For a number of years prior to the contract on which this action is brought, defendant had been in the employ of the “National Association of Manufacturers” in a confidential *750capacity, which defendant himself describes as “field agent and assistant in lobby work at Washington, D. 0.” During this period his relations to the “Association” were such as to enable him to secure and retain possession or to take copies of a mass of communications, chiefly in the shape of letters passing between the “Association” or its officers and numerous persons with whom it or they had dealings. Having left the employ of the association, defendant conceived the idea that these communications had a. pecuniary value, whereupon he entered into a contract with plaintiff by which the latter undertook their sale for publication and, in case of success, was to receive for his services one-half of the sale price. As the result of plaintiff’s efforts, defendant entered into a written contract of sale with the representatives of a newspaper, for which he received $10,000, for his share of which plaintiff recovered the judgment appealed from.
By defendant’s contract of sale he agreed to furnish the newspaper with “ all letters, books, memoranda and documents in his possession relative to the transactions of the National Association of Manufacturers and affiliating organizations.” Attached to this contract is a “synopsis” of the letters which states that “these letters,” to the number of over 5,000, “ prove that the National Association of Manufacturers has been engaged, unknown to a majority of its 4,000 members, for ten years past, in a corrupt political campaign to prevent tariff legislation. * * * They implicate more than thirty politicians, many of national renown, and convict the president and general manager and secretary of the N. A. M. of bribing.” The “synopsis ” covers several printed pages of similar description which, if true, justifies one of its paragraphs, which says of the letters: “They furnish material for a very great journalistic sensation.”
These facts, so far at least as the parties to this action are concerned, show that the contract on which the action is based was nothing more than a sordid attempt to get money through the sale, for sensational purposes, of communications and information which had come into defendant’s possession while acting in a confidential capacity. It scarcely needs the authority of decided cases to show that such contracts are *751immoral and will not be enforced. (Davenport v. Hulme, 11 Misc. Rep. 521; Coffey v. Burke, 132 App. Div. 128, 131.) Whether the industry in which the defendant’s employer was engaged was or was not a proper one, does not enter into the question. The quality of its acts is not at issue. If its business or methods were reprehensible or contrary to law, what circumstances, short of information to the public prosecutor, would have justified defendant in disclosing the knowledge he had of them, need not be discussed. It is sufficient to say that no such disclosure by an employee will escape the ban of the law where its sole motive is pecuniary gain and its sole purpose a “ journalistic sensation.” The fact that the illegality of the contract was neither pleaded nor urged at the trial is of no moment, for in every case, regardless of the pleadings, where it appears that the contract before the court is opposed to good morals or sound public policy, or offends the provisions of a statute enacted for the public good, the court will of its own motion deny relief thereunder. (Dunham v. Hastings Pavement Co., 56 App. Div. 244.)
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed, without costs, and the complaint dismissed, without costs.
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred; Dowling, J., dissented.