34 Minn. 247 | Minn. | 1885
Action for the conversion of a mare, wagon, set of harness, lap-robe, whip, and halter. One Allardt originally owned the property, and on November 4, 1884, he and plaintiff made a bet on the then pending presidential election; Allardt betting the property that James G. Blaine would be elected president, against $350 staked by plaintiff that Grover Cleveland would be elected. One G. F. Farrington was agreed on as stakeholder, and, to perfect the bet, Allardt then made to Farrington a bill of sale of the property, and plaintiff executed his note to Farrington for $350, payable on demand, and Farrington was to pass the note or the property according to the result of the bet. Possession of the property was retained
Of' course the bet, and the bill of sale and note made to perfect it, were all void; and being void, they could not, of themselves, vest any right in the winner, nor take any from the loser. Where money or property is delivered by the loser to the winner in payment of a bet, the loser cannot (except in the case specified in Gen. St. 1878, c. 99, § 13) recover it back. The reason given in some of the cases for this rule is that after delivery it is in the nature of an executed gift, the title passing by virtue of the delivery. Another reason is that the parties are in -pari delicto, and the law will not help either, but leave them just where their own acts have placed them. But to put them in that position there must be an actual delivery by the loser, or with his assent. Tarleton v. Baker, 18 Vt. 9; Miller v. Le Piere, 136 Mass. 20. Whether a delivery, at the time of making the bet, to the stakeholder, for the purpose of being by him delivered upon the event of the bet, is, unless revoked, a sufficient assent to the delivery by the stakeholder to the winner, so that the latter can hold the property under it, we need not decide, for in this case there was no such delivery to the stakeholder. He merely went and took the property, with nothing to justify his possession and his passing it to plaintiff but the bet and the void bill of sale. Upon these the law would not put either the stakeholder or winner in possession, nor sustain either in putting himself in possession. The act of taking possession did not change the title to the property. It still remained the property of Allardt subject to be levied on for his debts. If there was any question of exemption as to any part of it, plaintiff is not in position to raise it.
Order reversed.