131 A. 690 | N.H. | 1926
The plaintiff bases his right of recovery upon the terms of the receipt which he sets up as a binding contract of bailment independent of any antecedent contract between him and Dupont. The defendant, on the other hand, in support of the order of nonsuit, relies in argument upon an unexpressed condition of the bailment, disclosed by the plaintiff's evidence, which involved the performance of an act forbidden by law.
The rule which forbids the introduction of parol evidence to contradict, add to or vary a written instrument does not extend to evidence offered to show that the contract was made in furtherance of objects forbidden by statute, by common law or by the general policy of the law. Gould v. Leavitt,
It appears upon the plaintiff's evidence that by the contract between the plaintiff and Dupont, as finally modified, the latter was to pay the former two thousand dollars contingent upon the successful transportation of six hundred gallons of alcohol from Stark to Berlin. Such transportation was in violation of Laws 1917, c. 147, as amended by Laws 1919, c. 99. It is immaterial whether or not the plaintiff's trip to Berlin with the alcohol was pursuant to an unexpressed provision of the agreement that he should assist in the illegal conveyance; the fact that the transportation, by whatever means accomplished, was an essential condition or part of the agreement is sufficient to taint the contract with illegality.
It was part of the arrangement between the plaintiff and Dupont that, unless the illegal transfer of the alcohol should be successfully accomplished, the plaintiff's right to receive two thousand dollars should never accrue. The deposit was made to secure Dupont's contingent obligation under this arrangement. It was the intention of the plaintiff and Dupont that the deposit should be held by the defendant subject to the contingency and that the plaintiff's interest therein should arise only upon the happening of the event. The plaintiff's evidence admits of no other inference. Manifestly, therefore, the receipt signed by the defendant did not embody all the terms of the depository agreement. The stipulation that the money should be paid to the plaintiff only upon the successful accomplishment of a breach of the law was omitted. Under the principles hereinbefore recited this provision of the contract can be established by evidence aliunde the receipt. The plaintiff's case supplied conclusive proof thereof.
But it is suggested that the case discloses no evidence that the defendant was informed of, or knew, what the purpose or occasion was for making the deposit or what relations existed between the plaintiff and Dupont. It is reasoned from this that, as respects the obligation of the defendant to account to the plaintiff, the deposit was unconditional. The answer to this argument is that the defendant was a mere stake holder. He held the deposit subject to the *235
agreement upon which it was deposited. If the terms of the deposit signed by him did not conform to the true agreement it was subject to be amended according to the truth. Although the conditional character of the deposit was neither disclosed to him nor expressed in his receipt, he would not have been at liberty to disregard the condition upon notice thereof from either of the parties to the deposit. Had the parties informed him of the omitted condition he would have been bound by it. Manahan v. Noyes,
As the plaintiff's title to the deposit conclusively appears to have been conditional he can recover only upon proof that the condition has been performed. Recovery cannot be had in this class of cases if the plaintiff requires any aid from the illegal transaction to establish his right. This is the test laid down in all the cases. Roby v. West,
The case of Portsmouth Brewing Co. v. Mudge,
Exceptions overruled: judgment for the defendant.
All concurred.
MEMORANDUM
On the thirty-first day of December, 1925, Mr. OLIVER WINSLOW BRANCH was appointed an associate justice of this court, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Mr. Justice PLUMMER, and took his seat upon the bench at the January session, 1926. *236