Wilhite v. Roberts

34 Ky. 172, 4 Dana 172, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 9, 1836
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 34 Ky. 172 (Wilhite v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilhite v. Roberts, 34 Ky. 172, 4 Dana 172, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 46 (Ky. Ct. App. 1836).

Opinion

J.udge Ewing

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

George Roberts, as the survivor of Roberts, and Rudd., brought an action of debt against Presley Wilhite, on a penal bond for four hundred dollars, to 'which the follow-: ing condition is attached:—

“The condition of the above obligation is such that “ whereas the above named Roberts and Rudd, as my “ attorneys, have, for me, commenced ap action of eject, “ ment in the.NeJ.son Circuit Court, on the demise of my “ wife, Betsey Wilhite, formerly Pebaneaux, formerly. “ Roberts, for lot No. situate in Bardstown, against “ the tenant then in possession. Now, if the said Rudd “ and Roberts shall succeed in recovering possession of “. said lot of ground, on the demise aforesaid, then I oblige “ myself to pay them to the amount of one half of the “ value of the above mentioned ground.”

The declaration, in reciting the condition of the bond, in attempting to set it out verbatim, alleges that “Roberts and Rudd, as attorneys of said defendant, had commen? ced an action of ejectment in the Nelson Circuit Court, ,.on the demise of said defendant, and his wife Betsey Wil-. hite &c.”

The defendant craved oyer of the bond and condition, and demurred for the variance. Elis demurrer was overruled by the Court, and this is the first error assigned.

The variance is certainly fatal; and it was proper to take advantage of fit by demurrer. A covenant to pros-, ecute a suit on the demise of Betsey Wilhite, is certainly yariant from a covenant to prosecute a suit on the demise, of Presley Wilhite and Betsey Wilhite his wife. And we are satisfied that the variance is so material, as to he. fatal on demurrer. 1 Chitty's Pis. 307,439.

A client gives his lawyer a bond reciting that the lawyer had commenced an eject, for him, & bind-j ing himself to pay the lawyer, tin case of sucicess, to the amount of half the value of tha land: this is not a contract prohibited by the act ag’st champerty of1824:the contracts within that act ave contracts to undertake- to recover &c. for part or profit, on,t of the thing in contest,

The defendant, after his demurrer was overruled, filed the following plea: “that said Roberts and Rudd, at the “ time of the date of said covenant, had commenced, “ and were prosecuting, a suit in ejectment, on the de- “ mise of plaintiff’s wife &c. for a lot of ground, and “ that, contrary to the law of the land against champerty “ and maintenance, it was illegally agreed.between the. “ said Roberts and Rudd on the one part, and the de-, ti fendant on the other, that the said defendant should: “ give and convey one half of said lot of ground to said £.£ Roberts and Rudd, for their services in prosecuting ££ said suit, and that said obligation was procured, by the “ said Roberts and Rudd, as a security for the performance “ by the said defendant, of said illegal agreement, and ££ was taken in the form in which it is written, fraudulently, £.£ for the purpose of evading the force of the law against champerty and maintenance, and that the same was given “ without any other- consideration: and this he is ready “ to verify.”

To this plea a demurrer was filed by the plaintiff, and joined, and the demurrer sustained by the Court. And the most important question arising on the record, is as to the sufficiency of this plea to bar the plaintiff’s ac-: tion. -

It is provided in the second section of the act “to, revive and amend the champerty and maintenance law” (Stat. Laio, 2,86) that “It shall not be lawful for any person or persons to contract, or to undertake to recover, “ or carry on any suit for the recovery, of any such pre- “ tended right or title to land as aforesaid, of which ad- “ verse possession is held under conflicting title asaforc- £-£ said, for or in consideration to have part or profit thcre- “ of; and the parties to such contract shall forfeit all “ x'ight, title, interest or claim in or to the land claimed, £.£ under such pretended right o.r title, and all right to, “ maintain any action, ox: suit at law or equity, upon such “ pretended right or title; and such right or title shall- “ vest in the Commonwealth, and exxure to the benefit “ of the pex'son in possession, without office found.”

We have no idea, that the bond sued on, coutaixxs aixy stipulation, oi\ its face* in coxxflict with the provisions of [174]*174the foregoing section. It is as competent for a litigant to regulate the amount of his attorney’s fee, by the value or half the value of the property in contest, as to regulate it by the value, or half the value, of any other piece of property.

Champerty —tho_ worst species of maintenance—is an offence at com mon law, prohibited also, under heavy penalties,' by various statutes, which the courts vigilantly enforce; they also, declare all champerty contracts void. If any part of the consideration or subject matter of á contract was in violation of those statutes, the entire contract is void: for tho’ a contract containipg some things ^ontrary to the common law, ¿iay be enforced, is'o far as its stipulations are legal, one made §>r or about any ihiag prohibited by statute, is void in toto.— So— Where it appeared by the recital in an indemnity bond, taken by a sheriff from his, deputy, that there had been a 'sale of the office, contrary to a slat ute, it was held thatthebondwas inoperative. — 4 Bibb, 506. Contracts in writing cannot, in general, be con-, tradicted, or varied, by parol proof; but whera it is alleged, that a writing, fair & legal upon its face, was founded upon, and intended to secure, an illegal agreetnent—asacham pertous, or usurious contract, &c. such allegation may be pleaded and proved, and constitute a bar to any suit upon the writing.

[174]*174Whether he regulates it by the one or the other, or agrees to pay a contingent fee in money, agreed upon by the parties at the time, he is not subject to the denunciations of the statute,—-provided he is not to give a part or profit out of the thing in contest.

But champerty is the most odious species of main?: tenance, an,d. was an offence at common law,' and has been denounced by various highly penal statutes, in. aid of the common law. It always has been regarded as, an offence agáinst the peace of society, the administration of impartial justice, and tending to the encouragement of litigation and the oppression of the weak. And the courts have been uniformly vigilant, where the peace and quietude and justice of the country are re-? garded, not only in enforcing their penalties, but in declaring void all contracts made in derogation of their provisions. If the contract contained any stipulation on its face in derogation of their provisions, we should find no difficulty in treating it. as a nullity, and refusing all aid from the law and the Courts in enforcing it, or any stipulation in it howeyer lawful. It is laid down in. Chitty on Contracts, 229, «.that if any part of the consid- “ eration or subject matter of a contract, be contrary to a « statute, the whole shall be invalid; but that if only a “ portion of an agreement be contrary to the common “ law, the invalid part, if it can be separated from the “ rest, shall be rejected, and the remainder of the con- “ tract shall be established.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Ky. 172, 4 Dana 172, 1836 Ky. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilhite-v-roberts-kyctapp-1836.