The decision was made at September term 1846.
Dewey, J.The contract upon which the plaintiff seeks to recover was illegal, being in violation of the principles of law in reference to maintenance and champerty. Such agreement for a proportionate share in the fruits of litigation, as a consideration for services rendered in conducting and prosecuting, with success, a suit at law, where the party has no interest, legal or equitable, and no claim or expectancy, even remotely contingent, has been deemed contrary to public policy, and proscribed by statutes and the common law. The Sts. 3 and 13 Edw. 1 related to officers of the king; but the provisions were further extended, and made applicable to other persons, by St. 28 Edw. I. 2 Inst. 207, 563. Independently of these statutes, such agreements seem also to have been considered as illegal at common law.
It is, however, contended, on the part of the plaintiff, that the evils originally attending such contracts, and the undue influence supposed to result from them, in the prosecution of litigated claims, no longer have any real practical influence, and that, in view of this change, and in the absence of any statute of this Commonwealth forbidding such contracts, we ought now to introduce a more liberal system in reference to contracts like that now under consideration.
No doubt is entertained but that the earlier doctrine as to maintenance has been very essentially modified. Its application to many cases entirely venial in their character, and not within the mischief to be guarded against in the administration of justice, has been denied and abandoned. Hence the many cases that have occurred, and are continually occurring, which form exceptions to the general rule that declares maintenance and champerty illegal; cases of remote and contingent interests, or possibility of interest in the subject litigated; *491cases of affinity in the persons intermeddling or aiding in conducting the suit; or other equally justifying causes. But while the exceptions to the rule have been thus multiplied, and have come to be liberally considered and allowed, the rule itself has not been abrogated, but, on the contrary, has become the subject of statute enactment in some of our sister States, and, where no statute exists, is recognized as a part of the common law applicable to such contracts.
It is not, however, our purpose to consider this question as one of novel impression, or pronounce an opinion upon the point whether, in the present state of society, more good or evil may result from giving effect to a defence of this nature. The question before us is merely, what is the law of this Commonwealth in reference to it. And as to that, we think there can be no reasonable doubt. It has become a well settled principle in our system of jurisprudence ; so much so, that we should not feel at liberty to abrogate it by force of a judicial opinion merely. The point now in issue arose distinctly in the case of Thurston v. Percival, 1 Pick. 415. The facts were substantially the same, and all those considerations, which have now been pressed upon us as reasons for repudiating the illegality of such contracts, were equally applicable in that case. This court, after a full argument, and upon mature consideration, decided against the validity of the contract. Although more than twenty years have elapsed since that decision was promulgated, and during the intervening period a general revision of the statutes of the Commonwealth has taken place, in which many adjudications of this court were brought under legislative revision, and many new enactments were made, modifying such decisions as were thought to be inapplicable to the present state of the Commonwealth, no new statute or legislative provision was made upon this subject. For these reasons, we do not feel authorized to consider the ground of defence here relied upon as one novel in principle, but we must regard it as the application of a well settled rule of law.
It was suggested in the argument that the facts here shown *492do not bring the case strictly within the definition of champerty, as the plaintiff was not to conduct . the suit wholly at his own expense, but was, in the event of a failure to sustain the action, to be remunerated for his actual expenses. It is true that some of the elementary books, in defining champerty, say that “ the champertor is to carry on the suit at his own expense j ” as 4 Bl. Com. 135 ; Chit. Con. (5th Amer. ed.) 675. Other books of equal authority omit this part of the definition of champerty; as 1 Hawk. c. 84, § 1; Co. Lit. 368 b.
Maintenance and champerty, if we are to judge from the manner in which they are usually introduced in connexion with this subject,' are deemed illegal, not from the consideration that all the expenses of the litigation are to be borne by a stranger, but in reference to the evils resulting from officious intermeddling, and upholding another’s litigation by personal services as well as money; more dangerous formerly than now, as more powerful combinations were resorted to with a view of controlling, if not overawing, the judicial tribunals. In the view we have taken of the subject, the result is, that the defence is well maintained.