60 S.E. 1133 | N.C. | 1908
Defendant appealed. The facts are stated in the opinion. The complaint alleges that the plaintiff was editor of a newspaper, and "(2) that during February, 1902, the defendant company, then trying to secure aid in building a line of railroad from Raleigh to some point on Pamlico Sound, applied to the plaintiff to secure the columns of his paper and his personal service in trying to carry elections along the route of the proposed road by which bonds were to be issued for the use and benefit of said road, and to gain for said road the good-will of the citizens along said road and in other ways assist the managers and directors of said road in their undertaking; and under the promise from the manager and one of the directors of said defendant company that he should be `taken care of,' well paid for his services, he agreed to serve the defendant as best he could in the manner suggested, and did serve it, in the ways indicated by defendant, through the columns of his paper, by advertisements and by personal services at elections and in other ways well known to defendant. For such services the defendant agreed and promised to pay, but when demand was made the defendant admitted his right to compensation; but only offered him $300 in second-mortgage bonds of its railroad company for his services; (3) that the services rendered the defendant by the plaintiff were reasonably worth the sum of $1,500; (4) that payment has been demanded and refused." *196
(265) The plaintiff makes clear his meaning by his evidence, in which he said: "I was to do everything I could, through my paper and by personal service, in the interest of the railroad. . . . I published editorials, etc., in the paper for two years. . . . I don't know that I published articles favoring the railroad in every issue. They were topay me for editorial." He further testified that he had a great many conversations with the president and general manager of the defendant railroad company, "in all of which he agreed to pay for my services. I ran a paper — that was my regular work Another service I rendered was in arranging for and helping to carry the elections for issuingbonds for the railroad in 1903. Contract was, `if it won, would issue $15,000 bonds and take second mortgage,' etc. I was largely instrumental in getting citizens interested and in calling elections and in getting people to register and vote and in carrying the elections. Don't know that others got anything for services. . . . Munford (an advertiser) has paid me as much as $400. I gave him more space than I did the railroad, but if I had advocated his business like I did for the railroad it would have been worth several thousand to his business. I never published notices for railroad. County and town paid me for election notices. I wrote the editorials published in my paper myself and would copy extracts from other papers." On redirect examination he admitted that "There is a difference in advertising a thing and advocating a measure." The Court concurs in this last proposition.
When an advertisement is inserted the public knows that it is paid for, that it speaks for the advertiser and that the representations are made by him and not by the editor. But an editorial is understood to express the true and unbought views of the editor. It is because of that fact that they carry any weight with the public. It was precisely because of such weight that the defendant thought it worth money to buy the use of plaintiff's editorial columns. Had the plaintiff (266) informed the public that he had sold his editorial columns to the railroad company his editorials would have had no weight whatever in inducing the citizens to vote a bond issue on themselves in favor of the railroad. Both parties knew this. Both are at fault. Public policy will not permit the courts to enforce a contract based upon an immoral consideration, but will leave the parties to their own devices.Basket v. Moss,
Contracts, for money or personal profit, to use efforts and influence to *197
"carry an election," especially an election of this character, are contra bonos mores. 9 Cyc., 500; Wilson v. Puryear,
In Trist v. Child,
The plaintiff in this case was the editor of a paper and is seeking to recover for sale of his editorial influence and for other alleged services in carrying an election to issue bonds. Certainly this was as much against public policy as an agreement for a consideration not to bid on articles to be sold by the Government, or an agreement to pay for a contract to carry the mail, or an agreement to pay for procuring signatures to a pardon to be presented to the Governor, or an agreement not to bid at a sale made under the judicial order, or an agreement to pay for promoting a marriage; because in each of the several instances mentioned, which have all been held to be invalid by reason of public policy, the interests affected are private and largely bear upon individuals rather than upon a community, while in this case the interests affected are public and bear, if the burden should be placed, upon the (267) whole community.
There are other services mentioned in the complaint, but they are all stated in the same cause of action and so mixed up with it as to poison the whole. Trist v. Child,
Action dismissed.
Cited: Lloyd v. R. R.,