Rust v. Gott

9 Cow. 169
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1828
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 Cow. 169 (Rust v. Gott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rust v. Gott, 9 Cow. 169 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1828).

Opinion

Curia, per Woodworth, J.

This was an action for tro[182]*182ver to recover the amount of a promissory note drawn by Luther Marsh in favor of the plaintiff for $435, and alleged to have been converted by the defendant.

The plea avers, that after the closing of the polls at the election in 1826, and before the event was known, the plaintiff and Marsh made a bet upon the event of the election for governor, they being legal voters ; that the note was deposited by Marsh with the defendant, as stakeholder, upon condition that if De Witt Clinton had been elected governor at the election, the note was to be delivered to the plaintiff; that afterwards, and before the event of the election was generally known, and before the official canvass of the election in the respective counties of the state, Marsh forbade the defendant to deliver over the note to the plaintiff, and demanded that it should be delivered to him, and that in pursuance of such demand, he re-delivered the note to Marsh To this plea there is a demurrer.

From the plea, I infer that Marsh, before the demand of his note from the stakeholder, was well satisfied as to the result of the election. The averment is that it was not generally known. Want of knowledge in Marsh is not pretended. This, then, is not the case of a party, who, having made an illegal wager, and deposited the amount with the stakeholder, attempts to avail hihiself of a locus penitentice, (before the event is known, and before there are any reasonable grounds for forming an opinion of the result,) and claims his deposit. It is not necessary here to say whether such a claim could be enforced against the stakeholder, should he refuse to comply; neither is it necessary to give any opinion on the question whether Marsh could, in this case, have sustained an action against the stakeholder, had he refused to deliver up the note.

The question here is between the winner and the stakeholder. The event has taken place; and the stakeholder is entitled to defend himself on the same ground that might be taken by the losing party had the action been against him. Is a wager of this kind recoverable ? It is conceded that some wagers form the proper ground of an action, although *eourts have generally expressed regret that the [183]*183law has so been settled in any case. There are wagers of a different class, which cannot be supported, and among that number may be reckoned such as are contrary to the principles of morality or sound policy. (Jones v. Randall, and Da Costa v. Jones, Cowper, 37, 729.)

The wager in this case falls within the latter description; for, although it does not possess one prominent feature which distinguished the case of Bunn v. Riker, (4 John. 425,) (I allude to the fact that the bet was laid on the last day of the election, and one of the parties had not then voted,) yet enough remains which the principles of sound policy forbid the court to sanction.

The wager is, that De Witt Clinton had been elected governor. By the act regulating elections, (sess. 45, ch. 250,) it is declared, that all questions that may arise in the canvass, estimate or calculation of the votes given at any election, shall be decided by the opinion of the majority of persons composing the board, who shall determine conform-ably to the the certified copies returned by the clerks of counties, the person duly elected, and cause to be delivered a certificate of their determination.

If the question is afterwards to be litigated in a court of law, I apprehend the certificate would only be prima facie evidence, and that it would be competent to go into evidence to show that the canvass was not correct, or was illegal. Thus a jury may find 'that the governor declared to have been elected had not been duly elected; but that another person is the legal governor, by a majority of votes. Such decision would not affect the exercise of the powers of governor by the person holding the certificate; but its manifest tendency would be to excite discontents, and pos - sibly disturbances among the people; to alienate their attachment from an incumbent chosen by a minority, and withhold confidence so essentially necessary in a government resting on public opinion. We may suppose a case, where it is alleged that a certificate was obtained by bribery. The question being as to the validity of the election of the chief magistrate, evidence might be offered to prove the fact, and thus implicate third persons, not parties *to [184]*184the suit, who may or may not know that any such qnes tion is pending. We are, then, called on to decide, whether an idle wager, which might draw into discussion matters of great public interest, the direct tendency of whiph ■ is to open the door of collision between different departments of the government, to impair public confidence, and agitate the community, without producing any salutary effect, ought not to be considered as'against sound policy ?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Cow. 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rust-v-gott-nysupct-1828.