Court Opinion

ID: 3615570
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:58:48.629528+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:17:55.505394
License: Public Domain

The suit is by a broker or agent for his commissions earned in arranging a sale by defendant, who is a jobber of clothing, to the French Purchasing Mission, in New York City, in 1946. However, the sole question here is as to the sufficiency of two counterclaims. For present purposes, those counterclaims may be treated as one, since each alleges these same things: that defendant (vendor) agreed to pay, and did pay to plaintiff (broker) certain sums, on plaintiff's agreement that he would divide those sums with an employee or representative of the French Supply Council (vendee), but that plaintiff paid to that French representative part only of the latter's agreed share, wherefore defendant, in these counterclaims, sues for return of the part so assigned to the French representative but not paid to him. The question of law is aptly stated in appellants' brief thus (p. 2): "May a seller of goods, who has agreed with his broker that the broker shall divide his commissions with the buyer's purchasing agent and has paid the broker moneys intended to be so divided, recover back from the broker a portion of such moneys intended to be paid to the buyer's purchasing agent but not yet so paid?" Both courts below answered that question in the affirmative. We answer it in the negative.
These counterclaims plainly allege a conspiracy (see Penal Law, § 580) to violate section 439 of the Penal Law, which makes it a misdemeanor to give or offer such a commission or bonus to a purchasing agent. The contract or arrangement between plaintiff and defendant was thus illegal, criminal and unenforcible *Page 271 
(see Sirkin v. Fourteenth St. Store, 124 App. Div. 384). It is the settled law of this State (and probably of every other State) that a party to an illegal contract cannot ask a court of law to help him carry out his illegal object, nor can such a person plead or prove in any court a case in which he, as a basis for his claim, must show forth his illegal purpose (Reiner v.North Amer. Newspaper Alliance, 259 N.Y. 250; MunicipalMetallic Bed Mfg. Corp. v. Dobbs, 253 N.Y. 313, 316; MorganMunitions Corp. v. Studebaker Corp., 226 N.Y. 94;Flegenheimer v. Brogan, 284 N.Y. 268; Carmine v. Murphy,285 N.Y. 413; Furman v. Furman, 287 N.Y. 772; Baksi v.Wallman, 297 N.Y. 456). For no court should be required to serve as paymaster of the wages of crime, or referee between thieves. Therefore, the law "will not extend its aid to either of the parties" or "listen to their complaints against each other, but will leave them where their own acts have placed them" (Schermerhorn v. Talman, 14 N.Y. 93, 141). Conforming to that settled rule, this court and its predecessor have several times held that when an agent receives money to be spent for illegal purposes, his principal may not recover back so much of that money as the agent has failed so to spend, particularly when the illegal purpose has been partly or wholly attained and a part of the money expended therefor (Perkins v. Savage, 15 Wend. 412;Staples v. Gould, 9 N.Y. 520, 522; Leonard v. Poole,114 N.Y. 371, 378). Both Staples v. Gould (supra) and Leonard
v. People (supra), say that a broker or agent who knowingly participates in a criminal scheme is a principal, and in paridelicto with the one who employs him, so that neither may sue the other. Such is the New York law and it disposes of this case. Insofar as the Restatement of the Law of Agency (§ 412) is to the contrary, we do not concur in it.
We point out that we are passing on the precise question here involved, and no other. This is not a case where a mere agent or depository, receiving money for his principal, refuses to pay it over, on the ground that it was the fruit of an illegal contract between his principal and another (see Murray v. Vanderbilt,
39 Barb. 140, 152; Merritt v. Millard, 4 Keyes 208;Woodworth v. Bennett, 43 N.Y. 273, 276; and the reference to such a situation, by way of dictum, in Leonard v. Poole,supra, 114 N.Y. at p. 379). Nor are we deciding what the result would be had this *Page 272 
defendant repented of his wrong, and demanded back his money, before any attempt had been made by plaintiff to bribe the purchasing agent (see Morgan v. Groff, 4 Barb. 524; SpringCo. v. Knowlton, 103 U.S. 49, 59; Schley v. Andrews,225 N.Y. 110, 114).
The orders should be reversed, with costs in all courts, each certified question answered in the negative, and the motion to dismiss granted as to both the first and second counterclaims in the amended answer.
LOUGHRAN, Ch. J., LEWIS, CONWAY, DYE and FULD, JJ., concur.
Orders reversed, etc.