Court Opinion

ID: 6905593
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 21:59:51.688861+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:06:20.120407
License: Public Domain

Reversed and nonsuit entered February 13, 1917.
On the Merits.
(162 Pac. 1058.)
Department 1. Statement by
Mr. Justice Benson.
This is an action wherein plaintiffs seek to recover for detective services performed by them at the request of the defendant. The complaint alleges, in substance, that defendant had been convicted in the municipal court of B andón of the crime of giving liquor to two minor girls named Simpson; that the defendant had appealed from such conviction to the Circuit Court; that he was also threatened with an action for damages for being the father of an unborn *48child then supposed to be carried by one of those girls; that he employed plaintiffs at an ag’reed price of $12 per day and all expenses to assist and render services in connection with the defense of such litigation; that such services were performed and continued from September 20, 1914, to March 26, 1915, and included moneys advanced, etc. There follows an allegation of total indebtedness under the contract of $3,226.80, with a credit of $1,622.30, and a prayer for judgment for an unpaid balance of $1,604.50. The answer admits the employment of plaintiffs for services in the liquor cases only; that those cases were finally disposed of by the acquittal of defendant on December 14, 1914, and alleges that plaintiffs have already been paid more than was due them. From a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs, defendant appeals.
Reversed. Nonsuit. Entered.
For appellant there was a brief and an oral argument by Mr. Charles F. McKnight.
For respondents there was a brief over the names of Mr. Austin 8. Hammond, Mr. John B. Goss- and Mr. A. H. Derbyshire, with oral arguments by Mr. Hammond and Mr. Goss.
Mr. Justice Benson
delivered the'- opinion- of "the court.
4. When plaintiffs rested their case defendant moved for a judgment of nonsuit upon the following grounds:
“For the reason that it appears in the testimony for the plaintiffs that the alleged contract was and is against public policy and should not be enforced.”
This motion was denied, and the ruling of the court thereon is assigned as error. The bill of exceptions *49does not purport to contain all the testimony given upon the trial, and plaintiffs insist that, in the absence of any part of the evidence, this court is not in a position to consider an assignment of this nature. It is true generally that the decision upon a motion for nonsuit will not be considered unless the transcript of the entire testimony is before the appellate court, but there is a well-established exception thereto which is very clearly enunciated in Goodale Lumber Co. v. Shaw, 41 Or. 544, 547 (69 Pac. 546, 547), wherein Mr. Chief Justice Moore, speaking for the court, says:
“The law, however, does not require the performance of vain things; and where, as in the present instance, the testimony set out in the bill of exceptions clearly shows the mode adopted to prove a particular fact, and also contains a statement which necessarily negatives the possibility of other testimony having been introduced upon the issue involved, the reason for the rule announced in the cases adverted to ceases, and the rule, which is otherwise general, has ingrafted thereon and become subject to an exception, which is illustrated in cases like the one at bar, where the bill states the objection with so much, but no more, of the evidence than is necessary to explain it.”
The present bill of exceptions contains the following statement:
“The only evidence offered or given by or on behalf of plaintiff at the trial as to the nature of the contract between the plaintiffs and the defendant which is set out in the complaint is as follows.”
5. It is clear, then, that a motion for a nonsuit is properly before us. The plaintiff Mitchell appears to have been the one member of his firm who did business with the defendant and performed the services for which a recovery is sought. It appears from his own testimony that he was employed primarily to so man*50age things that the defendant should be acquitted in the “liquor cases” upon appeal, not so much on account of the intrinsic importance thereof, as for the moral effect that a conviction might have upon the outcome of the anticipated action for damages for bastardy. It seems to be beyond question that Mitchell from the beginning knew that Coach was guilty of the offense of which he had been convicted in the police court, and that what was required of him by his employer was so to manipulate affairs that the witnesses for the prosecution either should be removed from the jurisdiction of the trial court or be so influenced as to commit perjury and thus save Coach from a'conviction. Sequestration was first tried, and the girls were concealed in a house in the suburbs of Marshfield, under the guardianship of one or more of plaintiffs’ “operators.” Subsequently they were started to Portland still in the care of one of plaintiffs’ employees, but were arrested en route and brought back. In the final outcome they swore falsely at the trial, and Coach’s acquittal was secured. During the interval between the employment and the hearing in court Mitchell was in constant touch with these witnesses and advancing them money, in at least one instance paying money to one of the girls or sending it to her by an intermediary because she had threatened to “squeal” to the district attorney. When upon the witness-stand the plaintiff Mitchell said:
“After we closed up this contract with Coach and I was working for him I went right along, and done as he wanted done as far as I dared go.”
When asked as to the nature of his employment after the liquor cases were disposed of, he replied:
“The nature of the work principally was this: We were trying to get Mr. Treadgold; Joe was going to spend $20,000 to get Treadgold.”
*51There is much more of the testimony leading to the same conclusion, but we have outlined enough. The sole object of the employment of plaintiffs was to defeat the ends of justice with a reckless disregard of the means employed to accomplish such purpose. As is well said by Mr. Chief Justice Bean in Jackson v. Baker, 48 Or. 155 (85 Pac. 512):
“If the illegality appears from the complaint or the plaintiff’s case, the court will, at any stage of the proceedings, dismiss the action, although such illegality is not pleaded as a defense, or insisted upon by the parties, and may have been expressly waived by them. It is an objection which the court itself is bound to raise in the due administration of justice, regardless of the wishes of the parties.”
It is not often that a case arises where the evidence leaves an appellate court as free from doubt as we find ourselves in this case.
The judgment will be reversed and a nonsuit entered here. Reversed. Nonsuit Entered.
Mr. Chief Justice McBride, Mr. Justice Harris and Mr. Justice Burnett concur.