67 N.Y.S. 632 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The answer which was served in this case did not plead as a defense that the contract was- illegal, or that the service to be performed thereunder was expected to be in violation of any law, or repugnant to any principle of public policy. It is insisted that the failure to plead that the contract was illegal and void, as being in contravention of good morals or a sound public policy, precluded the defendant from raising such question, and therefore did not furnish basis for the court so to rule. It is undoubtedly the rule that a contract is not necessarily void because the enforcement of rights thereunder may be in violation of a statute. Where the statute is provided for the protection of parties, and the benefit taken thereby may be waived, the defense of invalidity must be pleaded, or the defendant cannot avail himself of it. Crane v Powell, 139 N. Y. 379, 34 N. E. 911; Matthews v. Matthews, 154 N. Y. 288, 48 N. E. 531. The rule is otherwise, however, where the general public is affected by the violation of the particular statute or the provisions of any public law. In such case the enforcement of rights arising thereunder is or may be opposed to good morals or a sound public policy, and the court will refuse their aid to parties so contracting, and will in every instance leave them as it found them. In such a case it is not necessarily essential that the illegality be pleaded. Courts, of their own motion, will interfere and deny the right to any relief thereunder, without reference to the state of the pleadings. Drake v. Seibold, 81 Hun, 178, 30 N. Y. Supp. 697; Oscanyan v. Arms Co., 103 U. S. 261, 26 L. Ed. .539; Kearnes v. Ferry Co., 19 Misc. Rep. 19, 42 N. Y. Supp. 771.
In the present case the learned court below took the view that the contract fell within the second class of cases,—that it was void as being in contravention of a sound public policy,—and for that reason the court would not lend aid to its enforcement. It is evident that, if this view finds support in the testimony, the learned court was clearly right, and the state of the pleadings would not be controlling of its action. This brings us to a consideration of the contract itself, and the acts of the parties thereunder. It is conceded that the contract, upon its face, is not tainted with illegality, nor does any other infirmity appear therein. It is entitled, therefore, to find favor at the hands of the court, unless the proof ■ of acts thereunder is sufficient to establish, as matter of law, that it was a mere cover in legal form for the performance of illegal •acts, and that such was the intention of the parties when it was executed. If it was intended when the contract was executed that under it should be performed what in popular language is called “lobby service,” it is void and cannot be enforced. Mills v. Mills, 40 N. Y. 543; Powers v. Skinner, 34 Vt. 274; Marshall v. Railroad Co., 16 How. 314, 21 Curt. Dec. 153, 14 L. Ed. 953. These lobby services are generally defined to mean the use of personal solicitation, the
“If the plaintiff was employed to render what are commonly called ‘lobby services,’ in procuring the legislation desired by the defendant, then he should have been defeated in his action. Such contracts are condemned as .against public policy, and the rules applicable to them are laid down in many decisions. Chippewa Val. & S. Ry. Co. v. Chicago, St P, M. & O. By.*636 Co., 75 Wis. 248, 44 N. W. 17, 6 L. R. A. 601; Frost v. Inhabitants of Belmont, 6 Allen, 152; Harris v. Roof’s Ex’rs, 10 Barb. 489; Sedgwick v. Stanton, 14 N. Y. 289. Here the jury could find that the plaintiff was not employed to render, and that he did not render, lobby services. He waS not a lobbyist, and he had no acquaintance or influence with any member of the legislature, and it does not appear that he had any peculiar facilities for procuring legislation. The jury could find from the evidence that he was employed by the defendant to draw legislative bills, and to explain them to members of the legislature, and to procure their introduction into the legislature, and nothing more. It does not appear that he asked or solicited any member of the legislature to vote for the bills, or that he did anything except to explain them and request their introduction; and so much he could do without violating any public policy. It must be the right of every citizen who is interested in any proposed legislation to employ an agent, for compensation payable to him, to draft his bill, and explain it to any committee, or to any member of a committee, or of the legislature, fairly and openly, and ask to have it introduced; and contracts which do not provide for more, and services which do not go further, in our judgment, violate no principle of law or rule of public policy.”
Certainly, if the contract could be sustained as a legal contract upon the evidence in the Chesebrough Case, we see no reason why a similar inference may not be drawn from the evidence in the present record. Some minds, we think, will be impressed with the view that the present case is stronger in its facts upon which to find a legal contract than were found present in the Chesebrough Case.
In Barry v. Capen, 151 Mass. 99, 23 N. E. 735, the court was called upon to construe a contract under which the plaintiff was employed to appear before the street commissioners and advocate the laying out of a street and the terms of damages, for which the defendant offered the plaintiff, as compensation, all that he could get awarded over $10,000. This proposition the plaintiff declined. The defendant thereupon stated, “You go and get as much as you can, and I will pay you a thousand dollars for it.” The plaintiff accepted this offer and appeared before the commissioners. The report in that case does not show just what the plaintiff did under his employment, and the record is not available. Upon the trial the court was asked to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that the contract contemplated the rendition of improper service, and was void as against public policy. This motion was denied, and upon appeal a judgment for the plaintiff was affirmed. In disposing of the question the court, through Holmes, J., said:
“As the plaintiff recovered upon an express contract, and not upon a quantum meruit, it is not of the first importance to consider what he actually did. That is evidence, no doubt, tending to show what was the contemplated consideration of the defendant’s promise, but it is not conclusive. The plaintiff may have rendered illegal services, and yet the defendant’s promise may have been in consideration of the plaintiff’s promising to perform or performing legal ones only. If the contract was legal, it would not be made illegal by misconduct on the part of the plaintiff in carrying it out. Howden v. Simpson, 10 Adol. & E. 793, 818, 819; Id., 2 Perry & D. 714, 740, 9 Clark & P. 61. 68; Barrett, X, in Powers v. Skinner, 34 Vt. 274, 284, 285. The judge having found that the contract was legal, the fact that the plaintiff did things against public policy, if it be a fact, can be considered only as bearing, by way of illustration, upon the question whether the tendency of the contract necessarily was to induce the doing of such things. If that was its necessary tendency to an appreciable degree, it was void, whether it induced the acts or not.”
It follows that the plaintiff’s exceptions should be sustained, and the motion for a new trial granted, with costs to the plaintiff to abide the event.
VAN BRUNT, P. J., and INGRAHAM, J., concur. PATTERSON, J., dissents.