Defendant appeals from a judgment against him in the sum of $11,029.13 and interest, on a contract for services as an investigator.
Questions Presented
1. Was the contract one for splitting attorney’s fees? 2. Must the defense of illegality be pleaded ? 3. Are the parties in pari delicto ?
Facts
Defendant filed a general denial to plaintiff’s complaint, but offered no evidence as to the facts here related. Defendant is an attorney at law. Plaintiff had experience as an insurance adjuster. The parties entered into an oral agreement under which plaintiff was to render service to defendant as a private *441 investigator. Plaintiff’s compensation was to be of two types: in certain cases plaintiff was to be paid mileage and an hourly rate; in other eases plaintiff was to receive an amount “measured by and equal to one-third (1/3) of the net” attorney’s fees received by defendant in such cases. Defendant was to designate the cases as to which each type of compensation would apply. In the latter type cases, plaintiff’s compensation was contingent upon defendant’s success in the particular case and his receiving a fee therefrom. However, plaintiff’s compensation was to come out of defendant’s “general fund, without regard to the particular money paid in those designated cases.” Plaintiff rendered services for approximately one and a half years, during which time six of the cases investigated by him were designated by defendant as being of the contingency fee type. Plaintiff received payment in full for five of these and for all eases to which the hourly rate applied. In the sixth case defendant received a fee of $36,609.40. For his work in that case defendant paid plaintiff only $1,174. On the one-third basis he was entitled to $12,203.13, leaving a balance due him of $11,029.13, the amount for which he sued and the amount the trial court awarded him.
1. Fee Splitting.
Rule 3 of the State Bar Rules of Professional Conduct approved by the Supreme Court,
2. Defense of Illegality.
Plaintiff contends that as defendant merely filed a general denial of the allegations of the complain] and did not plead such defense he is barred from raising it. As stated in 2 Within’s California Procedure, 1531, the problem of pleading illegality is confused by contradictory expressions in the opinions. So far as applicable to the circumstances of this case, the authorities seem clear that although generally illegality of a contract is a defense which must be pleaded, that rule is qualified as follows: (1) where the illegality appears on the face of the contract, or (2) where the evidence which proves the contract discloses the contract’s illegality. (See
Gelb
v.
Benjamin,
3. Bari Deliato.
However, a different rule bars the defense from being available to defendant. This rule is stated in 12 Cal.Jur.2d 302-303, 304: “Where parties to an illegal contract are in pari delicto, neither may recover from the other property or money transferred in the course of the illegal transaction. But a member of a class for whose protection a statute was enacted is ordinarily not considered in pari delicto with those who violate the statute. The statute being for his benefit and he not being in pari delicto, he is entitled to relief and may resort to the courts to recover. . . . The rule, therefore, is that if refusal to enforce or rescind an illegal bargain would produce a harmful effect on parties for whose protection the law making the bargain illegal exists, enforcement or rescission, whichever is appropriate, is allowed.”
The object of the contract here—investigation—is legal and proper. It is only the fee-splitting that is against public policy. Nevertheless the contract may be enforced if
*443
the parties are not
in pari delicto.
As said in
Estate of Cohen,
As said in
Irwin
v.
Curie,
In
Anderson
v.
Nelson,
In
Wilson
v.
Stearns,
In the language of the trial judge here, “Buie 3 is not a two-edged sword, but a rule binding the lawyer who has accepted the fruits of his unlawful contract and now says he is forbidden to pay for them because he has violated the rules of professional conduct.” To permit the attorney to retain the moneys he promised to pay plaintiff would put a premium on the attorney’s disregard of the rules made for his guidance and conduct.
Therefore, although the illegality of the contract appears on its face, and the defense of illegality would therefore not have to be pleaded, as the parties are not m pari delicto defendant cannot successfully raise the defense of illegality.
The judgment is affirmed.
Peters, P. J., and Wood (Fred B.), J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied May 11, 1955.
Notes
The contingency nature of the contract does not in itself make the contract illegal. See
Bergen
v.
Frisbie,
