In 1816 an association, called the Baltimore Company, was
organized in Baltimore for the purpose of furnishing advances and
supplies in fitting out a military expedition under General Mina,
against Mexico, then a part of the dominions of the King of Spain.
See 52 U. S. 11 How.
529, and
53 U. S. 12 How.
111;
55 U. S. 14 How.
610.
An assignment of a share in this company, made in 1829 to a
bona fide purchaser for a valuable consideration, was
valid.
Although the transaction was illegal in 1816 and had not changed
its character in 1829, yet the assignment was not tainted with any
illegality. The claim against Mexico, as being one of the efforts
to establish her independence of Spain, rested entirely upon her
sense of honor in acknowledging the obligation after her
independence was achieved; but after the debt was admitted, the
bona fide assignee became substituted to all the rights of
the original shareholder.
The cases examined, showing how far a
bona fide
assignee of an illegal contract can claim and enforce his contract
of assignment.
An assignment of "all my undivided ninth part, right, title, and
interest, of every kind whatever in the claim" carried with it an
assignment of a claim to commissions as well as the share
itself.
Moreover, the original holder or his representatives would be
estopped from claiming the proceeds after they had been received by
his
bona fide assignee.
The controversy related to a share in the Mexican Company, which
was held by Goodwin, and also to a claim on his behalf to a
commission of five percentum upon the proceeds in virtue of his
agency and under an agreement with the company.
The nature of this case has already been explained in the
preceding volumes of these reports, and is again touched upon in
the opinion of the Court in the present case. The reader is
referred to
52 U. S. 11 How.
529;
53 U. S. 12 How.
111; and
55 U. S. 14 How.
610.
The bill was originally filed by McBlair in a state court, but
was removed into the circuit court of the United States by Gibbes
and Oliver, who stated themselves to be citizens of the State of
New York.
On the 13th of March, 1852, McBlair took out letters of
administration upon the estate of Lyde Goodwin, from the Orphans'
Court of Baltimore City, and filed his bill to recover from the
executors of Oliver the proceeds of Goodwin's share in the company
and also his commission of five percentum. The claim rested upon
the allegation that all the assignments which Goodwin had made to
Oliver were void, as was also the purchase by Oliver of Goodwin's
interest from his trustee in insolvency. If these were void, the
proceeds of the share would, of course, belong to Goodwin's
personal representatives.
On the 3d of December, 1853, the circuit court dismissed the
Page 58 U. S. 233
bill with costs, whereupon the complainant appealed to this
Court.
MR. JUSTICE NELSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The bill was filed by the administrator of Lyde Goodwin against
the executors of Robert Oliver to recover the proceeds of a share
in an association called the Baltimore Company,
Page 58 U. S. 234
which had a claim against the Mexican government that was
allowed under the convention of 1839 "for the adjustment of claims
of citizens of the United States against the Mexican Republic." The
claim of the company was founded on a contract with General Mina in
1816 for advances and supplies in fitting out a military expedition
against the dominions of the King of Spain. The bill also sought to
recover a commission of five percentum which the members of the
company had agreed to give to Goodwin for his services as agent in
soliciting the claim against Mexico. The share and commissions, as
charged, amount to $67,337.15.
The executors of Oliver set up a right to retain the fund for
the benefit of the estate under and by virtue of a purchase of
Goodwin's share in this company and also of his right to the
commissions by their testator in 1829. The purchase and transfer
took place the 30th May in that year for a good and valuable
consideration.
A question was made on the argument whether or not the
assignment of Goodwin was sufficiently comprehensive to include a
right to the commissions as well as to the proceeds of the share.
We are satisfied that it is. The language is very broad: "All my
undivided ninth part, right, title, and interest, of every kind
whatever, in the claim on the government of Mexico," &c. And
again:
"The object and intention of this agreement is to make a full
and complete transfer to the said Robert Oliver of all my right,
title, and interest aforesaid"
&c. The commissions were dependent upon the allowance of the
claims of the company against Mexico, and of course an interest
intimately connected with them; without the allowance of the one,
the other would be valueless.
The understanding of Goodwin himself of the intention and effect
of the assignment accords with this view as derived from his
deposition taken in behalf of the claims of the company and used
before the board of commissioners, and also from his testimony in
the proceedings before the Baltimore County Court for the
distribution of the fund among the several claimants.
This share of Lyde Goodwin in the company and his commissions
have heretofore been the subject of consideration in this Court.
The case is reported in
52 U. S. 11 How.
529. George M. Gill the permanent trustee of Goodwin, who had taken
the benefit of the insolvent laws of Maryland in 1817, claimed this
fund before the Baltimore County Court as part of the estate of the
insolvent, against the right and title of the executors of Oliver,
claiming under this assignment of 1829. The Baltimore County Court
held that the fund passed by the insolvent assignment of 1817 to
Gill the permanent trustee. The case was
Page 58 U. S. 235
taken to the Court of Appeals of Maryland, where the decree was
reversed and the fund distributed to Oliver's executors, the
appellate court holding that the contract of the company with
General Mina was made in violation of the neutrality act of the
United States of 1794, and, being thus founded upon an illegal
transaction, constituted no part of the property or estate of the
insolvent within the meaning of the Maryland insolvent laws. Gill
brought the case to this Court under the 25th section of the
Judiciary Act for the purpose of revising that decision, but the
court dismissed the case for want of jurisdiction, a majority of
the judges holding that the only question involved in the decision
below was the true construction of a statute of the state and that
it belonged to the Maryland court to interpret its own statutes.
Whether that interpretation was right or wrong, was a matter with
which this Court had no concern.
Gill the permanent trustee, having thus failed to establish a
title to the fund under the Maryland insolvent laws, the litigation
is again revived respecting the fund, in behalf and for the benefit
of the personal representatives of Goodwin, on the ground that the
moneys realized upon the contract with General Mina, from the
Mexican government, is to be regarded as a subsequent acquisition
of property by the insolvent, belonging to his estate, and to be
dealt with accordingly.
Hence this bill filed against the executors of Oliver to recover
possession of the fund. The defense set up to this demand of the
administrator of Goodwin, and which it is insisted is conclusive
against him, is the assignment of the contract of General Mina, by
Goodwin himself, to Robert Oliver, in 1829, which has been already
referred to; that having thus parted with all his right or claim to
that contract, for a full and valuable consideration, the proceeds
thereof derived from the recognition and fulfillment by the Mexican
government belong to the estate of Oliver, and not to that of
Goodwin, and vested his executors with the equitable right to
receive the moneys, and which have been paid accordingly under the
decree of the Court of Appeals of Maryland in making a distribution
of the fund.
It is urged, however, in answer to this view that the contract
with General Mina being illegal, the sale and assignment of it from
Goodwin to Oliver must also be illegal, and consequently that no
interest therein, equitable or legal, passed to Oliver's
executors.
But this position is not maintainable. The transaction out of
which the assignment to Oliver arose was uninfected with any
illegality. The consideration paid was not only legal, but
meritorious, the relinquishment of a debt due from Goodwin to him.
The assignment was subsequent, collateral to, and wholly
Page 58 U. S. 236
independent of, the illegal transactions upon which the
principal contract was founded. Oliver was not a party to these
transactions nor in any way connected with them.
It may be admitted that even a subsequent collateral contract,
if made in aid and in furtherance of the execution of one infected
with illegality, partakes of its nature and is equally in violation
of law; but that is not this case. Oliver, by the assignment,
became simply owner in the place of Goodwin, and as to any public
policy or concern supposed to be involved in the making, or in the
fulfillment of such contracts, it was a matter of entire
indifference to which it belonged. The assignee took it, liable to
any defense, legal or equitable, to which it was subject in the
hands of Goodwin. In consequence of the illegality, the contract
was invalid and incapable of being enforced in a court of justice.
The fulfillment depended altogether upon the voluntary act of Mina
or of those representing him.
No obligation existed except what arose from a sense of honor on
the part of those deriving a benefit from the transaction out of
which it arose. Its value rested upon this ground, and this alone.
The demand was simply a debt of honor. But if the party who might
set up the illegality chooses to waive it, and pay the money, he
cannot afterwards reclaim it. And if even the money be paid to a
third person for the other party, such third person cannot set up
the illegality of the contract on which the payment has been made
and withhold it for himself. In
Faikney v. Renous, 4 Burr.
2069, where two persons were jointly concerned in an illegal
stock-jobbing business with a third, and a loss having arisen, one
of them paid the whole, and took a security from the other for his
share, the security was held to be valid as a new contract,
uninfected by the original transaction. And in
Petrie v.
Hannay, 3 T.R. 418, where one of the partners, under similar
circumstances, paid the whole at the instance of the other, he was
allowed to recover for the proportionate share. These cases are
examined and approved in
Armstrong v.
Toler, 11 Wheat. 258.
In
Tenant v. Elliot, 1 B. & P. 3, the defendant, a
broker, effected an insurance for the plaintiff which was illegal,
being in violation of the navigation laws; but on a loss happening,
the underwriters paid the money to the broker, who refused to pay
it over to the insured, setting up the illegality, upon which an
action for money had and received was brought. The plaintiff
recovered on the ground that the implied promise of the defendant,
arising out of the receipt of the money for the plaintiff, was a
new contract not affected by the illegality of the original
transaction. The same principle was applied and enforced in the
case of
Farmer v. Russell, 1 B. & P. 296.
Page 58 U. S. 237
In
Thomson v. Thomson, 7 Ves. 470, there had been a
sale of the command of an East India ship to the defendant, and as
a consideration he stipulated to pay an annuity of �200 to
the previous commander so long as he should continue in command of
the ship.
This contract of sale was illegal. Subsequently the defendant
relinquished the command and another person was appointed in his
place. But under the regulation adopted by the East India Company
to prevent the sale of the commands of their ships, an allowance
was made to the defendant, on his retiring, of �3,540.
The bill in this case was filed for the purpose of procuring a
decree for the investment of a portion of this fund to satisfy the
annuity of �200, praying that the value of it might be
ascertained and paid out of the money allowed by the company.
The objection made was that the contract providing for the
annuity was illegal, and a court of equity therefore would not
interfere.
The Master of the Rolls, Sir William Grant, agreed that the
contract was illegal; he admitted there was an equity against the
fund if it could be reached by a legal agreement, but observed,
"you have no claim to this money, except through the medium of an
illegal agreement, which, according to the determinations, you
cannot support." "If the case," he further observed,
"could have been brought to this that the company had paid this
into the hands of a third person for the use of the plaintiff, he
might have recovered from that third person, who could not have set
up this objection as a reason for not performing the trust; . . .
but in this instance the money is paid to the party. . . . There is
nothing collateral in respect to which, the agreement being out of
the question, a collateral demand arises, as in the case of
stock-jobbing differences."
So in
Sharp v. Taylor, 2 Ph.Ch. 801, the bill was
filed, among other things, to recover a moiety of the freight
money, the whole of which had come into the hands of one of the
joint owners. The defense set up was that the trade in which the
vessel had been engaged, and in which the freight had been earned,
was in violation of the navigation laws and illegal. But Lord
Chancellor Cottenham answered that the plaintiff was not asking for
the enforcement of an agreement adverse to the provision of the act
of Parliament, nor seeking compensation and payment for an illegal
voyage; that, he observed, was disposed of when Taylor the
defendant received the money; the plaintiff was seeking only his
share of the realized profit.
Again, he observed, can one of two partners possess himself of
the property of the firm and be permitted to retain it if he
Page 58 U. S. 238
can show that in realizing it some provision in some act of
Parliament has been violated? The answer is that the transaction
alleged to be illegal is completed and closed, and will not be in
any manner affected by what the court is asked to do as between the
parties. The difference, he observes, between enforcing illegal
contracts and asserting title to the money which has arisen from
them is distinctly taken in
Tenant v. Elliot and
Farmer v. Russell, and recognized by Sir William Grant in
Thompson v. Thompson.
These cases show that the assignment of Lyde Goodwin to Robert
Oliver, in 1829, being collateral to and disconnected from the
illegal transaction out of which the Mina contract arose, was valid
and binding upon Goodwin, and vested in Oliver all the benefits and
advantages, whatever they might be, derived from that contract.
The assignment from Goodwin to Oliver, though the assignment of
an illegal contract -- which contract therefore imposed no legal
obligation, and rested simply upon the honor of the parties -- was
not within the condemnation of the Maryland insolvent laws as
expounded by her courts, as the right was not derived under but
entirely independent of them. Those laws have no application to
this assignment.
And further, that the money having been realized by his
executors, according to the purpose and object of the assignment,
becomes a part of the assets of the estate, which belong to the
personal representatives.
Another ground may be briefly stated which, in our judgment, is
equally conclusive against the complainant. The assignment of 1829,
of the Mina contract, not being tainted with illegality, and
therefore obligatory upon Goodwin, if he were alive and claiming
the fund against the representatives of Oliver, having parted with
all his right in the subject to their testator, for a valuable
consideration, would be estopped from setting up any such claim,
and, of course, his personal representatives can be in no better
situation.
We have not deemed it necessary to look into the case for the
purpose of ascertaining whether Goodwin, at the time of the
proceedings in the Baltimore County Court, had such notice of them
as required that he should have appeared there and asserted his
right; and hence, that the decree of that court, in the
distribution of the fund, was conclusive upon such right. That
question is unimportant inasmuch as, in our opinion, the executors
of Oliver have, independently of that ground, established a
complete title to the fund in controversy.
Page 58 U. S. 239
We think the decree of the court below was right, and should
be
Affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY.
I shall state my opinion in this case in the cases of
Williams' Administrator and
Gooding's
Administrator, as the three cases are nearly connected, and
depend on the same principles.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Maryland, and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, it
is now here ordered, adjudged, and decreed by this Court that the
decree of the said circuit court in this cause be and the same is
hereby affirmed with costs.