Willis v. Hoover

9 Or. 418
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 9 Or. 418 (Willis v. Hoover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willis v. Hoover, 9 Or. 418 (Or. 1881).

Opinion

By the Court,

Lord, O. J.:

This was an action to recover money deposited with the defendant by the plaintiff as a stakeholder, on a wager depending on the result of the presidential election in the state of Pennsylvania; and among other things it is alleged that the respondent, at various times thereafter, and particularly on the 6th day of November and on the 30th day of November, 1880, at Roseburg, demanded of the appellant the money so deposited, but that appellant refused to return the same to the respondent, and that no part of the same has been paid. The complaint was demurred to on the ground that no cause of action was stated, and upon being overruled an answer was filed, in which the demand for the money so deposited was denied, except as follows: That no demand was made upon the appellant until about the 30th day of November, 1880, and at that time the said sum had been by the appellant, as stakeholder, paid over to F. P. Hogan, the other party in said wager mentioned in the complaint.

The reply denies that appellant paid to F. P. Hogan the sum of money mentioned in the complaint before the respondent demanded the return of the same, but avers that frequently, between the 6th day of November, 1880, and before the money was delivered to Hogan, he demanded the return of the same and notified the appellant not to deliver the same to the said Hogan. Upon the issue thus joined the jury found for the respondent, and the court rendered judgment in his favor, from which this appeal is taken. The first ground of error specified is the overruling of the demurrer. It is conceded that the wager out of which the question under consideration arose is not a valid contract. Wagers upon the result of public elections are held to be illegal and void [420]*420upon grounds of public policy. In Vischer v. Yates, 11 Johns. R. 21, Chief Justice Kent says: “ When we consider the importance of popular elections to the constitution and liberties of this country, and that the value of the right depends upon the independence, moderation, discretion and purity with which it is exercised, we cannot but cherish a decision which declares gambling upon such elections to be illegal, as being founded in the clearest and most incontestable principles of public policy.” There is, however, a distinction taken in the books between an action in affirmance of an illegal contract and where the action proceeds in disaffirmance of such contract. In the first instance such an action can in no ca.se be maintained, but in the latter the authorities are in favor of recovering back money paid, where the contract is void as against public policy, if such contract has not been executed, and the plaintiff seeks to disaffirm the same. And it is claimed by counsel for the appellant, that, to establish a cause of action against the stakeholder, it must be alleged in the complaint that the wager was repudiated, and a return of the money demanded, before the election took place, and not thereafter. His view of the law is that any time before the happening of the event upon which the wager was made, either party may disaffirm the wager and recover his money of the stakeholder, but that after the event has happened, as in the present case, and the xiarty has lost his money, the contract of wager as to him is executed and he cannot recover it back of the stakeholder. If this position is tenable, it was error to overrule the demurrer, for in such a case it makes no difference that a demand is made or alleged, after the event has happened, but while the money still remains in-the hands of the stakeholder, no action can be maintained uxion such a state of facts by the loser to recover it of the stakeholder. To sustain this view, two authorities are cited and relied upon, viz.: Yates v. Foote, 12 Johns, 1; and Johnson v. Russell, 37 Cal., 670. In the ease of Yates v. Foote, it was held that after the event has happened, no action will lie by the [421]*421loser against the stakeholder, upon notice and demand, while the money remains in his hands. In McKeon v. Cherty, 3 Wend., 494, Chief Justice Savage stated in effect the law to have been thus settled by the case of Yates v. Foote. In Johnson v. Russell, 37 Cal., 670, the court approved the reasoning of Senator Sanford in Yates v. Foote, and declared that they saw no satisfactory reason for the distinction made by the English cases between actions directly between the parties to the wager and actions between the loser and the stakeholder; that the reason of the rule, as laid down in Yates v. Foote, was founded upon the better morality, and that after the money has been lost or won, and the result generally known, neither party ought to be heard in a court of justice.

The distinction which the English cases make is, that where the money has not been paid over by the stakeholder, although it has been lost by the happening of the event, upon notice and demand, the stakeholder is liable to the loser for the amount by him deposited. (Colton v. Thurland, 5 T. R., 405; Lancassade v. White, 7 T. R., 535.)

But when the money has been once paid over to the winner, unless where made recoverable by statute, the parties being clearly in pari delicto, no action can be maintained to recover it back. (Howson v. Hancock, 8 T. R., 575.)

In the first case, the contract is said to be executory, and the loser may disaffirm his wager and recover the money staked by him, but in the second case the contract is executed, and the parties being in pcvri delicto, the law will lend its aid to neither.

When, then, money is deposited as a wager with the opposite party, it may be recovered back from him at any time before the event has happened upon which the wager was made, and against a stakeholder at any time before the money has been paid to the winner, either before or after the event has transpired, and even when the stakeholder has paid the money over to the winner after notice not to do so, for the reason that in all such cases, the contract being void as against [422]*422public policy, and not executed, an action in disaffirmance of it may be maintained. (Hastilow v. Jackson, 8 Barn, and Cress., 221, and cases cited above.)

In Vischer v. Yates, supra, money was deposited in the hands of the defendants by the plaintiff and others, on the event of the election of governor of New York. After the result of the election had been ascertained, the defendant was notified not to pay over the money to the winner, and he refused to pay it over to those who made the deposit. Upon this state of facts Chief Justice Kent reviews the English cases, and from them he declares the true rule to be, that an action may be maintained against the stakeholder, upon notice and demand, before he pays over the money, as well after as before the happening of the event. This was the doctrine of the English cases approved and fully sustained upon principle, by the individual opinion of the supreme court. It is true that this decision was reversed in the case of Yates v. Foote, supra, by the court of errors of New York, hut the decision rendered in this last case is barren of any authority to sustain it, and in Wheeler v. Spencer, 15 Conn., 81, the court say: “ And it is not, perhaps, unworthy of notice that the legislature of New York soon after interfered and re-enacted the common law as it was held to be by their supreme court. (1 Rev. Stat. N.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Or. 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willis-v-hoover-or-1881.