Court Opinion

ID: 6949224
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 01:29:14.830548+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:08:01.503623
License: Public Domain

Walker, J. This suit was originally commenced before a justice of the peace of Bureau county, who on the trial rendered a judgment against the defendant, which was by him taken by appeal, to the Circuit Court. On a trial in the Circuit Court, the plaintiff again recovered a judgment against defendant,from which he appealed to this court. The action was to recover a wager of $25, that Nash could make a certain horse rack one-half mile in one and a half minutes. It was agreed by the parties on the trial below, that in pursuance of the wager, the horse of Nash was racked within the corporate limits of the town of Princeton, previous to the commencement of the suit, and that the horse failed to rack a half mile in one and a half minutes. When the wager was made, no place for the trial of the horse’s speed was agreed upon, but when the horse was racked, both of the parties were present, and Monheimer made no objection that the horse was racked in the corporate limits. It was agreed that the town of Princeton was legally incorporated under the laws of this State, at the time the horse was racked. That an ordinance of the town was then in full force which prohibited, under a penalty, furious riding or driving of horses in the corporate limits of the town, and the speed of the horse on this occasion was such that he reached a half mile in one minute and thirty-four seconds, along one of the streets of the town. The only question which we propose to consider in this case, is, whether the plaintiff was entitled to recover on this wager. It is a rule of .the common law that all contracts in violation of its principles, or opposed to legislative enactments, or that are opposed to public policy, are void. The object of all laws is to repress vice and to promote the general welfare of the State or society; and an individual shall not be assisted by the law, in enforcing a demand originating in a breach or violation, on his part, of its principles or enactments. Chit. Cont. 513. And the rule was laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States, 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 for its enforcement. And if the contract be in part only connected with the illegal transaction, and growing immediately out of it, though it be in fact a new contract, it is thereby equally tainted. Armstrong v. Taylor, 11 Wheat. R. 258. From the admitted facts in this case, while no time or place for the trial of the horse’s speed is expressly named, yet they do show that the horse was racked when both parties were present and no objection was interposed, and that the ordinance of the town was violated. The parties were both engaged in this transaction, both violating an enactment in executing their wager, and we are therefore irresistibly forced to the conclusion that the parties, when they made the wager, intended to make the trial of the horse’s speed just as it was tested. If this was not their intention, there would have been objection to the time, place and manner of trying the speed of the horse; but none was interposed, and the execution of the contract was intended to and did violate the town ordinance. The contract was clearly connected with the violation of a legal enactment. It then follows that the plaintiff below had no right to recover in this case, and the Circuit Court erred in rendering a judgment in his favor. The judgment of that court is reversed. Judgment reversed.