Hensler v. Jennings

41 A. 918, 62 N.J.L. 209, 33 Vroom 209, 1898 N.J. LEXIS 28
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 14, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 41 A. 918 (Hensler v. Jennings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hensler v. Jennings, 41 A. 918, 62 N.J.L. 209, 33 Vroom 209, 1898 N.J. LEXIS 28 (N.J. 1898).

Opinion

[210]*210The opinion of the court was delivered by

Magie, Chief Justice.

The record brought here by this writ discloses a declaration in debt, a plea of nil debet, a trial of the issue and a judgment upon a verdict in favor of Jennings, the defendant in error, and against Hensler, the plaintiff in error.

The assignments are directed solely at errors alleged to have been committed on the trial. There is no general assignment nor any directed at the record. •

The assignments to the refusals of the trial judge to grant a nonsuit or to direct a verdict for Hensler and to his direction for a verdict in favor of Jennings may be conveniently considered together.

The bills of exception show that Jennings had made a bet or wager of $500 with one Meyer upon the result of a horse-race between the respective horses of Meyer and Jennings. The wager was made in New Jersey but by its terms the race was to take place in New York. Pursuant to the terms of the bet Jennings deposited his $500 with Hensler, who was agreed upon as a stakeholder by the parties, and Hensler received the money in New Jersey.

The action of Jennings was to enforce a liability of Hensler claimed to arise under the provisions of “An act to prevent gaming (Revision), approved March 27th, 1874. Gen. Stat., p. 1606.

In support of.the motion to nonsuit Hensler contended that no liability arose under that act because the event on which the wager was laid was to be decided in another state, and there was no evidence that it was prohibited by the laws of that state.

The act imposes a liability upon a stakeholder by two of its sections. By section 2, any person who deposits money with a stakeholder upon the event of a wager prohibited by that act or by any law of the state, may sue for and recover the same whether the money has been paid over or the wager has been lost or not. By section 5, one who loses money upon a wager prohibited by section 1 of the act may sue for [211]*211and recover it from the stakeholder whether he has paid it over or not, but such suit must be brought within six calendar months. Both sections give an action of like character against the winner or any person receiving such money for him.

By section 4 of “An act to prevent horse-racing,” passed February 15th, 1811 (Rev. L., p. 550), a similar action was given to a loser of money bet on a horse-race, but against the winner or his agent only. By section 4 of “An act to prevent gaming,” passed February 8th, 1797 (Rev. L., p. 267), a like action was given for money lost upon bets upon certain prohibited forms of gaming. The actions in both cases were limited to be brought within six calendar months.

Notwithstanding the provisions of these acts did not impose a liability upon a stakeholder to return money deposited with him upon wagers which were declared illegal by those acts, it was held in the Supreme Court that such money could be recovered from him by the depositor if demanded before payment to the winner. Moore v. Trippe, Spenc. 263; Huncke v. Francis, 3 Dutcher 55; Sutphin v. Crozer, 1 Vroom 257. The case last cited was brought to this court and reversed. It was here held that after the adoption of the “Act to prevent horse-racing,” approved March 19th, 1846 (Rev. Stat., p. 369), which made a stakeholder, by accepting the deposit of stakes upon a prohibited bet, guilty of misdemeanor, an action could not be maintained by one of the guilty parties against the stakeholder to recover money illegally staked. Sutphin v. Crozer, 3 Vroom 462.

When the revisers of 1874 came to draft the present act to prevent gaming (ubi supra) they made use of the provisions of section 4 of the act of 1797 of a like title, enlarging them so as to include all forms of betting prohibited by section 1 of the act and extending the liability to the stakeholder to answer to the loser of any prohibited bet. It was thus the present section 5 was made up.

By section 2 of a supplement to the act of 1797, approved April 6th, 1871 (Pamph. L., p. 109), the same provisions [212]*212were adopted which the revisers of 1874 have included, with some extensions and modifications, in section 2 of the present act.

The purpose for which the provisions of both sections relating to stakeholders’ liability were included in the act would seem to be to cover a liability to an action for money deposited upon an illegal wager, in case the event on which it was to depend never came off and so the wager was never decided. Such a liability would not arise under section 5, but would under section 2. Perhaps there were other reasons for the inclusion of both provisions.

This review of legislation on this subject seems, however, to be unnecessary, because it appears from the evidence, with the bills of exception, that Jennings’ claim was covered by the provisions of both sections, if the wager was one prohibited, for the race was run and Jennings’ horse was beaten, and the stakes were paid over to Meyer, the winner, by Hensler, the stakeholder.

Recurring, then, to the contention that Hensler’s liability was not established, because the event on which the bet was laid was to come off in another state, it is sufficient to point out that the act in question does not prohibit horse-racing. Such prohibition is contained in other legislation. But the provisions of section 1 of this act make unlawful and therefore prohibit all wagers upon any race. A race elsewhere, and whether prohibited by the laws of the place where it is-run or not, is within the plain language and intent of the act, and a wager on such a race is prohibited. A like construction was given to similar language of the Crimes act (State v. Lovell, 10 Vroom 463), and no other construction is reasonable.

The nonsuit was therefore properly refused.

The request for a direction for a verdict in favor of Hensler was pressed upon the trial judge on the single ground that the evidence, as it then stood, established the fact that Jennings and Meyer had rescinded the original illegal wagering contract made in this state, and had thereafter, and in the [213]*213State of New York, made another contract by which each wagered $500 upon the result of a race to be there run between the same horses, and, in the absence of proof that such a contract was prohibited in New York, this action could not be maintained.

The trial judge held that the evidence was insufficient to establish a rescission of the illegal contract made in this state, and I entirely concur in his conclusion.

But it is now contended that there was evidence, of such rescission sufficient to go to the jury, and that it was error to direct a verdict for Jennings, because, if the jury had found such rescission, the action was not maintainable.

But I am unable to yield to this contention. We are not called upon to determine what would have been the effect of a return to Jennings of the money he had deposited, after a rescission of the illegal wager by him and Meyer. The case shows that the money was not returned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 A. 918, 62 N.J.L. 209, 33 Vroom 209, 1898 N.J. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hensler-v-jennings-nj-1898.