26 N.Y.S. 525 | Superior Court of Buffalo | 1893
This action is brought by the plaintiff to recover against the defendant on a bond bearing date the 6th day of June, 1890, made by the defendant and others to secure the payment to the plaintiff of the sum of $900, which one Charles L. Lancaster owed to the plaintiff by reason of misappropriation of the funds as treasurer sometime ■ previous to 1890.
It appears that Lancaster had been elected treasurer of the plaintiff, and during the time he held office he misappropriated about $1,000. A discovery of his defalcation was made about the 1st of April, 1890. At that time he had ceased to be treasurer, and his successor had been elected and taken possession of the office. The bond on which this action is brought was given to indemnify the club against the loss which it had sustained by the misconduct of Lancaster. The defense is, in brief, that the consideration for the giving of the bond was the release of Lancaster and an agreement not to prosecute him for the felonies for which he had been indicted, and being against public policy, is void.
A reference to a few cases bearing upon the law governing the case will show what the tendency of the courts is in thé direction of holding such contracts illegal. It is laid down as an elementary proposition that if the consideration to a contract is illegal, that the contract will not be enforced, being against public policy, or if it is in contravention to the positive provisions of a statute law it will be invalid. 2 Kent’s. Com. 465.
■ But if the legality of the contract does not appear on the face of the instrument, it may be shown by parol testimony, and this whether the contract is under seal or a mere unsealed written instrument. Brown v. Brown, 34 Barb. 533.
The cases are numerous, and are found in the reports of all the states, that contracts given to prevent the prosecution of offenders, or to stifle investigation, are void, as against public •policy.
In this state, as in most of the other states, the statute has expressly prohibited and made it a felony to compound or conceal a crime.
Section 125 of the Penal Code provides that “A person who takes money or other property, gratuity or reward, or an engagement or promise therefor, upon an agreement or understanding, express or implied, to compound or conceal a crime, or a violation of statute, or to abstain from, discontinue or delay a prosecution therefor, or to withhold any evidence thereof, except in a ease where a compromise is allowed by .law, is guilty of a felony.”
This is but the terse enactment of the common law upon that subject, for, in the absence of the statute, under the authorities, a contract, the consideration of which is given in violation of law, is against public policy, and, therefore, void. Steuben Co. Bank v. Mathewson, 5 Hill, 249; Porter v. Havens, 37 Barb. 343;. Conderman v. Hicks, 3 Lans. 108: Conderman v. Trenchard, 58 Barb. 165; Fellows v. Van Hyring, 23 How. Pr. 230.
The cases cited by the learned counsel for the defendant from the reports of other states accord with the rule above ■stated, and are in harmony with the authorities in this state. Biddle v. Hall, 99 Penn. St. 116.
In Buck v. First National Bank, 27 Mich. 293, Judge
A number of cases referred to by the defendant’s counsel in his brief reported in other states have been examined, and quite unanimously held to the doctrine as stated by Judge ■ Cooley.
It is not questioned that these cases correctly state the law, but it is claimed that Lancaster was owing the plaintiff money which might have been collected in a civil action, and that it was not a violation of law to take the bond of the defendant and others, friends of Lancaster, agreeing to pay his debt; that the transaction was entirely innocent, not related to any •unlawful agreement to stifle prosecution or compound a crime. If this is a correct statement of the transaction, then the bond is valid and can be enforced, because there is no principle of law that prevents a person, deprived of his property by the wrongful or felonious act of another, maintaining an action in a court of law to recover the value of the property, or from taking such security as is necessary to insure full indemnity to the injured party. This, of course, must be accompanied with the fact that there is' no promise or understanding that the injured party will abstain from prosecution for the criminal offense.
In this view of the case and the claim made by the learned
Charles L. Lancaster was treasurer of the Buffalo Press Club, and in April, 1890, had become a defaulter in about the sum of $1,000. Officers of the club went before the grand jury and procured his indictment on two charges, one for grand larceny and one for forgery. In the meantime, Lancaster had left the country and gone to Canada. About May 1, 1890, Mr. Vouglit, the president of the plaintiff, accompanied by an officer, went to Canada, arrested and brought him back to this city, he consenting to come without being formally extradited. lie was placed in jail, where he remained, unable to get bail, for about six weeks. After his arrest, he expressed contrition for what he had done, and manifested a desire to make restitution to the club, so far as it lay in his power, “if he was given a chance.” His wife was to give $500 in cash, and security was to be given for the balance. The president, in his report to the club of the arrest and of the proposition of Lancaster, says : “ Of course it is expected that in the event of an acceptance of this proposition, that an effort will be made to have all criminal proceedings withdrawn, if the district attorney can be prevailed upon to consent to such an arrangement. It seems to me that if it can be satisfactorily arranged "for both parties, it will be a matter of pecuniary beneht to the club.for the board to assent to the plan, and my recommendation is that the whole subject be referred to Simon Fleischmann as our attorney, he to report to the board before any concluding action is taken.” The communication was referred to Mr. Fleischmann, the attorney, as recommended by President Vought. Later, and on the twenty-sixth day of May, Lancaster made a formal proposition for settlement in writing. It "differed somewhat from the other; instead of paying $500 in cash, he proposed to pay but $100 in cash and to sign an agreement to pay ten dollars a week, providing he could get a salary of not less than twenty dollars a week, or in case he received less, he would pay one-half of his weekly salary, to
The bond given by defendant and others to the Press Club is an ordinary bond for the payment by Lancaster of the sum of §900, on condition that the Press Club shall forbear enforcing the collection of said sum against Lancaster for two years, and expresses a nominal consideration of one dollar. The sum which the defendant- agrees to pay is fifty dollars. The bond on its face does not mention the criminal proceedings against Lancaster, and is not on its face void as contravening any statute, nor as being against public policy.
But we are to determine the question as to what the true consideration was, not alone from the bond, but from all the evidence in the case, from the circumstances surrounding the giving of the bond and the undertaking of the plaintiff and Lancaster at the time, and if it was given in consideration that the plaintiff would abstain from prosecuting him criminally on the charges for felony, which wrere then pending against him, it would be invalid, notwithstanding it is fair and valid on its face. Brown v. Brown, 34 Barb. 533.
The legal presumption is in favor of the bond, but it is not conclusive, and it may cover an illegal consideration, and such a fact may be shown by parol evidence. The question, then, is, from all the facts shown upon the trial before me, is this bond valid %
■ I have made a careful examination of the evidence, and of the authorities cited by the learned counsel for the plaintiff, with a view to arriving at a correct conclusion, so far as I may be able to do, as it was stated on the trial that this was a test,
I do not think the cases cited bear out the construction put upon them by counsel for the plaintiff. The rule is everywhere recognized that agreements to" forbear prosecution, or of bringing indictments to trial, or for the purpose of withholding or suppressing ^evidence against a party charged with crime, or to interfere with the course of justice so as to prevent the enforcement of the law in criminal actions, are contrary to public policy, and void, and I, therefore, conclude from the evidence that the contract was given for an illegal purpose, and is invalid. The defendant is not a party to such an illegal undertaking, and may interpose it as a defense to this action.
The parties stipulated in open court, on the trial of the action before me, that whichever way the case was decided, no costs should be given to the prevailing party. The plaintiff’s complaint should be dismissed, but without costs.
. Complaint dismissed.