2 Va. 80 | Va. | 1808
The bill states, that in 1783, Miller gained with the appellant Woodson, and won of him 1,400/. in officers’ certificates; that Jouitt had won about the same sum of Miller j that Miller requestedWoodson to paj Jouitt the 1,400/. and that Woodson gave his bond to Jouitt for that sum, Jouitt at the time knowing that it was for this gaming debt. This bond was afterwards assigned to Barrett and Co. who say they had no information that the bond was for gaming at the time of the assignment, nor does Barrett, who alone answers, admit that it was founded on a gaming consideration. The proof that it was, is very abundant.
The question upon this case is, whether the assignee of a bond given for money won at gaming, for a valuable consideration, without notice of the nature of the debt, is barred from recovering the money, by the act to prevent unlawful gaming.
By the acts of 1748, c. 25. and Oct. 1779, c. 42. all promises, agreements, notes, bills, bonds, or other contracts, judgments, mortgages, or other securities, or conveyances whatsoever, where the whole, or any part of the consideration shall be for money, or other valuable thing whatsoever, won at gaming, or for the repayment of money lent to game with, shall be utterly void, frustrate, and of no effect, to all intents and purposes whatsoever.
It may not be amiss to observe, that although our statute is generally supposed to be a transcript from the statute of 9 of Anne against gaming, yet there is a material difference between them, in the insertion of the word contracts, in our law, which was omitted in the statute of Anne. It was upon the omission of that word in the statute, that the judgment in Robinson v. Bland,
said it was a plain case; and that, in his opinion, there was less reason for taking it out of the statutes against gaming than appeared in the cases cited from Washington.
2 Burrow, 1077. and 1 W. Black. Sep. 234. 256.
2 Strange, 1155.
5) Douglass, 713.
Ambler, 269.
2 W. Black. 1226.
1 Wash. 299. and 389.