Duval v. Wellman

15 N.Y. St. Rep. 384
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 15 N.Y. St. Rep. 384 (Duval v. Wellman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duval v. Wellman, 15 N.Y. St. Rep. 384 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Ehrlich, J.

This action is not properly one for money had and received, but for damages sustained as alleged, by plaintiff’s assignor, from various causes, all growing out of her transactions with the “Matrimonial Bureau,” kept by defendant, of which she became a patron.

Among other grievances which the complaint sets forth, is one for the payment to defendant of the sum of five dollars as a “ registration fee,” and the deposit with defendant of the further sum of fifty dollars, to be returned on or before August 15, 1887, unless in the meantime defendant should introduce her to some person whom she would be willing to marry, and that defendant refused to return said sum op. demand.

Plaintiff’s counsel, however, in his brief, submitted upon the motion for a new trial, appears to abandon other claims pleaded, and while not controverting the proposition that the agreement may be void as against public policy, insists that the money paid in performance on plaintiff’s part of such agreement, if unlawful, may be recovered back, and desires that the action may be considered in that aspect, and treated as one for that purpose.

The question, therefore, will be so treated and considered.

The agreement, so called, under which was paid the money in suit, is not made void by statute. 3 R.S. (6th ed.), 142, sec. 2, subd. 3.

The statute simply provides that “every agreement, [385]*385promise or undertaking made upon consideration of marriage, ” shall be void, unless the same shall be in writing.

This is not an agreement in consideration of marriage. The consideration, in effect, was that defendant should render services toward the bringing about of a marriage; there is no pretense that defendant either was to marry plaintiff’s assignor, nor that any other person either married or agreed to marry her, in consideration of the money deposited or otherwise; and plaintiff himself does not aver that defendant promised that any other person should marry her, or even that he would procure a man willing to marry her, but that he (defendant) should undertake to introduce to her some man whom she would be willing to marry.

And finally, if otherwise within the terms of this statute, the due bill offered in evidence would sufficiently satisfy the provision requiring the agreement, or some note or memorandum thereof, to be in writing£ signed by the party to be charged therewith.

With the exception of a single case (62 Barb.’92), where the broker was defeated in an action to recover the agreed compensation for bringing about a marriage with a designated person, no suit involving the question has been discovered in the reported decisions of this state, and no adjudicated case anywhere has been called to the attention of the court wherein the terms of the agreement provided, as in the case at bar, for a general and promiscuous introduction of men formerly strangers to the female applicant, with the express purpose and intent of thereby securing a husband.

The reasonable, if not the necessary, inference is that the parties to be so introduced would not be ignorant of the object of forming such acquaintances on the part of plaintiff’s assignor; therefore no element of fraud or deceit as between the parties can be urged to impair the validity of such a contract.

There is no proof—and there must be no presumption— that any immoral purpose of plaintiff’s assignor was covered under the guise of defendant’s employment; on the other hand, it cannot be held that she was the victim of defendant’s fraud or negligence. The case must be considered and disposed of upon the theory adopted by plaintiff’s counsel.

The contract of marriage, established by divine decree, and being the true foundation of the family and the state, is highly favored by the law of every civilized country. Every other lawful contract, recognized as such by legislatures and courts of justice, may be negotiated and consummated through the agency of others. Is any such attempted agency for the purpose of negotiating marriage contracts void as against public policy ?

[386]*386To this question none other than an affirmative answer must be given; indeed, none other seems possible. Public policy has been well defined to be that principle of law which holds that no subject can lawfully do that which has a tendency to be injurious to the public or against the public good. And no thoughtful advocate, no right-minded citizen, can withhold his assent from the doctrine “that in the law of contracts, the first purpose of the courts is to look to the welfare of the public; and if the enforcement of the agreement would be inimical to its interests, no relief could be granted to the party injured, even though it might result beneficially to the party who made and violated the agreement.”

And it is not too much to say that the sanctioning of “matrimonial agencies” by courts of justice, and the letting loose upon the community of a horde of brokers stimulated solely by the promise of reward, or the hope of gain, intent upon bringing together parties of opposite sexes willing to rush into the marriage relation, would be far more disastrous to the welfare of the people and more subversive of that sound morality which is the corner stone of the social edifice, than would be the legalizing of concubinage or the licensing of prostitution.

It is true that mercenary motives may have a place in the mind of one or both of the parties entering into the nuptial contract, which the courts have neither ability to reach nor power to correct; but the arm of justice is not so shortened, nor is the authority of its ministers so impotent, that they may not effectually discountenance and suppress any attempt to surround the antecedents of the marriage bond with th'e influences and the atmosphere which may pervade an exchange of real estate, a sale of goods on commission, or the making of a “builders’ loan” agreement.

It does not follow because the law recognizes marriage as a Civil compact, that therefore it may be negotiated through agents like any other lawful agreement. While in a sense it is a civil contract, it is far more; it is a relation, divinely ordained to be sacred in its offices and lifelong in its continuing obligations. Out of it as a fountain flow the brightest anticipations, the purest affections, and the tenderest memories of which humanity is capable. It is fitting, therefore, that the administration of civil justice should guard its approaches and environments from all intrusion of sordid traffic or vulgar greed. If brokers could be permitted to make a show of‘off ering marital affections upon the market, the mischiefs to family peace and social order would be innumerable and irreparable.

It follows that any contract to do anything in consideration of any efforts in procuring a marriage is repugnant to public policy, and void.

The question then remains, can money advanced or paid [387]*387in consideration of such void agreement be recovered back? To this inquiry, sound reason and principle demand that a negative answer shall be given. The halls of justice are not open to any party of full age, and free from mental incapacity who has voluntarily entered into an agreement which is hostile to the public welfare, either in respect of the performance of it, the consideration for it, or any incidents or consequences flowing directly from it.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.Y. St. Rep. 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duval-v-wellman-nynyccityct-1888.