The defendant on Sunday or Lord’s day, hired' of the plaintiff a team for the purpose of pleasure driving on the-same day. The defendant used the team for that purpose on-that day as the plaintiff supposed he would, and while so using-the team he injured it, not “wilfully, but solely by his negligence.. He returned the team to the plaintiff in a damaged condition on-the same day and refused to pay for the injury or the hire. The-plaintiff, thereupon, afterward brought these two actions, one in-case for the injury caused by the defendant’s negligence, the-other in assumpsit for the hire. The defendant invokes in-defense of both actions, the "Sunday Law,” E. S., c. 124, § 20..
Before the enactment of E. S., c. 82, § 116, in 1880, the-plaintiff could not have maintained either action. The contract itself was of course void under the old law; and Parker v. Latner, 60 Maine, 528, expressly decides that on these facts an action for negligence could not have been maintained.
How far has the new statute, E. S., c. 82, § 116, changed the-law? It does not in terms make lawful anything which was-before unlawful. It does not say that contracts made on Sunday are valid or enforceable. It does not say that men may work on Sunday or play on Sunday without offense. No inhibitions of the statute or common law against Sunday business or pleasures are repealed. The new statute does not create any new rights of actions. It simply forbids the interposition of the "Sunday law,” in defense to certain enumerated actions in certain enumerated cases. Those actions and cases’ not enumerated in the statute remain unaffected by it. The statute is limited in terms to actions upon contracts where the defend*116ant has received a valuable consideration. In such an action and case the. defendant is delayed in interposing the "Sunday law” in defense until he restores the consideration. If he restores the consideration he may then interpose that defense and defeat the action.
The hiring and using of this team on Sunday were illegal. The plaintiff was a party to that illegal transaction. The statute does not forbid the defendant defending on that ground against the action on the case for negligence. Such an action is not named nor implied in the statute. It may be a casus omissus, but we cannot supply it. We must recognize the defense to the action for negligence on the authority of Parker v. Latner, supra, and dismiss that action.
The action of assumpsit is an action on the contract. The plaintiff relinquished the use of the team to the defendant in consideration of the defendant’s promise to pay for the use. This constitutes a technical valuable consideration for such promise. The only infirmity about it is the operation of the Sunday law upon it. In all other respects the consideration is valid as a foundation for a promise, and in that one respect the statute cures the defect. The contract and the action upon it are thus within the terms of the statute.
The defendant cannot now defend this action of assumpsit on the ground of the contract having been made on Sunday until he restore that consideration. That he cannot restore it — that in the nature of things it is not restoi’able, does not relieve him. He need not have made the contract. Having made the contract and received the consideration he must either restore the consideration or abide the contract. If he cannot do the former he must do the latter. The statute is explicit and imperative. Wentworth v. Woodside, 79 Maine, 156. We can no more curtail it to shut out this action, than we could extend it to include the action on the case for negligence.
In the action on the case for negligence, Plaintiff nonsuit.
In the action of assumpsit for hire, Defendant defaulted.
Peters, C. J., Virgin, Libbey, Poster and Whitehouse, JJ., concurred.