Veazey v. . Allen

66 N.E. 103, 173 N.Y. 359, 11 Bedell 359, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1161
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 10, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 66 N.E. 103 (Veazey v. . Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Veazey v. . Allen, 66 N.E. 103, 173 N.Y. 359, 11 Bedell 359, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1161 (N.Y. 1903).

Opinion

Werner, J.

Before proceeding to discuss the question whether the contract, under which the plaintiff makes his claim, is void as being repugnant to public policy, it may be well to fix the point of view from which it is to be considered. The learned counsel for the appellant asserts that it makes a vital difference in the case whether the referee’s decision is to be regarded as a determination upon the merits, or whether it is to be treated simply as a nonsuit. It appears that after the plaintiff had rested his case, counsel for the defendants moved for a dismissal of the complaint on various grounds, one of them being that the contract testified to by the plaintiff was void as against public policy. After this motion had been made and discussed, the referee twice adjourned the further hearing of the case, when he made his decision in the short form, in which he finds and decides that the defendants are entitled to judgment herein against the plaintiff dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint,” and directs judgment accordingly, upon the ground that each of the agreements set forth in the complaint was and is contrary to public policy and void, and that the plaintiff, therefore, has no cause of action against the defendants upon either of said agreements.” As the “ agreements ” referred to in the decision are all of the same character and involve but one question, we shall refer to it as a single contract.

In form, and according to the decided cases, the referee’s decision was simply a nonsuit, and the plaintiff is entitled to have it so treated. (Scofield v. Hernandez, 47 N. Y. 313; Place v. Hayward, 117 N. Y. 487; Raabe v. Squier, 148 N. Y. 81.) Such a decision gives a defeated plaintiff the right to have it reviewed in the light of the facts and inferences most favorable to him. In the case at bar this question *368 is one.of form, rather than súbstance because, in either event, the ultimate question to be decided is whether the contract made by the parties under the conditions and circumstances testified to by the plaintiff is valid or void.

This contract is assailed on the ground of public policy. Lord Brougham defined public policy as “ that principle of the law which holds that no subject can lawfully do that which has a tendency to.be injurious to the public or against the public good, which may be termed the policy of the law, or public policy in relation to the administration of the law.” In many of its aspects the term “ public policy ” is but another name for public sentiment and, as that is often transitory or shifting, it lacks the permanency upon which fixed principles of law are, or should be, based. There are, however, other phases of public policy which are as enduring and immutable as the law of gravity. One of them is that, as applied to the law. of contracts, courts of justice will never recognize or uphold- any transaction which in its object, operation or tendency is calculated to be prejudicial to the public welfare. That sound morality and civic honesty are corner stones of the social edifice is a truism which needs no re-enforcement by argument. It may, therefore, be taken for granted that whenever our courts are called upon to scrutinize a contract which is clearly repugnant to sound morality and civic honesty, they need not look long for a well-fitting definition of public policy, .nor hesitate in its practical application to the law of contracts. This is no new doctrine, for it was the law in the time of Lord Chief-Justice Wilmot, when he said, “It is the duty of all Courts of Justice to keep their eye steadily upon the interests of the public, even in the administration of commutative justice; - and when they find an action is founded upon a claim in jurious to the public and which has a bad tendency to give it no countenance or assistance in foro oimliP (Low v. Peers, p. 378, Wilmot’s Notes.)

Let us now look at the contract which the plaintiff seeks to enforce in this action. It is, in effect and substance, a contract.to pay the. plaintiff the whole, or a part, of the profits *369 resulting from speculations in the stock of a corporation, undertaken by the defendants pursuant to advance information furnished them by the plaintiff, as to the probable course and developments of a congressional investigation into the affairs and methods of said corporation, instituted and encouraged by the plaintiff as a prosecuting witness, and in other ways. The investigation was intended to and did seriously impair the reputation of said corporation and resulted in a substantial decline in the market price of its stock. This was the end aimed at in said contract. The plan agreed upon between the plaintiff and the defendants contemplated the sale, at a given price, of stock which they did not have, but which they expected to be able to purchase at a lower price in consequence of the investigation referred to. The anticipated profit was to be the difference between the selling and purchasing price of the stock. The allegations of the complaint suggest the great extent to which the plaintiff believed he was to be benefited by the defendants’ operations under this contract, and the answer admits enough to prove that plaintiff’s interest in it was, at least, a substantial one. The fidelity and zeal with which the plaintiff performed his part of the contract is clearly shown by the voluminous telegraphic and written correspondence -which appears in the record. In its final effect we have here a case in which it is alleged and proved that the consideration of the contract sought to be enforced is the fruit of a legislative investigation, instituted, prosecuted and encouraged by the plaintiff. That such a contract is one which, in its object, operation and tendency, is calculated to be prejudicial to the public welfare, ought not to be doubted for a moment. Why ? Not because the plaintiff was in fact necessarily dishonest or corrupt in instituting and prosecuting the investigation ; nor yet because the charges preferred against the offending corporation were not true, but because the plaintiff voluntarily acquired a pecuniary interest in the result of the investigation, which might subject not only him, but through him others, to the temptations and allurements which human experience *370 has proven to be potent in sacrificing sound morality and honesty to that greed and cupidity which not infrequently beget perjury, bribery and other moral delinquency, incompatible with the public weal.

But just here counsel for the plaintiff interjects the suggestion that he is entitled to all the favorable inferences that may be drawn from the testimony; that since his efforts to procure an investigation were begun before the making of the contract in suit it is not to be presumed that he was or could be improperly influenced, or that he would be led to improperly influence others, by the financial interest which he subsequently acquired in the results of the investigation. It is true that under the rule entitling the plaintiff to all the favorable inferences that may legitimately be drawn from the testimony, we must assume that plaintiff’s first efforts to procure a legislative investigation of the corrupt and evil methods of the

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Bluebook (online)
66 N.E. 103, 173 N.Y. 359, 11 Bedell 359, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 1161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veazey-v-allen-ny-1903.