231 Mass. 498 | Mass. | 1919
This is an action for breach of a bond. The condition of the bond is that “said Patrick William O’Neill, who is about to be employed by said Boylston Bottling Company, shall render a faithful account of all merchandise delivered to him aid money collected by him and shall return all packages received by him from the company or account to the company for the value of any not so returned.” The breach alleged is that O’Neill “ received from the plaintiff ten hundred and sixty-four dozen bottles of the value of thirty cents a dozen and three hundred and sixty-one cases of the value of forty cents apiece, for which he has failed to account.” The surety on the bond pleaded (inter alla) that, “if it shall appear that the principal upon the bond, . . . ever did any of the things set out in the plaintiff’s declaration, that the same were done or performed under contract in violation of the laws of this Commonwealth.” At the trial the judge refused to rule “that upon all the evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover” and reported the case to the Appellate Division of the Municipal Court. The Appellate Division directed that the report be dismissed and from that order the surety took the appeal which is now before this court.
We agree with the plaintiff that in deciding the question before us (whether as matter of law the plaintiff was not entitled to" recover) the evidence favorable to the defendant must be laid on one side. The surety’s contention is that on the plaintiff’s own evidence O’Neill (the principal defendant) as matter of law was employed for a single sum to do work which was illegal in part; that for this reason the whole employment was illegal and that as a result the law will leave the parties where it finds them. If this be so, the ruling asked for ought to have been given.
It is stated in the report “that the plaintiff employed O’Neill to deliver intoxicating liquor sold by it in Roxbury and in Brook-
“It appeared that the plaintiff was engaged in the sale of intoxicating liquor on Lamartine Street in the city of Boston under a license of the fourth class issued by the licensing board of the city of Boston.” The surety’s contention is that the contract between the plaintiff and O’Neill by which “the plaintiff employed O’Neill to deliver intoxicating liquor sold by it in Roxbury and in Brookline” was an illegal contract so far as it provided for the delivery of “intoxicating liquor sold by it [the plaintiff] ... in Brookline” and that the consideration paid O’Neill being an undivided sum ($60 a week for all his services) the contract was an illegal one although the delivery of liquors sold in Boston was legal.
It is established that a party to an illegal contract will be left by the law where the law finds him. A collection of authorities on that point is not necessary. For a' recent case in which the proposition is well stated and a collection of some of the authorities is made, see Pelosi v. Bugbee, 217 Mass. 579. It is also established that a contract for a single consideration is wholly void if that single consideration is paid in part for an illegal act. Bishop v. Palmer, 146 Mass. 469. Kennedy v. Welch, 196 Mass. 592. Murphy v. Rogers, 151 Mass. 118. Andrews v. Frye, 104 Mass. 234.
The answer of the plaintiff to this contention is, that “there is no evidence that the goods referred to in the declaration were delivered to O’Neill for transportation to points in Brookline and not to points in Boston.” The objection which the plaintiff has to meet is, that O’Neill was employed for a single sum in part “to deliver intoxicating liquor sold by it [the plaintiff]' ... in Brookline” and that that part of the employment being illegal and the consideration being single the whole contract is void.
The plaintiff has also placed great reliance on the case of Bone v. Ekless, 5 H. & N. 925. The decision in that case went on the same ground. In that case the plaintiff had sold a vessel to the Turkish government for £6,500 under an authority from the defendant to pay £5Q0 of the purchase money as a bribe to certain Turkish officials to secure the sale to the Turkish government. Later the plaintiff sued the defendant for the sum of £426 due from the defendant to him and the defendant pleaded in set-off that of the £6,500 received by the plaintiff to the defendant’s use he had paid over to them £6,000 and that he had paid in bribes £300, but that he had kept in his own pocket the remaining £200. To this the plaintiff answered that he had promised to pay the £200 (which he kept) as a bribe to an official of the Turkish government, although he had not yet paid it over. The court held that the £6,500' received by the plaintiff was the defendant’s money and that the defendant had a right to revoke the plaintiff’s authority to pay over as a bribe the £200 which he had not paid over. This conclusion was reached on the ground on which it is held in this Commonwealth that the authority of a stakeholder to pay the money deposited with him to the winner of a bet can be revoked so long as the matter is executory and the money has not been paid over. The sale of the ship in Bone v. Ekless was not an illegal transaction although it had been procured by fraud and so could have been avoided by the Turkish government. The illegal transaction there in question consisted in the payment of the £500 as bribes. But in the case at bar
We have decided the case at bar on the footing on which it was argued. But a word must be added to prevent its being misunderstood. The case was argued on the footing that the sales made in Boston were legal. On the record it would seem that ,they were illegal. It is stated in the report that “the employment [of O’Neill by the plaintiff] was carried out in the following manner.” The plaintiff recorded on its books at its store on Lamartine Street all “orders for liquor” received by it. It delivered to O’Neill a written order on Haffenreffer and Company (“a brewery located in the city of Boston, which furnished the plaintiff with beer”) for the beer necessary to fill these orders. O’Neill then drove with his truck to the brewery, presented this order to it and received from it the beer called for. He then “placed upon the various cases and packages” tags (bearing the name and address of the plaintiff) on which there was written the name and address of the customer to whom the beer was to be delivered. “O’Neill also entered in a book which he kept for the purpose the date of reception, a transcript of the marks on the packages and the dates of delivery of the liquor which he so received and delivered. Under the terms of his employment, O’Neill was required to collect the price of the liquor on delivery, and, in the event of failure to collect the price, to withhold delivery and to return the merchandise to the plaintiff.” The beer so sold by the plaintiff was not sold on the premises owned by the plaintiff “on Lamartine Street” and it must be taken on the record that the premises described in the plaintiff’s fourth class license were its premises on Lamartine Street. A license authorizes a sale on the premises described in it. A sale by the person licensed made elsewhere than on the premises described in the license is not protected by it and is an illegal sale.
The result is that the.order dismissing the report must be reversed and judgment entered for the surety.
So ordered.