37 Cal. 670 | Cal. | 1869
This is an action upon a promissory note. The defendant pleads payment. Below, judgment passed for defendant upon the following facts, which were found by the Court: First—On the 8th day of September, 1868, plaintiff loaned the defendant eight hundred and fifty dollars, for which defendant gave the promissory note in suit, payable one day after date.
On the same day the plaintiff made another bet of two hundred dollars with one Miller, upon the terms and to the same effect as the bet above mentioned, the defendant acting as stakeholder, and plaintiff directing defendant to furnish one hundred dollars of his stake out of the money due him on said note; the other half of plaintiff’s stake being furnished by the plaintiff from other sources, and the defendant put up said one hundred dollars, as requested by plaintiff.
On the same day plaintiff made another bet with one Howard upon the result of the presidential election in certain named States, in which plaintiff wagered his horse Consternation against Howard’s horse Young Jack. It was agreed that each party to the bet might retain possession of his horse until after election, and that each should deposit in the hands of the defendant, as stakeholder, the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars, to abide the result of the election, in lieu of the horse, in case of non-delivery.
The defendant Russell, as in the aforementioned bets, acted as stakeholder in this, and at request of plaintiff put up his stake, to wit: two hundred and fifty dollars, out of the money due on said promissory note. That about three or four days after the bet was made, and before the election took place, plaintiff' called at the store of the defendant, and said: “I am told that Howard has sold his horse, and I think that lets me out of the bet with him.”
“ Sacramento City, November 23d, 1868. “Mr. P. H. Russell: I notify you that if you pay any of the money held by yon as stakeholder in the bets made by me with Freeman, Miller, and Howard, you will do so at your own peril, as I repudiate said bets, and refuse to pay any of them, W. F. Johnston.”
Defendant paid all of these stakes to the- winners after the notice above mentioned.
The only question presented for our consideration is, whether these facts constitute a defense to the action. There is no statute in this State upon the subject of wagers, except the statute against gaming, which does not include wagers of this character, and hence the question, whether these facts are a defense, must be decided by a reference to the principles of the common law.
At common law wagers made in respect to matters not affecting the feelings, interest, or character of third persons, or the public peace, or good morals, or public policy, are valid and can be enforced. But if the wager involves a breach of the peace, or tends to a breach of the peace, or is calculated to wound the feelings, or affect the interests or character of third persons, or is in relation to a matter which is contra bonos mores, or is against public policy, it is illegal and void, and no action in affirmance of the contract can be maintained. Wagers upon the result of public elections are, under this rule, illegal and void, upon grounds of public policy. (Bunn v. Riker, 4 Johns. 426; Lansing v. Lansing, 8 Johns. 454.) Said Mr. Chancellor Kent, in Vischer v. Yates, 11 Johns. 28: “When we consider the importance of popular elections to the Constitution and liberties of this country,
The earlier decisions in England upon illegal contracts were contradictory, and the law, as remarked by the Chief Justice, in Smith v. Bickmore, 4 Taunton, 474, was for a time in “ sad confusion.” But it has now become well settled there that no action in affirmance of an illegal wager can be maintained, but actions which proceed upon a disaffirmance of the contract as illegal and void may be maintained, while the contract remains executory. Neither money won and not paid, nor money lost and actually paid to the winner can be recovered. In such an action the plaintiff is confronted and defeated by the maxim in pari delicto, potior est conditio possidentis; but, as was said by Lord Ellenborough, in Edgar v. Fowler, 3 East, 225: “In illegal transactions the. money may always be stopped while it is in transitu to the person who is entitled to receive it.” Hence, in England, either party may disaffirm the wager, and recover the money staked by him, even when it is in the possession of the opposite party, at any time before the event upon which the wager was made has transpired; and against a stakeholder, if there be one, at any time before the money has been actually paid to the winner, either before or after the event has transpired, and even after the money has been paid to the winner, if before the payment the stakeholder was notified not to pay it, for the reason that the contract is not executed, as the Courts hold, until the stakeholder has paid the stakes to the winner. (Cotton v. Thurland, 5 Term R. 405; Howson v. Hancock, 8 Term R. 575; Smith v. Bickmore, 4 Taunton, 474; Hastelow v. Jackson, 8 Barn. & Cress. 221.)
In Vischer v. Yates, supra, Mr. Chancellor Kent declared the English rule to be the true rule upon the subject. That was
This rule of the Court of Errors of Hew York has been adopted in some of the other States, while in still other States the English rule, as expounded by Mr. Chancellor Kent in Vischer v. Yates, has prevailed. There has been no decision in this State, so far as we are advised, declaring definitely for or against either rule. The only cases upon the general subject have been Bryant v. Mead, 1 Cal. 441; Gahan v. Neville, 2 Cal. 81; and Hardy v. Hunt, 11 Cal. 343, in neither of which did the question arise. Hot being concluded by any previous decision, we arc at liberty to adopt the rule, which, in our judgment, best promotes good morals, and subserves the public policy, upon which all rules upon this subject are supposed to be founded.
We see no satisfactory reason for the distinction made by the English cases between actions directly between the par
The judgment is affirmed.