16 Minn. 299 | Minn. | 1871
By the Court
Plaintiff and one John Farmer laid a wager upon the result of a horse race, each depositing with the defendant as stakeholder the sum of one hundred dollars, to be paid to the winner, plaintiff or Farmer, as the case might be. The race resulted unfavorably for the plaintiff, and after it had taken place, but before the money deposited had been paid over to Farmer, plaintiff notified defendant not to pay it over, and demanded the return of the sum of one hundred dollars deposited by himself, with which demand defendant refused to comply.
The first inquiry is, was the wager a valid contract? The English courts have held that at the common law contracts of wager were valid, unless affected by some special cause of invalidity; that they were not void qua wagers, but if made on indifferent subjects or questions, an action lay upon them against the loser. Good xs. Elliot, 3 T. R. 693; Chitty on Contracts, 494; Ball vs. Gilbert, 12 Met. 399. But as remarked by Mr. Chitty, “the courts have frequently reprehended these contracts, and expressed their regret that they have ever been sanctioned.” Chitty on Contracts, 496, and cases cited. See opinion of Mr. Justice Buller and Lord Kenyon in Good vs. Elliot, supra; Gilbert vs. Sykes, 16 East. 156; Atherford vs. Beard, 2 T. R. 615, et seq.; Forbes vs. Waltham, 1 Ad. & El. N. S. 889; Evans vs. Jones, 5 M. & W. 82. In this country the courts have expressed their views upon the subject of wagers generally in very strong language. In Armory vs. Gilman, 2 Mass. 6, Avhich Avas an action upon a Avagering policy of insurance, Parker J. says: “It would seem a disgraceful occupation of the courts of any country, to sit in judgment between two gamblers in order to determine which was the best calculator of chances, or Avhich had the most cunning of the two. I here could be but one step of degradation below this, Avhich is, that the judges should be the stakeholders of the 1 arties.” See also Ball vs. Gilbert, 12 Met 399. In Collamer vs. Day, 2 Vt. 146, which was an action founded upon
“ The judges of the courts in England have expressed their regret of late years, that such transactions ever received the sanction of a court of justice, but they yield to the force of law which they consider settled by a train of decisions extending down from remote antiquity. We feel no such embarrassment; nor are we willing to transmit any such embarrassment to our successors; nor diffuse into society the influence of a rule so demoralizing as would be the sanction of such a contract. * * * The good morals of society require that no encouragement should be afforded to the acquisition of property otherwise than by honest industry. Time might be occupied in seeking occasions to take advantage of the unwary, and acquiring a skill to take such advantage, which ought to be devoted to better purposes.” The court accordingly refused to recognize the bet as a valid contract. See also West vs. Holmes, 26 Vt. 534. In Perkins vs. Eaton, 3 N. H. 155, C J. Richardson says: “ On the whole it is not to be doubted that at the common law an action might under certain circumstances be maintained for a wager; but the question is wliether the common law on this subject has ever been adopted in this state. It is not known that an action of this kind has ever been before brought in this state; and this circumstance seems to indicate a general impression among the members of the bar, that such an action cannot be maintained, for wagers have certainly not been uncommon among us We are not precluded then by adjudged cases from adopting the rule of the civil law, and holding that a wager upon a subject in which the parties have no interest is a void con
From the foregoing citations; from the statutes which have of late years been enacted in England, and in the various states of this country against bets and wagers; as, well as from the common knowledge of the prevailing public sentiment on-this subjective think the remark found in 2 Sm’s Lea. Cases (6th Am. Ed.) 343, that “the moral sense of the present day regards all gaming or wagering contracts as inconsistent with the interest of the community, and at variance with the laws of morality,” is abundantly justified. The only case which we find reported in this state on the subject of wagers is Cooper vs. Brewster, 1 Minn. 94, in which it was held, that a bet upon the result of an election was illegal and void. In determining then
The other question presented by the case at bar is, whether money bet upon an illegal wager can be recovered by the loser of the stakeholder, if before paying it over to the winner, the stakeholder has been notified by such loser not to pay it over, and the loser has demanded its repayment to himself. There is a remarkable approach to unanimity in the authorities in answering this question in the affirmative. Ball vs. Gilbert, 12 Met. 397; McAllister vs. Hall, 6 S. & R. 148; Tarleton vs. Baker, 18 Vt. 9; Wheeler vs. Spencer, 15 Conn. 28; West vs. Holmes, 26 Vt. 534; Perkins. vs. Eaton, 3 N. H. 155; Whitwell vs. Carter, 4 Mich. 329, and numerous cases cited; 2 Sm’s Lea. Cases, 345. The reason for allowing the recovery is well stated by Shaw C. J. in Ball vs. Gilbert, supra, as follows: “we think it clear that in no proper sense can the stakeholder be regarded as a party to the illegal contract, or in pari delicto. He is a mere depositary of both parties for the money deposited by them respectively, with a naked
It follows from the views expressed by us, that the complaint in this case stated a cause of action, so that the respondent’s demurrer to the same was improperly sustained.
Judgment reversed.