Schirm v. Wieman

63 A. 1056, 103 Md. 541, 1906 Md. LEXIS 135
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 14, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 63 A. 1056 (Schirm v. Wieman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schirm v. Wieman, 63 A. 1056, 103 Md. 541, 1906 Md. LEXIS 135 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

Page, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was instituted to recover upon a check given to the appellant by the appellee, under the circumstances which *542 will afterwards be stated. The case was tried without the intervention of a jury, and but one exception was taken, and. that was to the action of the Court upon the prayers asked for by the respective parties. The Court by its granted instruction, decided there was no sufficient evidence to entitle the appellant to recover. The judgment being against him, the appellant has ^appealed.

The following facts appear from the record: In July, 1904, the appellant and the appellee, together with two other persons, all members of the Order of Elks, occupied the same room in a hotel-in the city of Cincinnati, on the occasion of a convention of the members of that order. During the. night, the watch of the appellee was lost, under circumstances which led to the belief that it had been stolen. Notice was given by the appellee of his loss, and extensive searches therefor were instituted, by officers and detectives, throughout the hotel and elsewhere, without however obtaining any clue as to the manner obits mysterious disappearance. The appellee obtained no information about his watch, until the 7th of December, 1904. About that time the appellant had an interview with a Mr. Lyons, since deceased, a detective in the city o'f Baltimore. After pledging him not to reveal what he was about to tell him,' Lyons told the appellant that the appellee could recover his watch, but would have to pay for it” that “parties outside the State had communicated with him and told him they would accept $350 for it.” Neither at that time nor subsequently, was the appellant informed who these persons were and he never knew more of the matter that was communicated to him by the detective Lyons. It was shown, that on that occasion, Lyons employed the appellant “to communicate this information to Mr. Wieman, and if Mr. Wieman was satisfied to accept the proposition, to turn over the money to Lyons and get the watch, and return it to Wieman.” The appellant also stated in evidence and there is nothing to contradict or in any respect impeach it, that he knew of the loss of the watch and believed it had been stolen ; but he had no knowledge as to that fact or the manner of its loss, other than *543 that which Wieman himself communicated to him. The appellant communicated this conversation to the appellee. At first, the latter refused to pay anything; but after several weeks he agreed to give $300 if the watch could be returned to him in good condition. The appellant so informed Lyons, and the sum was then agreed to. The appellant testifies without being contradicted, that the state of his knowledge at that time was that “Mr. Wieman agreed to pay the money; that the watch was at that time outside the State and that it was sent for at his (Wieman’s) request, through him and that Lyons would not have sent to New York for the watch, except Mr. Wieman had authorized me to tell him to have it sent for and that he (Wieman) would'pay the $300 for it.”

Ic was under these circumstances that the appellee and appellant met on the 4th April to carry out the understanding between them as to the return of the watch. Wieman’s account of the conversation, is substantially as follows : Schirm asked Wieman, have you got the money? “Wieman replied he had a check,” that he paid everything by check, and besides he said “suppose he gave a check and that fellow should pocket the money and keep the watch too, he would have no redress” and “how do I know the watch is not all battered' up.” He, Wieman, then suggested to call in Hennegen & Bates and let them examine the watch. Schirm objected to this. Wieman then proceeds, “there is no shenanigan about this.” . I was to say this and when I did make that remark I felt a little guilty because there was some scheme arranged beforehand to have a deputy sheriff there, and to seize it, ‘but I told him there was no shenanigan about it.’ I wanted the watch at any price.” He, Schirm, skid “well I will tell you what I will do, I will go to your bank and cash that check. I will first go to the other party and show them I have got the check.” In reference to the last statement, the testimony of the appellant is, that he (Schirm) said “I will go over to the Fidelity and Deposit Company and get it cashed, because I will have to deliver the cash for it.” Upon this conversation the appellee delivered the check on the Drovers and Meehan *544 ics National Bank to the appellant, who endorsed it and had it cashed at the Fidelity and Deposit Company after it was endorsed by Schirm. With the proceeds Schirm obtained the watch and delivered it to the appellee. The payment of it was the same day stopped by Wieman, and the appellant after-wards was compelled to make it good and has not since been reimbursed.

It is contended that under these circumstances there can be no recovery because the consideration of the check was the advancement of money to be used for an illegal purpose, that is, for securing the return by a thief of property, alleged to have been stolen. It undoubtedly is a correct principle that one' who furnishes funds to anoth'er who he knows or has every reason to believe intends to devote them to the perpetration of crime, and that they were procured for that purpose will not be allowed to maintain an action on his contract. Fie can not do so, for the reason that as was said by Judge Story in his Conflict of Lazvs sec. 253, “no one can hesitate to say that such a man voluntarily aids in the perpetration of the fraud, and morally speaking is almost, if not quite, as guilty as the principal offender.” Hanauer v. Doane, 79 U. S. 342. But is that the case with which we are now dealing? Was it intended by any of the parties to perpetrate a crime with the proceeds of a check? The purpose as shown, was to employ it in an arrangement having for its object the return of the watch, by the supposed thief, to its real owner. Unless this object, was for some sufficient reason fraudulent, or legally wrong, or contrary to public policy the act of the appellant in advancing or otherwise procuring the money on the appellee’s check, cannot be so tainted as to preclude the recovery by the appellant of the amount paid him on that account. And this legal conclusion would be equally sound even- though in the transaction in which he advanced his own money or credit for the use of the appellee, the appellant was acting as the agent of the detective or even of the thief inasmúch as it was on the credit of the appellee that he acted, unless by so doing he participated in some wrong act.

*545 It seems to be clear that unless it can be maintained that it was illegal or morally wrong or contrary to public policy, for. the appellee to pay money to the detective or to any one else, for the purpose of recovering his own property, the legal right of the appellant to recover from Wieman in this case cannot be questioned. Now was it illegal or morally wrong, or contrary to public policy for Wieman to pay money to secure the recovery of his own property which presumably had been stolen? The solution of this question depends upon the nature of the act and its effect upon the public interest.

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Bluebook (online)
63 A. 1056, 103 Md. 541, 1906 Md. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schirm-v-wieman-md-1906.