102 Me. 128 | Me. | 1906
This action is based upon a contract wherein the plaintiff avers that the defendant has failed of performance on his part and in consequence of such failure, is indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $75. The essential part of the contract under which the plaintiff claims is as follows :
“American Mercantile Exchange.
Incorporated Nov. 24, 1897.
“In consideration of an annual contract in above Agency, I hereby agree to pay said Agency, or order, all sums of money as collected out of accounts placed in said Agency’s hands by me, whether such collections or settlements are made through said Agency’s office or by me through my office or by any other person in my'behalf, until the same shall amount to Twenty Dollars, and I further agree to send to the said Agency on or before ten days from date, ten accounts, otherwise the payment of Twenty Dollars shall become due and payable to said Agency, or order, on demand.”
This agreement was properly executed by the plaintiff and defendant.
“To American Mercantile Exchange.
“ We hereby agree to subscribe to your Exchange under the following special terms and conditions.
“1. You will employ your system to collect all claims we may place in your hands, suing where you deem advisable, and using legal means to enforce payment from debtors in any part of the United States and Canada, and all such claims shall be subject to our control or withdrawal; unless legal action has been taken, and all debts that may be advertised for sale shall be held ,at the figures quoted by us.”
It will be observed by the use of the language in the first clause of this stipulation “you will employ your system to collect all claims,” etc., that the written contract herein set forth did not state or contain all the elements of the contract. What the plaintiff’s system
This “system,” the terms of which were not incorporated in the written contract, nevertheless, in view of the purposes and object of the defendant, became, by the specific written allusion to it, a material and important feature in the performance of the contract on the part of the plaintiff. The defendant in the written stipulation, proscribing its duties, required that the plaintiff should use its “system.” Its “system” at the time the contract was executed, was explained by the plaintiff’s agent as above set forth. When so explained, the terms of his interpretation became as much a part of the contract as though they had been contained in a separate written document. Therefore, the whole contract of the parties, or so much of it as is necessary to the decision of this case, is contained in the written clauses before quoted in this opinion, and the explanation of the “ system ” as made by its agent to the defendant; that is, the written and the oral parts of the contract are to be construed together in determining what the whole contract expressed,
It is clear that this statute when it took effect April 16, 1899, absolutely prohibited the plaintiff from using that part of its “ system” wherein it had stipulated that accounts would be advertised for sale by public poster. It is presumed that the plaintiff did not violate this statute and did not, subsequently to the date when it took effect, post any list of delinquent debtors. Therefore the case stands as if the plaintiff on the 16th day of April, 1899, had ceased to perform its contract in respect to posting lists of debtors’ names and advertising the judgment for sale. While the plaintiff’s contract as to the method of advertising does not specifically state that the posters shall contain the name of the debtor, yet the only inference to be derived from the language used clearly sustains that conclusion.
But the full performance of its contract was a condition precedent to the right of the plaintiff to recover the annual payment agreed upon, whether the non-performance was caused either by the fault
In Greenough v. Balch, 7 Maine, 461, the court fully approved of this rule of law and says: “Nor are we disposed to find fault with the doctrine, that where the consideration, or a part of it is malum prohibitum, it violates and invalidates the promise, as much as if it had been malum in se; both being unlawful, and neither entitled to favor or indulgence.”
Shaw, C. J., 3 Cush. 448, in discussing the status of illegal contracts says : “ The law will not lend its aid to carry into effect an illegal contract, if it be executory, nor to restore the party who has paid money on it, if executed.”
In Goodwin v. Clark, 65 Maine, 280, it was held: “A person cannot recover for his personal services, portions of which are rendered in an unlawful employment, the contract being an entirety.”
In Bishop v. Palmer, 146 Mass. 469, the court say: “As a general rule where a promise is made for one entire consideration, a part of which is fraudulent, immoral, or unlawful, and there has been no apportionment made, or means of apportionment furnished
For the third and subsequent years for which it has brought suit the prohibited part of the contract was illegal from the beginning of the year and no recovery can be had for any of these years.
Under the contract the balance of the first year’s subscription $11.14 is barred by the statute of limitations.
Judgment for the defendant.