Gregg v. Wyman

58 Mass. 322
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 58 Mass. 322 (Gregg v. Wyman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregg v. Wyman, 58 Mass. 322 (Mass. 1849).

Opinion

Fletcher, J.

By the Rev. Sts. c. 50, §. 1, it is enacted, that “ No person shall do any manner of labor, business or work, except only works of necessity or charity, on the Lord’s day; and any person so offending shall be punished by a fine not exceeding ten dollars for every offence.” By the second section it is provided, that “ No person shall travel on the Lord’s day, except from necessity or charity; and every person so offending shall be punished by a fine not exceeding ten dollars for every offence.”

Letting the horse by the plaintiff was a matter of business, which he could not lawfully do on the Lord’s day, and travelling with the horse for pleasure, by the defendants, was doing what they could not lawfully do on that day. The plaintiff, therefore, acted unlawfully in letting the horse, and [325]*325he let him knowingly for an unlawful purpose. No person can maintain any action founded on such an unlawful proceeding. The authorities on this point are numerous and conclusive. In Robeson v. French, 12 Met. 24, it was decided, that an action cannot be maintained for a deceit practised in the exchange of horses on the Lord’s day. The exchange of horses on that day was an unlawful transaction, the statute expressly prohibiting such business on the Lord’s day. The decision was founded on the established principle, that the court will not lend its aid to a party who founds his action on an illegal transaction. So in Bosworth v. Swansey, 10 Met. 363, it was decided, that a person who travels on the Lord’s day, neither from necessity nor charity, cannot maintain an action against a town for an injury received by him while so travelling, by reason of a defect in a highway, which the town was by law obliged to repair. The act of the plaintiff in that case, in travelling on the Lord’s day, was unlawful, and being thus himself in fault, he had no right to call the defendants to account for their fault.

In the case of Pattee v. Greely, 13 Met. 284, it was decided, that an action cannot be maintained on a bond, which is executed neither from necessity nor charity on the Lord’s day. This decision rests on the principle, that no man can come into a court of justice to seek the assistance of the law, who founds his claim upon a contravention of the law.

This general principle, as applied to acts prohibited by the provisions of the statute for the observance of the Lord’s day, is fully sustained by numerous decisions both in England and in various states of the union. Northrup v. Foot, 14 Wend. 248; Lyon v. Strong, 6 Verm. 219, and two cases cited; Berrill v. Smith, 2 Miles, 402; Fennell v. Ridler, 5 B. & C. 406. The authorities on this point are very fully col-' lected in the above case of Pattee v. Greely, 13 Met. 284, to which reference is made. The court below seems to have admitted the general principle, and to have ruled in effect that the letting was unlawful, and that the plaintiff could not recover for any injury or damage done to the horse, while the defendants kept within the route specified by them at the [326]*326time of the hiring; yet, that if the jury should be satisfied that the defendants did hire the horse to go to a particular place, and that they went further or to a different place, and that, in consequence of their going further or to a different place, the plaintiff’s horse died, or was injured, the plaintiff could recover.

By the instruction of the court, the jury were warranted in finding for the plaintiff, if they were satisfied that the defendants hired the horse to go to a particular place, and went further, and, that in consequence of going further, the horse died, or was injured. The jury found that the injury was occasioned by driving beyond the limits specified in the contract of hiring.

The question now is, Can the plaintiff by law maintain his action on this ground ? The letting of the horse by the plaintiff was an act directly prohibited by the statute, and consequently an illegal act, and it is quite too clear for controversy, that no action can be maintained, founded on that illegal transaction. In Holman v. Johnson, 1 Cowp. 341, 343, lord Mansfield says : No court will lend its aid to a man who founds his action upon an immoral or illegal act.”

In the case of Wheeler v. Russell, 17 Mass. 258, the chief justice, in giving the opinion of the court, says : “ No principle of law is better settled, than that no action will lie upon a contract made in violation of a statute, or of a principle of the common law.”

It is also a well-settled principle of law, that if the plaintiff cannot make out his claim without showing an illegal act on his own part, he cannot maintain his action. If the plaintiff’s own illegal act forms one link in his chain of title, that is a defective link, which cannot hold the chain together, and the whole must fail.

A party cannot be heard to allege his own unlawful act, and if such act be one of a series of facts necessary to support the plaintiff’s claim, then that claim must fail.

The party who seeks redress in a court of justice must come with clean hands; an action which requires for its support the aid of an illegal act cannot be maintained. No [327]*327action, therefore, can be maintained on an illegal contract, or upon any thing growing out of it. Whether a claim, connected with an illegal transaction, can be maintained in a court of law, may be determined by the test whether the plaintiff must bring in the illegal transaction to aid him in making out his case. There may, perhaps, be a class of cases, which would be considered as exceptions to this general principle, where the parties to an unlawful transaction are not regarded as in pari delicto, as in the case of usury, and perhaps some others. In these cases, a party to an illegal proceeding is sometimes allowed to maintain an action, as being an injured and oppressed person, and not equally guilty with the other party. The present case, however, does not fall within this particular class, but must be governed by the general principle, that a party cannot maintain an action when his own illegal act must be shown as a part of his case, and to make out his claim. This general principle is abundantly settled by decisions, to which it will be sufficient simply to refer, without going into any critical examination of the particular cases. Simpson v. Bloss, 7 Taunt. 246; Booth v. Hodgson, 6 T. R. 405; Stokes v. Twitchen, 8 Taunt. 492; Howson v. Hancock, 8 T. R. 575; Worcester v. Eaton, 11 Mass. 368, 376 ; Babcock v. Thompson, 3 Pick. 446 ; Dwight v. Brewster, 1 Pick. 50; Wheeler v. Russell, 17 Mass. 258; Vandyck v. Hewitt, 1 East, 96; Morck v. Abel, 3 B. & P. 35; Fivaz v. Nicholls, 2 M. G. & S. 500; Roby v. West, 4 N. H. 285.

In the case of Simpson v. Bloss, 7 Taunt. 246, 250, Gibbs, C. J., says: “Here the plaintiff pays ten guineas to the defendant, who was his partner in the bet, upon a confidence that he shall get the whole bet of twenty-five guineas from Brograve ; and not being able to do so, he seeks by this action to recover it back.

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58 Mass. 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregg-v-wyman-mass-1849.