
    Robert V. Johnston vs. Alexander A. Senecal, administrator.
    Hampden.
    September 17, 1952.
    December 4, 1952.
    Present: Qua, C.J., Lummus, Ronan, Wilkins, & Williams, JJ.
    
      Partnership, Legality of purpose, Accounting. Contract, Validity. Public Policy. Evidence, Presumptions and burden of proof.
    An affirmative defence pleaded by a defendant was established by certain testimony of the plaintiff which was not contradicted or affected by any other testimony and was binding on the plaintiff.
    A partnership contract between partners engaged in the sale of parking meters, who, in their efforts to sell them, entertained with food and liquor municipal officers having power to purchase them for their respective municipalities, was illegal as contrary to public policy where such entertainment was “one of the purposes of the partnership”; and, even if the partnership made no gift to any official apart from such entertainment and was not engaged in bribery, one of the partners was not entitled to maintain a suit in equity for a partnership accounting.
    Bill in equity, filed in the Superior Court on May 17, 1951.
    The suit was heard by O’Brien, J.
    In this court the case was submitted on briefs.
    
      Dudley B. Wallace & Frederick S. Pillsbury, for the defendant.
    
      James S. Bulkley & William C. Giles, Jr., for the plaintiff.
   Lummus, J.

This is a bill in equity by a surviving equal partner against the administrator of the estate of Leo P. Senecal, who died on June 28, 1950, for an accounting of the assets of a partnership consisting of the plaintiff and the defendant’s intestate in the business of selling parking meters to municipalities. The answer of the defendant sets up the only defence now relied on, that “the transactions from which the plaintiff’s claim arises were illegal, void and contrary to public policy.” The judge found that that defence “has not been sustained by the evidence,” and entered a decree ordering the defendant to pay to the plaintiff a balance due with costs. The only evidence to support the defence above quoted or to show the purposes of the partnership was the testimony of the plaintiff, which was not contradicted or affected by other testimony, and bound the plaintiff. Smith v. Brown, 302 Mass. 432, 433. Murphy v. Smith, 307 Mass. 64, 66. McFaden v. Nordblom, 307 Mass. 574, 575. Moskow v. Smith, 318 Mass. 76, 78. Bevacqua v. Ryan, 326 Mass. 137.

The question to be determined is whether a contract of partnership which contemplates the furnishing of entertainment to public officers as a means of carrying on the business, is legal and enforceable.

The testimony of the plaintiff on the question of the legality of the purposes of the partnership was in substance that the partners, in their efforts to sell parking meters, entertained with food and liquor the municipal officers having power to purchase them for the municipality, and that such entertainment was “one of the purposes of the partnership.” But the plaintiff testified that no gift was made to any official apart from such entertainment. Because such entertainment was one of the very purposes of the partnership, the case is not governed by Barry v. Capen, 151 Mass. 99, 100, relied on by the plaintiff, where Holmes, J., said, “The plaintiff may have rendered illegal services, and yet the defendant’s promise may have been in consideration of the plaintiff’s promising to perform, or performing, legal ones only. If the contract was legal, it would not be made illegal by misconduct on the part of the plaintiff in carrying it out.” See also Fox v. Rogers, 171 Mass. 546; Kerr v. American Pneumatic Service Co. 188 Mass. 27; Tocci v. Lembo, 325 Mass. 707, 709.

By G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 268, § 7, the crime of bribery is defined as the giving to a public officer of “any gift or gratuity whatever,” with intent to influence him in his official capacity. It has been held elsewhere that furnishing food and drink to a public officer by way of entertainment, to be consumed by that officer presently, while wholly bad in morals, is not bribery under a statute like ours. Randall v. Evening News Association, 97 Mich. 136, 143. If we assume in this case that the partnership was not engaged in bribery, it does not follow that its purposes were lawful. Conduct which is not criminal may nevertheless be so unlawful that it will vitiate a contract which calls for it. In Fuller v. Dame, 18 Pick. 472, in which the opinion was written by Chief Justice Shaw, notes given by the owner of land to a stockholder in a railroad corporation to be paid when the railroad should locate its warehouse near the land, were held invalid. The Chief Justice said (page 481) that the law “avoids contracts and promises made with a view to place one under wrong influences, those which offer him a temptation to do that which may injuriously affect the rights and interests of third persons.” In accord is Guernsey v. Cook, 120 Mass. 501. In Frost v. Belmont, 6 Allen, 152, although the decision was rested in part upon the want of authority of the town to pay for expenses incurred in attempting to procure from the Legislature an act of incorporation, this court said (page 159), “The practice of procuring members of the legislature to act under the influence of what they have eaten and drunk at houses of entertainment tends to render those.of them who yield to such influences. wholly unfit to act in such cases. They are disqualified from acting fairly towards interested parties, or towards the public. The tendency and object of these influences are to obtain by corruption what it is supposed cannot be obtained fairly.”

In Adams v. East Boston Co. 236 Mass. 121, 128-129, it was said that the test of invalidity “is, whether the underlying tendency of the contract under the conditions described was manifestly injurious to the public interest and welfare. . . It is sufficient if the contract, when applied to the facts, inevitably tends to results which impair not merely the character of the Legislature, but the public confidence in its integritjn” In Noble v. Mead-Morrison Manuf. Co. 237 Mass. 5, 21, Rugg, C. J., said, “A contract respecting public service and public welfare is illegal, which by its egress terms, by its inherent tendency, or by the means necessarily or by fair implication to be employed in its execution, requires the performance of acts corrupt in themselves or inclining toward the pollution of public or private honesty and integrity of purpose.” The Restatement (Contracts, § 559) declares that “A bargain to influence or to attempt to influence a legislative body or members thereof, otherwise than by presenting facts and arguments to show that the desired action is of public advantage, is illegal . . ..” And in the Restatement (Contracts, § 562) it is said that “A bargain to endeavor to secure a "public contract by presenting to the official having power to make the contract inducements except such as relate to the desirability on public grounds of entering into the contract, is illegal . . . .”

In the opinion of a majority of the court the contract of partnership in this case was illegal, and the plaintiff has no right to an accounting of profits received under it. The final decree is reversed, and a new final decree is to be entered, dismissing the bill with costs.

So ordered.  