eases which he cites, what these have led us to upon their consideration, consideration of what they in turn cite, and independent research, present a stronger argument for appellant.

As we understand, the major claim of appellee is that neither statute nor common law forbid what the parties agreed to or did, and that the whole transaction is, on its face, [1214]*1214neither against good morals nor injurious to the public; that defendant contended, and plaintiff believed, it was lawful to pay $1,200 a year for salary of a deputy recorder, but, because of being in doubt about the matter, said conditional agreement for reimbursement was entered into.

Does this meet the situation, which, stripped, is this: The salary of the recorder was $2,000 a year. Section 495, Code Supplement, 1913. By the Acts of the 34th G-. A., taking effect July 4, 1911, she was required to pay all fees collected and belonging to the county into the county treasury, quarterly. The law required the board of supervisors to fix the compensation for services of county and township officers, not otherwise provided for by law, and to provide for the payment of same. Code Section 422, Par. 14. Another provision was that this deputy “shall receive a salary not exceeding $900 a year, to be fixed by the board of supervisors.” Section 496, Code Supplement, 1913. The essence of the alleged agreement is that plaintiff will pay defendant more than the salary allowed by law, and more than the board of supervisors could allow without violating law, and that she should be repaid the excess allowance if, when she turned in all fees collected, the board should refuse to reimburse her out of the same to the amount of the excess allowance.

A contract intended to aid in effecting a transaction prohibited by law is void. Low v. Hutchinson, 37 Me. 196. Or one founded on an illegal consideration, which is made for the purpose of furthering any matter or thing prohibited by statute, or to aid or assist any party therein. Swanger v. Mayberry, 59 Cal. 91; Jones v. Hanna (Cal.), 22 Pac. 883; Berka v. Woodward (Cal.), 57 Pac. 777. It condemns, that the contract requires the doing of acts forbidden by statute. Dillon v. Allen, 46 Iowa 299. A contract is void if it contemplates the commission of a crime, or the doing of any wrongful or prohibited act. Kreiss v. Seligman, 8 Barb. (N. Y.) 439; Territt v. Bartlett, 21 Vt. 184. Or acts that [1215]*1215are illegal -or contrary to public policy. Drake v. Lauer, 86 N. Y. S. 986, affirmed 75 N. E. 1129.

But it is not necessary that a prohibited evil should be made criminal, or even penalized, to vitiate contracts made in furtherance of that evil. Jemison v. Birmingham & A. R. Co. (Ala.), 28 So. 51; McGehee v. Lindsay, 6 Ala. 16; Moog v. Espalla (Ala.), 9 So. 596. And a contract which, in its execution, contravenes the policy and spirit of a statute, is equally void if made against its positive provisions. Hunt v. Knickerbocker, 5 Johns. (N. Y.) 327; Wetmore v. Brien, 3 Head (Tenn.) 723.

Of course, any agreement is void if it have for object the commission of a thing made criminal by statute (Allison v. Hess, 28 Iowa 388; Peed v. McKee, 42 Iowa 689), or have for object anything that is against public policy (2 Elliott, Contracts, Sec. 645).

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178 Iowa 1211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodson-v-mccurnin-iowa-1917.