This is an action of replevin in the detinet for a gold watch, two diamond rings and two diamond pins, the property of the plaintiff, of. the value of nine hundred and fifty dollars. On the 21st of August, 1864, the defendant loaned to plaintiff five hundred dollars, in consideration of which the latter promised to pay the former one month thereafter said sum with interest thereon at the rate of seven per cent per month; and to secure the payment of the principal and interest, the plaintiff delivered to the defendant, who was a pawnbroker, the property above mentioned, in pledge. On the 4th of the following September the plaintiff tendered to the defendant five hundred and twenty dollars for the payment of the sum borrowed and the interest thereon for one month at the rate of four per cent per month, and thereupon demanded the property pledged. The defendant refused to comply with the demand. Hence this action.
To the complaint setting forth the facts, the defendant demurred on the grounds : First—Because by the complaint, it appears the plaintiff contracted to pay seven per cent interest per month on the sum borrowed, while the alleged tender was at the rate of only four per cent per mouth. Second— Because the Act entitled “An Act to define the duties and liabilities of pawnbrokers and pledgees,” passed April 17th, 1861, is in violation of section eleven of Article I of the Constitution, and therefore void. The demurrer was overruled with leave to the defendant to answer, which he declined to do, and in due time judgment by default, and also final judgment was entered against him.
Bate of interest pawnbrokers may charge.
The second and third sections of the Act, to which the defendant refers in his demurrer, are as follows:
“ Sec. 2. The rate of interest or percentage which shall be lawfully charged by any pawnbroker or pledgee shall not *271exceed four per cent per month in advance on all loans exceeding twenty dollars, which shall include all charges for discount, commissions, storage, brokerage, wasting and all and every charge or charges thereupon; nor shall said interest at any time be compounded.
“ Sec. 3. Any pawnbroker or pledgee who shall directly or indirectly charge or receive any interest greater than four per cent per month, or by charging commissions, discount, brokerage, storage, wastage or other charge, or shall attempt to increase said interest, or shall compound said interest, shall forfeit three times the value of the article pledged or to be pledged, to be recovered by the owner or pledger in a civil action, which may be brought by the party aggrieved.”
The constitutional objection which is made to this Act of the Legislature has been settled adversely to the views of the defendant by the cases of Smith v. The Judge of the Twelfth Judicial District, 17 Cal. 554; Ex parte Andrews, 18 Cal. 680; and French v. Teschemacher, 24 Cal. 544, and it is only necessary to say we are satisfied with the general doctrine of those cases respecting the clause of the Constitution in question, and therefore hold the objection made to the statute to be invalid.
An unlawful contract will not be enforced.
It is a well settled principle of the common law that no Court of justice will lend its aid to enforce the performance of any contract or agreement which was intended to contravene 'the provisions of a positive law (Pratt v. Adams, 7 Paige, 653 ;) and it may be stated, as a general rule, that no contract founded on or growing out of an unlawful Act can be enforced, whether it be malum in se or malum prohibitum. (Bank of the United States v. Owens, 2 Peters, 538, 539; DeGroot v. Van Duzer, 20 Wend. 390; Leavitt v. Palmer, 3 Coms. 19.) The statute referred to and in part quoted, in effect provides that a pawnbroker shall not charge a greater rate of interest on loans exceeding twenty dollars than four per cent a month in advance. The contract between the parties, as it appears *272by the complaint, shows that the defendant, who, in the character of a pawnbroker, made the loan to the plaintiff, charged him interest at the rate of seven per cent per month. The charge thus made was in contravention of the provisions of the statute, and to the extent at least of the three per cent in excess of the measure prescribed, the plaintiff’s agreement could not be enforced in any mode provided by law. Now, whether the defendant had any legal claim for any sum as interest when the five hundred dollars became due, it is not necessary to decide. The plaintiff’s promise was to repay to the defendant the sum borrowed in one month, and also to pay him seven per cent per month on the principal sum for its use. Here the contract between the parties was legal as to the principal sum, but illegal as to the interest. The two things were not inseparable. “When the transaction is of such a nature that the good part of the consideration can be separated from that which is bad, the Courts will make the distinction, for the common law doth divide according to common reason; and having made that void that is against law, lets the rest stand. The general and more liberal principle now is, that when any matter, void even by statute, be mixed up with good matter, which is entirely independent of it, the good part shall stand and the rest be held void.” (2 Kent’s Com. 467, and cases cited; DeGroot v. Van Duzer, 20 Wend. 412 ; Leavitt v. Palmer, 3 Coms. 37 ; 1 Parsons’ Cont. 380.)
A penalty for an act is a prohibition of the act.
The defendant’s counsel maintains in argument that the contract between the parties was valid and binding to the full extent of its terms, and that the only remedy, if any, which the plaintiff has, because of the violation of the law, is an action to recover the penalty mentioned in the third section of the Act. Parsons, in his work on contracts, says it has been held in England that where a statute provided a penalty for an act, without prohibiting the act in express terms, there the penalty was the only legal consequence of a violation of the law, and a contract which implied or required such violation *273was nevertheless valid. But Lord Holt denied the doctrine, and Sir James Mansfield established a better rule of law, holding that where a statute provides a penalty for an act, this is .a prohibition of the act. We apprehend that this has always been the prevailing, if not the uncontradicted rule of law, on this subject in this country. (1 Parsons on Cont. 382, and cases cited, 4th Ed.)
The plaintiff tendered to the defendant all that was due him by the law of the land, and was thereupon entitled to the possession of the property deposited in pledge. We are of the opinion the judgment should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Shafter, J., concurring specially.
I concur in the judgment.