Mackin v. Shannon

165 F. 98, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5355
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Arkansas
DecidedNovember 25, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 165 F. 98 (Mackin v. Shannon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mackin v. Shannon, 165 F. 98, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5355 (circtedar 1908).

Opinion

TRIEBER, District Judge.

The plaintiff has filed his bill to foreclose a mortgage executed to him by the defendant William T. Shannon to secure the payment of a note for the sum of $10,000, due six months after date. The other defendants are made parties as claiming some rights in the mortgaged property. The mortgagor, the defendant William T. Shannon, admits the execution of the note and mortgage sued on, but sets up that the same were executed in settlement of a gambling debt, and for this reason are null and void. The allegations in the answer are:

“That on the 24th day of February, 1905, he and the plaintiff entered into a copartnership for the purpose of carrying on and conducting the Kentucky Club, a gaming house, in the city of Hot Springs, Ark., for the season of 1905. That said copartnership continued until the 2d day of April, 1905, at which time it was dissolved by mutual consent of the plaintiff and this defendant. That upon the day of the dissolution, by reason of certain payments made by this defendant to the plaintiff, there was due the said plaintiff the sum of $9,432, and the note sued on herein ought to have been credited by the plaintiff in a sum sufficient to reduce the indebtedness therein mentioned to said sum.”

The other defendants filed separate answers, but it is unnecessary, in view of the conclusions reached by the court, to set them out in this statement of facts. There was a general replication filed by the plaintiff, and considerable proof taken by the parties. The proofs are somewhat contradictory, but adopting as findings of facts the testimony of the plaintiff and the conclusions advanced by his counsel, which are', of course, most favorable to him, they may be stated as follows:

That the defendant William T. Shannon was the owner of a gambling house in the city of Hot Springs known as the “Kentucky Clubhouse,” where all kinds of gambling were carried on. That one part of the establishment was used exclusively for banking games, such as roulette, faro, and horse wheel, while in another part of the building there were poker rooms, from which the house received certain commissions. That in February, 1905, the plaintiff, being in the city of Hot Springs, was introduced to the defendant Shannon, and was informed that the Kentucky Clubhouse was in financial distress, owing considerable money which it was unable to pay. Thereupon, an ar[99]*99rangement was made whereby the plaintiff was to put in $10,000, and was to have 30 per cent, of the business and the defendant Shannon the other 10 per cent. That he put $10,000' into the business, and a clay or so later put in $5,000 additional. Thai thereafter he inquired where the money was, and he was referred to John Kelly, who was the cashier of the gambling establishment, who first told him that the money was deposited in the hank. Plaintiff told him that he did not want the money there, that he wanted it in the house, and thereupon Kelly promised he would draw it out of the bank and put it in the house the next morning. On the same day Kelly came back and informed plaintiff that at various times lie had advanced $12,202 of that money to the defendant Shannon. The hank roll was always to he the plaintiff’s property, provided it was not lost in the game, and in addition he was to have 30 per cent, of the profits. lie saw Shannon, and after some conversations this settlement w as made, whereby the defendant executed, without any new, valid, or adequate consideration, his note for $10,000, and secured it by the execution of a chattel mortgage on the property therein described. It seems that some of the money missing had been lost in the poker game carried on in the gambling establishment, the evidence tending to show that it was customary, if not a sufficient number of men could be secured to play poker, and strangers desired to indulge in the game, that some member of the house would he one of the players, and any moneys lost by him would be charged to the house, and it was also customary that .strangers who were supposed to be “good” would give their due-bills for the losses sustained by them, many of them afterwards refusing to pay them. But the plaintiff claims that the partnership of Mackin & Shannon had nothing to do with the poker game. Plaintiff’s interest in the partnership, as claimed by him, included only the roulette wheel, the faro bank, and the horse wheel, and not the poker game. There have been some payments made on the note, being moneys collected on duebills executed for the gambling debts which had been turned over to the plaintiff, while others refused to pay these due-bills.

Assuming these to be the undisputed facts, the question is whether lie can invoke the aid of a court of equity, or any other court, for the purpose of collecting this note and foreclosing the mortgage executed by the defendant to secure it.

The keeping of a gaming house is malum in se. as well as malum prohibitum, under the laws of the state of Arkansas, which provide for heavy penalties against those maintaining such an establishment. See sections 2737 to 2752, Kirby’s Dig. St. Ark. 1904. While it is conceded by counsel for plaintiff that no court of law or equity will enforce a contract to carry on such a business or aid either party to the contract to maintain an action arising therefrom, it is contended that when the parties themselves have had a settlement, and upon such settlement a balance is found to be due to one of the parties from the other, and the latter executes to the other a note for the amount agreed upon as due, an action upon that note may be maintained. To maintain this proposition counsel rely upon the following cases: Sharp [100]*100v. Taylor, 2 Phil. Ch. 801, 817; Brooks v. Martin, 2 Wall. 70, 17 L. Ed. 732; Planters’ Bank v. Union Bank, 16 Wall. 483, 21 L. Ed. 473; Armstrong v. American Exchange National Bank, 133 U. S. 433, 10 Sup. Ct. 450, 33 L. Ed. 747; O’Bryan v. Fitzpatrick, 48 Ark. 487, 3 S. W. 527; Harcrow v. Gardiner, 69 Ark. 6, 58 S. W. 553, 64 S. W. 881; and other cases following the above decisions.

Planters’ Bank v. Union Bank and O’Bryan v. Fitzpatrick are clearly inapplicable to the case at bar. The principle laid down in those cases is that a third person or agent is not discharged from accounting to his principal, or the person for whose benefit the money or property was delivered to him, by reason of past unlawful acts or intentions of the principal collateral to the matter of the agency. This is the rule established by the English courts as early as 1797 in Tenant v. Elliott, 1 B. & P. 3; and followed in Farmer v. Russell, 1 Bos. & Pul. 295, Johnson v. Landsley, 12 C. B. 468, and Bridger v. Savage, 15 Q. B. Div. 363, and followed by the American courts generally.

It will serve no useful purpose to review these cases and the many other cases following them. On the other hand, the authorities are not only numerous, but practically unanimous, that the execution of notes with securities in settlement of an illegal contract does not purge the new promise from the illegal consideration; the reason therefor being that the new promise is founded upon the illegal consideration— a debt or demand growing out of the illegal transaction- — and is as infirm in the eye of the law as the implied promise that existed previous to the giving of the notes. Fisher v. Bridges, 3 E. & B. 642; Sykes v. Beadon, 11 Ch. Div. 170; Brown v. Tarkington, 3 Wall. 377, 381, 18 L. Ed. 255; Coppell v. Hall, 7 Wall. 542, 558, 19 L. Ed. 244; Dent v.

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Bluebook (online)
165 F. 98, 1908 U.S. App. LEXIS 5355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mackin-v-shannon-circtedar-1908.