2 Keyes 198 | NY | 1865
The plaintiff’s action is brought to recover money of the plaintiff alleged to have been lost by one Eugene Delonne, a clerk in his employment, at a gambling table, of which the defendant was the proprietor.
The complaint alleged that on divers days between the 26th day of April and the 3d day of July, 1867, one Eugene Delonne,. a clerk of the plaintiff, unlawfully lost at play, and the defendant won at play and received from Delonne, certain bank-notes or bills and moneys, the property of the .plaintiff; and that .Delonne never had or received from the defendant, and the defendant never gave him, any value or valuable consideration therefor. That the plaintiff demanded all such bank-notes, bills and moneys from the defendant, who refused to deliver the sum to him, but wrongfully retains the same. The answer denied all the allegations of the complaint. At the trial in the New York Common Pleas, before Judge Beady, without a jury, the defendant moved to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that no action could be maintained to recover money won at play by any person but the loser, and that such action by the loser was founded solely on the statute against “ betting and gaming.” The motion was denied and the defendant excepted.
The plaintiff then proved that the defendant kept a gambling house, 92 Prince street, in the city of New York. That Delonne was a clerk in the employment of the plaintiff, who was a jeweler. That Delonne was intrusted at different
Meech v. Stoner (19 N. Y., 26) determines that money lost in gaming is assignable as other dioses in action, and the right to prosecute given to the losing party is not a mere personal privilege which is unavailable by any one to whom he may have transferred the claim. The principle upon which the decision rests is, that the transaction is utterly void, and the winner obtains thereby no title in himself to the money won, but the inability of the loser to recover the money back is based upon another maxim of the common law, which withholds remedial process from the offending parties, and when both are equally guilty, the better condition is that of the defendant. The learned judge who delivered the opinion, thinks the fourteenth section of the statute which literally gives the right of action to the loser, if exercised within a given time, does not so much create a right of action as it removes an obstacle which the common law placed in the way of his recovery. He quotes in support of his opinion Turner v. Warren (2 Strange, 1079), where it was held the action given by the statute of Anne was not in the nature of a penal action, because the defendant was debtor to the plaintiff. Also, Bones v. Booth (2 Wm. Black., 1226), where it was observed, “the statute makes the winning
The plaintiff was not known to the defendant in the transaction by which the money changed hands. He did not deal with the plaintiff, nor was he aware the money which he won from Delonne was the money of the plaintiff until just before the commencement of the action. There was no actual privity between them. In order to maintain the common count for money had and received, however, it is not always necessary there should have been an express privity of contract between the plaintiff and the defendant. There need be no privity of contract except that which results from one man having another’s money, which he has not a right, conscientiously, to retain. (Chitty on Contracts, 605, 5th ed.) The defendant has obtained the plaintiff’s money by a process condemned by law as illegal and unjust, and can have no conscientious or equitable claim to retain it. He parted with nothing when he received it, and should he restore it to the true owner, he is no worse off than he was before the transaction with Delonne. The most favorable point of. view in which he can be regarded is that of one who has accidentally found the money of another, which he is bound, upon the plainest rules of morality, to restore. This view is in conformity with the principle alluded to in Pierce v. Craft (12 Johns., 90), where it is said: “It is not true that the action
The judgment of the Common Pleas should be affirmed. All concur.
Affirmed.