Trist v. Child

88 U.S. 441, 22 L. Ed. 623, 21 Wall. 441, 1874 U.S. LEXIS 1383
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 22, 1875
Docket195
StatusPublished
Cited by272 cases

This text of 88 U.S. 441 (Trist v. Child) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trist v. Child, 88 U.S. 441, 22 L. Ed. 623, 21 Wall. 441, 1874 U.S. LEXIS 1383 (1875).

Opinion

Mr. Justice SWAYNE

delivered the opinion of the court.

The court below decreed to the appellee the amount of his claim, and enjoined Trist from receiving from the treasury “ any of the money appropriated to him ” by Congress, until he should have paid the demand of the appellee.

This decree, as regards that portion of the fund not claimed by the appellee, is an anomaly. Why the claim should affect that part of the fund to which it had no relation, is not easy to be imagined. This feature of the decree was doubtless the result of oversight and inadvertence. The bill proceeds *447 upon the grounds of the validity of the original contract, and a consequent lien in favor of the complainant upon the fund appropriated. We shall examine the hitter ground first. Was there, in any view of the case, a lien ?

It is well settled that an order to pay a debt out of a particular fund belonging to the debtor gives to the creditor a specific equitable lien upon the fund, and binds it in the hands of the drawee. * A part of the particular fund may be assigned by an order, and the payee may enforce payment of the amount against the drawee. But a mere agreement to pay out of such fund is not sufficient. Something more is necessary. There must be an appropriation of the fund pro tanio, either by giving an order or by transferring it otherwise in such a manner that the holder is authorized to pay the amount directly to the creditor without the further intervention of the debtor.

Viewing the subject in the light of these authorities, we are brought to the conclusion that the appellee had no lien upon the fund here in question. The understanding between the elder Child and Trist was a personal agreement. It could in nowise produce the eftect insisted upon. For a breach of the agreement, the remedy was at law, not in equity, and the defendant had a constitutional right to a trial by jury. § If there was no lien, there was no jurisdiction in equity.

There is another consideration fatally adverse to the claim of a lien. The first section of the act of Congress of February 26th, 1853, declares that all transfers of any part of any claim against the United States, “or of any interest therein, whether absolute or conditional, shall be absolutely null and void, unless executed in the presence of at least two attesting witnesses after the allowance of such claim, *448 the ascertainment of the amount due, and the issuing of a warrant therefor.” That the claim set up in the bill to a specific part of the money appropriated is within this statute is too clear to admit of doubt. It would be a waste of time to discuss the subject..

But there is an objection of still greater gravity to the appellee’s case.

Was the contract a valid one? It was, on the part of Child, to procure by lobby service, if possible, the passage of a bill providing for the payment of the claim. The aid asked by the younger Child of Trist, which indicated what he considered needful, and doubtless proposed to do and did do himself, is thus vividly pictured in his letter to Trist of. the 20th February, 1871. After giving the names of several members of Congress, from whom he had received favorable assurauees, he proceeds: “Please write to your friends to write to any member of Congress. Every vote tells, and a simple request may secure a vote, he not caring anything about it. Set every man you know at work. Even if he knows a page, for a page often gets a vote.”

In the Roman law it was declared that “a promise made to effect a base purpose, as to commit homicide or sacrilege, is not binding.” * In our jurisprudence a contract may be illegal and void because it is contrary to a constitution or statute, or inconsistent with sound policy and good morals. Lord Mansfield said: “ Many contracts which are not against morality, are still void as being against the maxims of sound policy.”

It is a rule of the common law of universal application, that where a contract express or implied is tainted with either of the vices last named, as to the consideration or the thing to be done, ho alleged right founded upon it can be enforced in a court of justice.

Before considering the contract here in question-, it may be well, by way of illustration, to advert to some of the *449 cases presenting the subject in other phases, in which the principle has been adversely applied.

Within the condemned category are:

An agreement — to pay for supporting for election a candidate for sheriff; * to pay for resigning a public position to make room for another; to pay for not bidding at a sheriff’s sale of real property; to pay for not bidding for articles to be sold by the government at auction ; § to pay for not bidding for a contract to carry the mail on a specified route ; || to pay a person for his aid and influence in procuring an office, and for not being a candidate himself; to pay for procuring a contract from the government; ** o pay for procuring signatures to a petition to the governor for a pardon ; †† to sell land to a particular person when the surrogate’s order to sell should have been obtained; ‡‡ to pay for suppressing evidence and compounding a felony; §§ to convey and assign a part of what should come from an ancestor by descent, devise, or distribution ; |||| to pay for promoting a marriage; ¶¶ to influence the disposition of property by will in a particular -way. ***

The question now before us has been decided in four American cases. They were all ably considered, and in all of them the contract was held to be against public policy, *450 and void. * We entertain no doubt that in such cases, as under all other circumstances, an agreement express or implied for purely professional services is valid. Within this category are included, drafting the petition to set forth the claim, attending to the taking of testimony, collecting facts, preparing arguments, and submitting them orally or in writing, to a committee or other proper authority, and other services of like character.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 U.S. 441, 22 L. Ed. 623, 21 Wall. 441, 1874 U.S. LEXIS 1383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trist-v-child-scotus-1875.