102 Iowa 60 | Iowa | 1897
— This case turns on the question of the validity of the bond on which the action is based. If the bond is void, it is because of a provision of section 1550 of the Code, as follows: “All sales, transfers, conveyances, mortgages, liens, attachments, pledges, and securities of every kind, which either in whole or in part shall have been made for or on account of the intoxicating liquors sold in violation of this chapter, shall be utterly null and void against all persons in all cases, and no rights of any kind shall be acquired thereby, and no action of any kind shall be main tained in any court in this state for intoxicating liquors or the value thereof, sold in any other state or country, contrary to the law of said state or country, or with intent to enable any person to violate any provision of this chapter, nor shall any action be
I With these general propositions settled, we may notice some particular claims of appellant. The laws as to which the liquors are made subject by the terms of the Wilson-Act are those of a police nature, and it is said such laws have never been called into action, by which is meant that the laws have never been invoked as to the liquors, and it is said that some sales of liquors are lawful. We do not think such to be legitimate inquiries. As we said at the outset, this action is on the bond, and the inquiry is, is it valid? If not, it is because it was void at its inception. The bond shows that it was to be a security for the acts of Dennis in the sale of liquors. There is no pretense of a permit or authority to sell the liquors in Iowa. The sales were presumably in violation of law, and intended tq be so. State v. Cloughly, 78 Iowa, 626 (35 N. W. Rep. 652). Nothing in the stipulation of facts shows the sales intended by the bond, or made, in pursuance
It is said that the bond is of itself an act of interstate commerce, in that it was “executed in Sioux City, Iowa, sent to, delivered, and accepted in, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.” We are hardly willing to believe that counsel mean that the manner of execution — because the bond was, in its preparation and completion — passed between two states— made it a matter of interstate commerce, so that its validity cannot be questioned in a state court. The state law in no manner attempts to regulate those matters. We think it makes no difference how or where the bond was executed. It was a contract to be performed in Iowa, and so intended. It is, to all intents and purposes, a contract in violation of Iowa laws, and its enforcement is sought in Iowa.
This cause was submitted in January, 1897. On the first day of March, 1897, the supreme court of the United States handed down its opinion in the case of Allgeyer v. State of Louisiana, which is reported in 17 Sup. Ct. Rep. 427, and our attention has been called to it since the opinion in this case was prepared. It is thought that the case sustains appellant’s view, but we think it strongly supports our conclusion in both its reasoning and citations. The question involved is entirely different from the one in this case. The rule of that case is that, notwithstanding the law of the state of Louisiana to the contrary, a citizen of that state, or a person therein, has the right to contract with a corporation outside that state for insurance on his property in that state, where the contract is both made and to be performed outside the state; and that a person within the state may, to effect such insurance, write a letter or notification to the company because of which the insurance attaches. It is held