Herring v. Cumberland Lumber Co.

74 S.E. 1011, 159 N.C. 382, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 288
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 28, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 74 S.E. 1011 (Herring v. Cumberland Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herring v. Cumberland Lumber Co., 74 S.E. 1011, 159 N.C. 382, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 288 (N.C. 1912).

Opinion

*384 Walker, J.

This action was brought to recover the amount of a penalty, imposed by a contract between the plaintiff and the Wallace Manufacturing Company, for failure to comply with one of its stipulations. The question involved arose upon the following facts:

Plaintiff and ceftain other neighboring landowners agreed to sell the timber on their lands to the said company for a stated price, and defendant agreed to pay the price and also to construct a standard-gauge railroad from Delway to Wallace, and to complete the same for use and transportation on or before 15 March,' 1908, and, upon-failure to do so, it is provided by the contract that the Wallace Manufacturing Company shall forfeit and pay to the said landowners, as a penalty, an amount equal to 10 per cent of the price paid for .the timber, and 2% per cent on said price for each additional year of its default during the next five years, making 22Y¿ per cent in all if the default should continue as long as five years after 15 March, 1908. The parties conveyed the timber by deeds to the Wallace Company, coupled with the right to cut timber of a certain fixed dimension, and to build on the land roads, tramroads, and railroads, for the purpose of cutting and removing the timber. There is a provision in the deed that the trees sold to the company shall not be removed except by the standard-gauge railroad. The Wallace Company conveyed to the defendant Cumberland Lumber Company “the timber and tree rights, property rights and easements” acquired under the deed of the plaintiff to it. The standard-gauge railroad has never been constructed, and plaintiff sues to recover the penalty alleged to be due to him by the terms of his deed to the Wallace Company. .

The defendants’ counsel contend that the building of a standard-gauge road is not within the chartered powers and privileges of the defendants, and that it is also expressly forbidden by Revisal, sec. 2598. We need not decide whether or not this is a correct position, as we are of the opinion with the plaintiff upon another view of the matter. It appears in the case that the plaintiff and his neighbors, who joined with him in the agreement to sell their timber to the Wallace Manufacturing Company, one of the defendants, were influenced in fixing the *385 price of the same by the stipulation of the said company to construct this road, and that they sold the timber at much less than its reasonable worth because of this agreement, believing that if the road was built and put into operation, the benefit or -advantage they would derive therefrom would óompensate them for the loss of the difference between the price charged by them for the timber and the real value thereof. This being so, it would seem to be very unjust and inequitable that the defendants should repudiate their agreement and rely on its invalidity for the purpose of evading the payment of a reasonable price for the timber; in other words, that they should be allowed to keep the amount of the difference between the price paid for the timber and its true value, and, at the same time, refuse to execute their part of the contract to build the road, even upon the ground that it is malum prohibitum. If the stipulation to coii-struct the road is invalid, the plaintiff, if particeps criminis, is not in pari delicto. lie can recover the amount of his loss without declaring upon the alleged illegal stipulation, and relief can be given without enforcing this part of the contract. In such a case the action, it may be said, is not based on the agreement alleged to be illegal or invalid, but on the promise created by law to repay money of the plaintiff improperly obtained. 9 Cyc., p. 547.

The principle governing such cases is well stated in Lester v. Bank, 33 Md., 558, 3 Am. Rep. (Anno. Ed., 1912), p. 211: “The rule of law is well settled that no action will lie to enforce a contract malum, in se, nor, if executed, to recover money paid under it. In .all such cases the maxims, 'Ex turpi causa non oritur actio’ and 'In pari delicto portion est conditio defendentis et possidentis’ apply. In regard to contracts not immoral or criminal in themselves, but prohibited by statutory law, the same general rule may be said to apply, not, however, universal in its application, but subject to certain exceptions as binding in authority as the rule itself. Public policy, it must be borne in min'd, lies at the basis of the law- in regard to illegal contracts, and the rule is adopted, not for the benefit of parties, but of the public. It is evident, therefore, that cases may arise even under contracts of this character, in which the public interest will be *386 better promoted by granting than by denying relief, and in such the general rule must lead to this policy. Hence, Judge Story admits that, even between parties ‘in pari delicto’ relief will sometimes be granted if public policy demands it. 1 Story’s Eq. Jur., secs. 298-300. Other cases are to be found arising under contracts made in violation of a statute, in the application to which of the general rule courts have been governed by the plain and obvious purposes of the law; and in such it has been repeatedly held that an action would die against a party receiving money under such a contract upon a promise implied by law to refund it. Thus in Smith v. Bromley, Doug., 697, note, Lord Mansfield said: ‘If the act is in itself immoral, or a violation of the general laws of public policy, there the party paying shall not have this action. . . . But there are other laws which are calculated for the protection, of the subject against oppression, extortion, deceit, etc. If such laife are violated, and the defendant takes advantage of the plaintiff’s condition or situation, there the plaintiff shall recover.’ ”

Lord Mansfield said, in Browning v. Morris, 2 Cowp., 790: “It is very material that the statute itself, by the distinction it makes, has marked the criminal, for the penalties are all on one side — upon the office-keeper.”

This view of the case is not in conflict with what was decided in Edwards v. Goldsboro, 141 N. C., 60, as in that ease there was an illegal agreement which was contrary to public policy, if not contra bonos mores, and the action was for the recovery of money actually paid to carry out the illegal transaction, which was not only forbidden by law, but injurious to the public, and the parties were in pari delicto.

In this case the defendants have acquired the plaintiff’s timber at an undervalue, upon" a promise which they refuse to perform, and seek to shelter themselves behind its alleged illegality. There is nothing contravening public policy in permitting plaintiff to recover at least what he had lost by not receiving a fair and full price for his property, not exceeding" the amount named in the contract. Bond v. Montgomery, 56 Ark., 563; White v. Bank, 39 Mass. (22 Pick.), 181; 1 Pom. Eq. Jur., sec. 403; Sykes v. Beadon, L. R., 11 Ch. Div., 170; 9 Cyc., 546; *387 Bishop on Contracts, sec. 628

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.E. 1011, 159 N.C. 382, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herring-v-cumberland-lumber-co-nc-1912.