40 Mo. 532 | Mo. | 1867
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action commenced in the court below on a promissory note made in New Orleans on the 20 th of March, 1862, by Long to the firm of Austin, Goodwyn & Go., for the sum of $2,323.03, and by them assigned to Peltz, the respondent. It is admitted that the note was assigned after maturity and merely for collection, and that Austin, Goodwyn & Co. are the real parties in interest, and no question arises in regard to the rights of the endorsee.
The defence set up is that part of the consideration given
Upon a trial before the court without a jury, judgment was rendered for the respondent.
The evidence abundantly proves that Goodwyn was an officer in the rebel service ; that he left the camp and went to New Orleans to make a settlement with Long before the United States forces took possession of that city, and that the note given was the result of the settlement; that he gave to Long five or six hundred dollars in Confederate money, which was included in the note; and that the remainder was for articles sold at Confederate prices, and for which Confederate money was to be received in payment.
That all contracts which are immoral in their nature, or contrary to public policy, or contravene any established interest of society, are void and incapable of enforcement, must be considered as settled propositions of law. It is not necessary that the contract should be expressly illegal; but whenever it is opposed to public policy, or founded on an immoral consideration, no action can spring out of it, the maxim being ex turpi causa non oritur actio. In such cases the law will not intervene in behalf of parties who present themselves in the attitude of wrongdoers; it will not listen to their prayers for relief, but will leave them just where their conduct has placed them. Therefore Ld. Mansfield, in Smith v. Bromley, Doug. 695, says: “If the act is immoral in itself, a violation of the general laws of public policy, then the party paying shall not have his action (to recover back the money) ; for where both parties are equally criminal against such general laws, the rule is potior est conditis defendentis.” Chancellor Kent, in Griswold v. Waddington,
Obligations arising out of contracts made during the time of the rebellion, and where Confederate money was agreed to be taken, or constituted the consideration passing between the parties, have been on several occasions the subjects of litigation. In the case of Schmidt v. Barker, 17 La. Ann. 261, the plaintiff claimed from the defendant, who was a banker in New Orleans, the sum of four hundred dollars, being the balance which he averred was due to him on moneys deposited by him in defendant’s bank between the 17th day of January and the 1st day of April, 1862. The amount was claimed to be due in legal tender notes of the United States; but the defendant set up in his defence a special contract, by which it appeared that the' deposits were received in his bank
The case of Laughlin v. Dean, 1 Duv. (Ky.) 20, was a suit upon a note. The answer alleged and the defence showed that the consideration for the note was the purchase of Confederate notes. It was decided that the action could not be maintained, and that the policy of the State forbade its courts from aiding either of the parties to a contract for the sale or purchase of Confederate notes.
In a very recent case in Mississippi (Avera v. Robertson), Mr. Justice Clayton decided that the issuance of treasury notes by the Congress of the Confederate States was done by virtue of the war power in the constitution, and was the exercise of a belligerent right; that the abolition of the rebel debt by the superior power, the extinction of the government which created it, and the annulment of the laws which gave it vitality, made it impossible to recover on the notes themselves, and that the condemnation adhered to them even in a secondary transaction. Nor is there any force in the suggestion, that although the plaintiff may be debarred from re-' covering so much as is shown to have been paid in Confederate notes, yet that only goes partially to the consideration, and that the balance is good, and judgment should be rendered for it. This is not the case where the law allows a distinction to be taken where the consideration is illegal in part, and there are separate promises founded on partly legal and partly illegal considerations. It is an entire promise, and if any part of the consideration is illegal, the whole consideration is void ; public policy will not permit a party to enforce a promise which he has obtained by an illegal act or an illegal promise, although he may have connected with this act or promise another which is legal—1 Pars, on Cont. (5th ed.) 457.
With the concurrence of the other judges, the judgment is reversed. •