Wilson v. Sawyer
This text of 106 So. 2d 831 (Wilson v. Sawyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Sheldon W. WILSON, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Earl SAWYER, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
Goff & Caskey, Arcadia, for appellant.
Love & Rigby, Shreveport, for appellee.
AYRES, Judge.
Plaintiff seeks to recover of defendant $1,400, with 8% per annum interest thereon, from January 1, 1951, until paid, together with 10% additional on principal and interest as attorney's fees, less a credit of $200 paid January 20, 1953. This claim *832 is predicated upon two promissory notes, each for the sum of $700, executed and signed by defendant January 1, 1951, and payable to plaintiff, the first January 1, 1953, and the second January 1, 1954.
The defense is that the notes represent the balance of a gambling debt due by defendant to plaintiff as the result of a loss sustained by defendant in a dice game about a year or more prior to the execution of the notes, and that, as such, the object of the transaction was unlawful and contrary to public policy and good morals. On trial, this defense was sustained, and from the judgment rendered, plaintiff appealed.
The jurisprudence is well settled in this State that the courts will not entertain actions to recover what has been either won or lost in gambling. Sampson v. Whitney, 27 La.Ann. 294; Bagneris v. Smoot, 159 La. 1049, 106 So. 561; Nielsen v. Planters Trust & Savings Bank of Opelousas, 183 La. 645, 164 So. 613; Stewart Bros. v. Beeson, 177 La. 543, 148 So. 703; Russo v. Mula, La.App., 49 So. 2d 622. Accordingly, no action will be maintained on a check given in payment of gambling losses. Russo v. Mula, supra; Friel v. Murchison, 8 La.App. 354. Neither will the courts entertain demands for collection of notes given for gambling debts. Whitesides v. McGrath, 15 La.Ann. 401; Bagneris v. Smoot, supra; Keen v. Butterworth, La.App., 185 So. 37.
The statutory basis for this line of jurisprudence is found in the provisions of the Louisiana Constitution of 1921, LSA, Art. 19, § 8, which, so far as pertinent, provides:
"Gambling is a vice and the Legislature shall pass laws to suppress it,"
and in the provisions of the LSA-Civil Code. For instance, LSA-C.C. Art. 2983 provides, in part:
"The law grants no action for the payment of what has been won at gaming or by a bet * * *."
Moreover, all contracts which have as their object that which is forbidden by law or contrary to good morals are void. LSA-C.C. Art. 1892. By the "cause" of a contract is meant the motive or consideration for making it. LSA-C.C. Art. 1896.
"An obligation without a cause, or with a false or unlawful cause, can have no effect." LSA-C.C. Art. 1893.
"The cause is unlawful, when it is forbidden by law, when it is contra bonos mores (contrary to moral conduct) or to public order." LSA-C.C. Art. 1895.
Thus, it is well settled that the courts will not entertain demands for the collection of notes or other obligations which have been given for a gambling debt or for a cause or consideration which is unlawful or contrary to public order or morals. Bagneris v. Smoot, supra; Martin v. Seabaugh, 128 La. 442, 54 So. 935; Bank of New Orleans v. Frantom, 22 La. Ann. 462.
In the light of the aforesaid constitutional and statutory rules and the jurisprudence of this State, the decisive question is whether the notes sued upon represent gambling losses of defendant to plaintiff. This, of course, presents a factual issue. Important, however, to its determination is a legal question as to the burden of proof, which question should be resolved prior to a discussion of the facts.
The law presumes that men in their business transactions do not intend to violate the law or to make contracts, the enforcement of which the law refuses a remedy. Therefore, where a party asserts a contract is illegal, he has the burden to establish that defense or contention. Conner & Hare v. Robertson, 37 La.Ann. 814, 55 Am.Rep. 521; Baucum & Kimball v. Garrett Mercantile Co., 188 La. 728, 178 So. 256; Stewart Bros. v. Beeson, supra.
*833 Therefore, a legal presumption exists, in effect, in favor of the validity of contracts. The law does not assume an intention on the part of the contracting parties to violate its provisions nor will their agreement be decreed illegal where a reasonable construction supports its validity. J. P. Barnett Co. v. Ludeau, 171 La. 21, 129 So. 655. Moreover, to sustain a defense of the illegality of a contract, the illegality must be clearly shown. Tuckermann v. Jackson, 3 Orl.App. 399; Carlton v. Rice, 5 Orl.App. 19. It may be appropriate here to observe that the defense to the recovery on the notes is strictly not a want or failure of consideration but that the contract or notes themselves are illegal by virtue of their execution and delivery to pay a gambling obligation of defendant to plaintiff.
A consideration of the evidence is now in order. A brief résumé thereof will suffice. The documentary evidence consists of the two notes to which defendant admitted executing and signing. Only three witnesses testified, plaintiff and his wife on his behalf, and only the defendant in his behalf. The evidence establishes that plaintiff and defendant had known each other for several years. Defendant was engaged in an oil tool business in Bossier Parish, in which he was one of the two larger stockholders. Plaintiff was engaged in a mercantile and filling station business, in connection with which he loaned money and financed automobiles and other personal property. His business was located at Ringgold, Louisiana.
During the period of their acquaintance both parties readily admitted they engaged in social gambling, in which the amounts wagered, won and lost were not inconsiderable and ranged as high as $3,000. The outcome of their entertainment was not one-sided. Fortunes and misfortunes were visited upon both indiscriminately, and, at times, each was frequently a loser and, on occasions, one or the other became "busted", whereupon the loser would borrow from the other. The faithfulness and honesty with which these obligations were kept between them engendered a degree of confidence, one in the other.
As to the particular transaction, plaintiff insists that he made a bona fide loan of $1,400 to the defendant; that it was upon the insistence of the defendant, who related circumstances of adversity, such as that, at the time, his was a struggling business, that his father was ill in the hospital and that a member of his family experienced difficulties which necessitated his acquisition of a loan. Plaintiff says that defendant came to his place of business in Ringgold two or three times and discussed with him the matter of a loan; that after having given the matter consideration and deciding to make the loan, he and his wife drove to Bossier City and to defendant's place of business; that plaintiff went in said place, following which plaintiff and defendant came out, crossed the street to the Kickapoo Cafe, where they occupied a booth and drank coffee. Defendant prepared and signed the two notes and delivered them to plaintiff, who thereupon delivered or paid over to defendant in cash the $1,400. On leaving the cafe plaintiff delivered the notes for safe keeping to his wife to be placed in their safe at their residence.
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