132 Ala. 311 | Ala. | 1901
— If it be conceded that the promise of defendant to jiay to plaintiff $71.40 per month for the use of the license issued to Stinson & Co. was void on
Where the contract is entire, incapable of divisibility, the rule undoubtedly is that a promise to do an act which is illegal or a promise to do a legal act based upon an illegal consideration, is void.—Clark on Cont., 471. To state the proposition in another form: “Where a contract which is entire contains a stipulation or agreement which is illegal, and which, therefore, is not severable from the balance of the contract, such illegal stipulation or agreement cannot be ignored and the other provisions of the contract enforced; the illegal stipulation or’ agreement in such case penetrates and corrupts the whole contract and vitiates it as an entirety.” On the other hand, “Where a contract is in part illegal, and the illegal part is severable from the balance, the effect of such illegality is not to render the whole contract illegal, but the courts will recognize and enforce, the legal part; and this is true though the illegality arises out of the violation of a statutory prohibition.” So, too, “Where the contract contains several independent agreements on the part of one of the parties, and the consideration mewing from the other party is apportioned to each agreement, the contract as to such agreements will be held severable, and in case one is illegal as against public policy the others may still he enforced.”—15 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2d ed.), pp. 988, 990, 991 and notes.
In 2 Parsons on Contracts (8th ed.), p. 633, it is said: “The question whether a contract is entire or seperable is often of great importance. Any contract may consist of many parts; and these may be considered as parts of one whole, or as so many distinct contracts •entered into at one time, and expressed in the same instrument, hut not thereby made one contract. No precise rule can be given by which this question in a given
In the contract before us, we have two distinct and independent promises by the defendant based upon two distinct and independent considerations. By reference to the language employed, the subject-matter of the contract and the object it was intended to accomplish, it is clear that the first promise was based upon the consideration of'Stinson & Company’s assent to the use of the license by defendant theretofore issued to them and the assumption by him of their indebtedness to plain-tiff on account of money loaned by plaintiff to Stinson & Company to purchase said license. It is also clear that the second promise was made upon a consideration to advance defendant the money if it became necessary to-purchase a new license, which was fully performed by plaintiff. Manifestly the recital, “Now, therefore, in consideration of doing business under said license” found in the second clause of the contract, although preceding the obligation on plaintiff’s part to advance the money to defendant to purchase a new license was no part of the consideration upon which defendant’s promise Avas based to repay the money to be so axlvamced. That consideration moved from Stinson & Company to defendant and based upon it, defendant made the promise to pay Stinson & Company’s debt to plaintiff, which as we have said is not involved in this controversy. Conceding-, only for the purposes of this case, that the first promise-of defendant Avas void because based upon an illegal consideration, the second is not; for the very obvious reason that both the consideration and the promise are .legal and in noAvise dependent on the other consideration or promise expressed in the contract. The apportionment of tbe tAvo sums to be paid by defendant is-
Affirmed.