Summary
In Hodges v. Pitman, 4 N.C. 276, it was held that money won by gaming and paid could not be recovered back, because it could not be considered personal estate transferred to satisfy or secure money so won.
Summary of this case from Hudspeth v. WilsonOpinion
(January Term, 1816.)
Money won at gaming, and paid, cannot be recovered back by the loser.
THIS was an action brought to recover back money which the defendant had won by gaming at cards, and which the plaintiff had paid at the time of playing. The cause was tried before TAYLOR, C. J., at Cumberland Superior Court, when the jury, under charge of the court that the law was in favor of the defendant, found a verdict for him. A motion for a new trial, for misdirection of the court, having been made and overruled, the plaintiff appealed to this Court.
Henry for plaintiff.
McMillan for defendant.
There is no example to be found in the books where money has been paid by one of two parties to the other on an illegal contract — both being parteceps criminis in equal degree — that an action has been maintained to recover it back again; and it is unquestionably one of the greatest securities against transactions of this description that the contracting parties can have no redress against each other, and that where they are equally guilty of an infraction of the law, the claims of either may be effectually resisted.
Of a principle so salutary in its operation in restraining crimes and immoralities we should be reluctant to weaken the force by any refinement of construction or subtlety of reasoning; and without a broad (277) legislative direction to the contrary, we feel not less disposed than the able men who have gone before us so to expound the law as to promote the practice of private virtue and check the growth of this most ruinous vice of gaming.
We do not find in the act of 1788 language sufficiently explicit for this purpose. It is at best doubtful, and does not afford a satisfactory ground of decision to overrule the common law. The words "other personal estate" seem to relate to specific chattels, as they follow the words "transfer of slaves," and it would be difficult, if not impossible, to enumerate all the chattels that might be so transferred. Besides, the word transfer is ordinarily applied to the sale or pledge of a chattel; never to the payment of money. A horse is transferred, but money is paid. If the latter had been intended by the Legislature, it would probably have been expressed. If it is now to be understood, the act must be read thus: "the transfer of money to secure or satisfy the payment of money."
Upon the whole, we are furnished with a clear, strong light to direct us in the plain, open road of the common law, and that leads to the advancement of morality and the suppression of vice. We ought not to be diverted from it by the faint glimmering in the statute, into the devious track of doubtful and mischievous construction.
Judgment affirmed.
NOTE. — See act of 1788 (1 Rev. Stat., ch. 51) and the cases upon the construction of it. Mooring v. Stanton, 1 N.C. 52; Anonymous, 3 N.C. 231; Stowell v. Guthrie, ibid., 297; Turner v. Peacock, 13 N.C. 305; Dunn v. Halloway, 16 N.C. 322.
Cited: Jones v. Jones, post, 548; Hudspeth v. Wilson, 13 N.C. 373.
(278)