Plaintiff sues defendants John B. Malatesta and J. B. Malatesta, Inc., to recover moneys lost as wagers upon horse races and relies for success upon the provisions of section 994 of the Penal Law. To show the extent of his losses plaintiff produced at trial the original checks drawn by him to the order of defendant Malatesta, which, it is clear, were received and cashed by, or in the interest of, that defendant. Defendant Malatesta pleads a counterclaim for moneys lost by him as wagers upon horse races, and paid over to plaintiff. The trial court (a jury having been waived) found in favor of said defendants upon the counterclaim. Inasmuch as the amounts claimed to have been paid by Malatesta to plaintiff (as found by the trial court) far exceeded the aggregate
With respect, however, to the individual defendant, Malatesta, who claimed at first that he was merely a news distributor, occasionally at the race track, the evidence clearly establishes that he was a bookmaker, engaged in that occupation at various race tracks and elsewhere in direct violation of section 986 of the Penal Law, which makes bookmaking a crime. In the course of such prohibited conduct he made the wagers which form the subject-matter of the complaint and also those upon which he relies to sustain the judgment which has been accorded to him upon the counterclaim. If the judgment appealed from be upheld, the court will actually have countenanced the infraction of the Penal Law and have come to the aid of a lawbreaker, to restore to him that which he lost while engaged in the commission of acts specifically condemned by section 986 of the Penal Law.
This action is, as above stated, grounded upon section 994 of the Penal Law, which is as follows: “ Property staked may be recovered. Any person who shall pay, deliver or deposit any money, property or thing in action, upon the event of any wager or bet prohibited, may sue for and recover the same of the winner or person to whom the same shall be paid or delivered, and of the stakeholder or other person in whose hands shall be deposited any such wager, bet or stake, or any part thereof, whether the same shall have been paid over by such stakeholder or not, and whether any such wager be lost or not.”
That section, as well as a number of others,-is found in article 88 of the Penal Law, all of which were enacted to make effective the legislative purpose of suppressing gambling in the community, when conducted in the manner therein described. The chief object of section 994, in according a remedy to a person who delivers either money or property upon a wager, was to deter those against whom these enactments were directed from pursuit of the prohibited practices. While it may not, in and of itself, create a penalty (People v. Stedeker,
„ At common law wagering contracts were not void per se (Zeltner v. Irwin,
In this State, under the earlier anti-gambling laws, which evidence the public policy against gaming or betting on horse races, neither party could sue the other because each was regarded as being in pari delicto, and, therefore, not entitled to recover of the other. (Meeeh v. Stoner,
Statutes giving to the loser a right of action to recover a loss in specified gambling ventures were remedial (Stuart v. Grattan,
We are urged to follow the conclusion reached in Elias & Shepherd v. Gill (
No substantial question of fact remains, for defendant’s employee, Young, corroborated plaintiff and testified that the plaintiff’s checks in evidence were received by defendant in payment of bets.
The judgment and order dismissing the complaint should be reversed, with costs to the appellant against the defendant John B. Malatesta, and judgment directed in favor of the defendant
Finch, P. J., Merrell, O’Malley and Townley, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order granting defendants’ motion to dismiss the complaint and for judgment on the counterclaim reversed, with costs to the appellant against the defendant John B. Malatesta, and judgment directed in favor of plaintiff and against defendant John B. Malatesta in the sum of $37,535, with interest thereon from December 9, 1930, and costs; and judgment directed in favor of defendant J. B. Malatesta, Inc., dismissing the complaint. Order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial affirmed.
