Hope v. Linden Park Blood Horse Ass'n

34 A. 1070, 58 N.J.L. 627, 29 Vroom 627, 1896 N.J. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 34 A. 1070 (Hope v. Linden Park Blood Horse Ass'n) 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
Hope v. Linden Park Blood Horse Ass'n, 34 A. 1070, 58 N.J.L. 627, 29 Vroom 627, 1896 N.J. LEXIS 73 (N.J. 1896).

Opinion

[628]*628The opinion of the court was delivered by

The Chancellor.

The judgment reviewed is in an action upon contract brought by the Linden Park Blood Horse Association to recover from James W. Hope the sum of $5,000 paid by it to him in August, 1893, as hereinafter stated, in which the defendant pleaded the general issue.

The case was tried before the judge at Circuit without a jury-

Errors are assigned upon refusals of the judge to nonsuit and to admit and consider the defence that the money sued for was paid to Mr. Hope in pursuance of a corrupt and illegal agreement.

The plaintiff below proved that it applied to the township committee of the township of Linden, in Union county, to license it to maintain and use a race-course in that township, under chapter 16 of the laws of 1893 (Pamph. L., p. 28), entitled “An act concerning the maintaining of race-courses in this state, and to provide for the licensing and regulating of the same; ” that thereafter it was resolved by the township committee, Mr. Hope being a member thereof and voting in favor of the resolution, that the defendant in error be licensed as it requested, for a period of five years, upon conditions stated, and that it pay to the inhabitants of the township of Linden, for the exercise of the privileges granted by the license, the sum of $5,000 annually during the second, third, fourth and fifth years of that term, and that during the first year, it pay $5,000 to aid in the construction of a sewer projected in the township; the sewer referred to was to be the work of a private corporation called the Roselle Sewerage Company; that upon the adoption of the resolution an agent of the defendant in error, who was present at the meeting, prepared his check for $5,000, payable to his own order, and endorsed it to Mr. Hope, to whom it was also delivered; and that in March, 1894, the $5,000 was yet in Mr. Hope’s hands, and was demanded of him by the defendant in error.

Upon this proof, the court refused to nonsuit, and then the defendant below proceeded under objection, the decision of [629]*629which was reserved, to prove that after the resolutions of license were adopted, in the midst of confusion, some one remarked that there was something yet to be done, and that the reply was that $5,000 was to be paid, and that thereupon the agent of the defendant in error produced a blank check, and discussion arose as to whom it should be drawn; that the treasurer of the township was named and the treasurer of the sewer company was also mentioned, and that it was finally arranged that the check should be given to Mr. Hope, and be left with him to see that it got to the proper parties; also that it was suggested, by the agent of the defendant in error, that in making the check payable to Hope, the word “manager” should be added after Hope’s name, but, upon objection, that word was omitted from the check; and also that Mr. Hope was the manager of the Roselle Sewerage Company and a-subscriber for its capital stock; and that the corporation was organized to conduct its business for the profit and advantage of its stockholders.

In deciding the case, the judge held that the evidence upon the part of the plaintiff did not show either that there was any illegality in the transaction, or that the transaction was tainted with criminality or in contravention of public policy; that the payment appeared to be a voluntary payment to the defendant, who, therefore, stood as the agent of the defendant in error, charged with the duty of expending the money under its direction, from whom the money might, in legal right, be withdrawn at any time. Hence, he concluded that, at the close of the case of the plaintiff below, a right to recover had been proven.

As to the proofs by the defendant below, Hope, the judge said: “The defence is substantially this: That a stockholder in a private corporation gave his vote as a public officer in discharge of a public duty in consideration that the plaintiff would pay $5,000 into the treasury of the private sewer company which the defendant was engaged in promoting. This is a corrupt agreement, which is as clearly denounced by the law as though the money had been paid to the defendant for [630]*630his exclusive benefit, and it cannot be set up in defence to this action.

“ If the plaintiff, in order to make out his case, had been compelled to show these facts, the law would not have permitted him to recover back the money paid for such a corrupt purpose. The defendant is no more favored by the law. He cannot introduce such a state of facts into the case on his own behalf and set up his own corrupt action as a legal defence to this suit.

“ The defence set up by this testimony is incompetent and inadmissible, and is overruled.”

The court then proceeded to give judgment for the recovery of the $5,000, with interest and costs.

The proposition laid down by the trial judge that the transaction which influenced or induced Hope to give his official vote for the license of the defendant in error, was corrupt and unlawful, is not disputed. It is too well established to admit of question that an agreement which controls or restricts, or tends or is calculated to control or restrict, the free exercise of a discretion for the public good, vested in one acting in a public official capacity, is illegal and so reprobated by the courts that no redress will be given to a party who sues for himself in respect of it.

The question now mooted is whether the courts will permit a party to such an agreement to show its corrupt and illegal character in defence of an action against him to recover money paid to him in pursuance of its terms.

The trial judge thought that if one party to such an agreement should make out a prima facie case' for the recovery back of money paid under it, without exhibiting the illegality, it would not be competent for the person sued, who had been party to the agreement, to show the illegality and defeat such recovery.

The rule is that in an action in which either party to such a contract seeks redress from the other, for his own benefit, he will be left by the courts in the position in which he has placed himself. Church v. Muir, 4 Vroom 320; Price v. Polluck, 8 Id. 44; Shallcross v. Deats, 14 Id. 177, 182.

[631]*631That rule is the application of the maxim ex turpi causa non oritur actio. The maxim has its foundation in the public policy of discouraging illegal and corrupt agreements, by holding them to be void and refusing all judicial aid between the parties to them.

In Den v. Shotwell, 3 Zab. 465, 474, Chief Justice Green used this language: “ But in dealing with illegal contracts, courts do not and cannot look to the interest of those who aré parties to the illegal transaction. The law regards the welfare of society as paramount, and, in enforcing the law, courts cannot impair its efficiency or cripple its operation by considerations affecting the interest of those who are particeps cri7ninis.”

In Holman v. Johnson, 1 Cowp. 343, Lord Mansfield said: “ The objection that a contract is immoral or illegal as between the plaintiff or defendant, sounds at all times very ill in the mouth of the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
34 A. 1070, 58 N.J.L. 627, 29 Vroom 627, 1896 N.J. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hope-v-linden-park-blood-horse-assn-nj-1896.