Court Opinion

ID: 6413854
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 11:54:40.341203+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:28.152215
License: Public Domain

Dewey, J.
The question here is not that which is supposed by the counsel of the plaintiff, whether a clerk who in the ordinary employment of his master should receive money from illegal sales could withhold the same on the ground that it was received from illegal sales made in the business of his master. Such a case would not present the circumstances attending the present transaction. There would be no lease of the shop to the clerk, and no stipulation on his part to pay to his employer each evening the receipts of the day. The money so received by the clerk would at all times be the money of the master, and in the possession of the master. We can view the present contract in no other light than as a contract designed to carry into effect an unlawful purpose. This being so, no action can be maintained upon it, nor can there be a recovery of the money in the hands of the defendant which is the fruit of this illegal agreement. White v. Buss, 3 Cush. 448, and cases there cited. In Toler v. Armstrong, 4 Wash. C. C. 297, it is said that the rule now clearly settled is, “ that where the contract grows immediately out of and is connected with an illegal or immoral act, a court of justice will not lend its aid to enforce it.”
If money be received by an agent for his principal in the course of an illegal transaction to which both are parties, the latter cannot sue the former for money had and received to his use. Nicholson v. Gooch, 5 El. & Bl. 999.
The present is not a case of money coming into the hands of a third party, not connected with the illegal contract, but it is an attempt to recover in a suit at law money received by one who was a party to the original illegal contract, having for its object the selling of intoxicating liquors in violation of law.
Contracts in evasion of license and excise acts are illegal; and any agreement made with the view of enabling the party *257to carry on trade without the required license is invalid, and not to be enforced by a court of justice. Ritchie v. Smith, 6 C. B. 474. It appears by the facts stated that neither the plaintiff nor the defendant had any license or authority to sell intoxicating liquors, and that the sales to be made, as the plaintiff well knew, were in violation of the statutes of Massachusetts. Upon the case stated by the parties, the court are of opinion that judgment should be entered for the defendant.