Patterson v. Southern Railway Co.

Seawell, J.

In Parsley v. Nicholson, 65 N. C., 207, it is said: “The ■object of pleading, both in the old and new systems, is to produce proper .issues of law or of fact, so that justice may be administered between ■parties litigant, with regularity and certainty.” Pleadings serve to con:fine the controversy between the parties to some issue relating to a justiciable cause, so that the field of investigation may be defined and brought within reasonable limits. A party to an action is entitled as a matter of right to put into his pleading a concise statement of the facts constituting his cause of action or defense, and nothing more. C. S., 506; C. S., 519.

Upon motion made in apt time, an aggrieved party may have irrelevant or redundant matter stricken from his opponent’s pleading, espe*43cially when such matter is prejudicial to him, or scandalous. C. S., 537. A motion under tbis statute bas been beld to be made as a matter of right and not addressed to tbe discretion of tbe court. Bank v. Atmore, 200 N. C., 437, 439, 157 S. E., 129.

Upon motion of plaintiff made under tbis statute, tbe trial judge struck out tbe paragraphs of tbe answers above listed, finding them to be irrelevant and prejudicial.

If tbe matter stricken out should be found to contain a valid defense not asserted elsewhere in tbe pleading, tbe defendants would be entitled to have it stand, no matter bow prejudicial or scandalous. Powell v. Cobb, 56 N. C., 1; Mitchell v. Brown, 88 N. C., 156. And they could not complain if tbe matter stricken out contained no averment competent or necessary to tbe defense. Tbis case, therefore, turns upon tbe relevancy of tbe deleted paragraphs of tbe answer, as setting up matters of defense.

An approved test of relevancy is whether tbe matter alleged is competent to be shown on tbe bearing. Pemberton v. Greensboro, 203 N. C., 514, 515, 172 S. E., 196.

Tbe paragraphs stricken out of tbe answer by sections 1, 2, and 3 of tbe judgment are of tbe same tenor and may be considered together. They set up as a defense that tbe reduction of rates made by defendants bas bad tbe effect of reducing tbe price of gasoline to tbe consumer, with special reference to tbe vicinity of Burlington; that tbe result of a recovery by tbe plaintiff will be to destroy competition at Wilmington and raise tbe price of gasoline, and would therefore be in contravention of public policy, and bis action is therefore legally barred.

If tbe defendants could establish tbe causal sequence between their reduction of rates and tbe lowering of prices on gasoline, it would not be available as a defense in tbis action. Such a result is as likely to follow an unlawful reduction of rates in carrying out tbe conspiracy charged in tbe complaint as it is to follow a lawful reduction brought about solely by economic conditions.

Tbe public bas no vested right in a pecuniary or economic advantage produced by an unlawful invasion of private right, designed to injure an individual.

As to tbe policy involved, tbe State bas no policy directed toward tbe lowering of tbe price of gasoline, or any other commodity, although there is a strong public desire in tbis direction. Tbe policy of tbe State on tbis subject is comprised and declared in tbe Constitution (Article I, section 31), in tbe statutes on Monopolies and Trusts (chapter 53 of tbe Consolidated Statutes), and in tbe common law on tbis subject, still recognized as in force here; and it comprehends both tbe raising and lowering of prices by unlawful means and for an unlawful purpose.

*44Generalizations respecting monopoly statutes, their purpose and effect, cannot be expected equally to fit them all, but it may be laid down as a principle common to our own laws that where an act has been directly condemned by the statute, no power resides in the court to balance the advantages of continuing the situation produced by defendants’ violation of law against the advantages of granting the relief sought in the action, thereby making such a violator of the law a sort of economic Robin Hood who may, with judicial approval, plunder the individual in the interest of the needy public.

In the North Carolina case cited in defendants’ brief, Mar-Hof Co. v. Rosenbacker, 176 N. C., 330, 97 S. E., 169, this Court had to reconcile a statute aimed against- restraint of trade with the right of contract in partial restraint of trade, and held only that the restrictive terms of the statute did not affect that right. Of a similar nature are the decisions of the United States Supreme Court on the Sherman Anti-Trust Law cited in the brief. The conclusions drawn from them are not germane to the question before us.

Here we have a much more particularized law to deal with. It has nothing to do with the limitations of private contract or their relation to public policy or statutes against restraint of trade.

The suggested conflict between public interest and private right said to arise under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act cannot obtain under the North Carolina statute, as applied to this case, since that statute gives the individual whose business is destroyed a cause of action of such a nature, and under such conditions, that the temporary advantage incident to the process of eliminating a competitor must have been considered and subordinated to a superior legislative intent. The law looks at the transaction “in the long run,” adopting the philosophy that the public is more interested in continuing competition than in reaping the temporary rewards of a fight in which it is extinguished. C. S., 2559; C. S., 2563 (3); S. v. Coal Co., 210 N. C., 742, 188 S. E., 412.

We think, therefore, that this portion of the pleading was irrelevant.

The contention of the defendants that plaintiff was engaged in an illegal business and, ipso facto, could have no recovery for injury to such business, is not tenable under the alleged facts in this case.

There is no privilege license required in this State, either for the business of contract hauling or the business of private hauling, and there is no law which makes either unlawful because of noncompliance with any condition bearing upon the business itself. If this business was illegal, such result must come about through a construction of the motor vehicle laws cited in defendants’ brief, which patently do not apply to the business in which the plaintiff was engaged, and not even to the manner in which it must be carried on, but only to the physical means which happened to be employed by plaintiff in its prosecution. Indeed, if the *45business itself bad required a license, tbe defendants would not be materially helped, since the trend of authority on this subject is to the effect that when a person engages in a business without procuring the license which the State requires for the privilege, he incurs the penalties which the statutes pertaining to the license provide, and none other. The matter rests between him and the licensing authorities, and the fact that the business is carried on without license is ordinarily not available as a defense by a third party in a suit growing out of liability incurred in the course of the business, or in relation thereto. 31 O. J., page 259,' section 137. There are cases, not inconsistent with this view, holding contra, (a) where the licensing statute directly forbids the business itself, if carried on without license; (b) where the nature of the business renders it a proper subject of police regulation and the license is clearly referable to an exercise of that power; (c) and where the statute itself expressly denies to the unlicensed person any recovery in the courts upon contracts made in the course of business. They may be found under above citation.

In Vermont Loan & Trust Company v. Hoffman, 5 Idaho, 376, 49 P., 314, the Court passed upon a statute of Idaho requiring a license to be procured before engaging in the business of loaning money and declaring it a misdemeanor to transact such business without it. Defendant, in an action to recover for money loaned, set up as a defense that the business was unlawful, and the plaintiff having no license to engage in it was violating a state law and could not recover. In affirming the action of the trial court in sustaining a demurrer to that defense, the Supreme Court said: “From a careful study of all the authorities, we think that the better class of • authorities and the better reasoning leads to the conclusion that, where the prohibition is implied from a penalty imposed, as in the case at bar, the prohibition being for the protection of the public revenue, and no declaration in the statute making the prohibited act void, the doing of such act is not illegal. There is nothing in our statutes which makes it unlawful to loan money at interest. There is nothing in our statutes which says that it is unlawful to follow the business of loaning money at interest. Such business is not malum in se, nor is it malum prohibitum. Anyone may conduct the business, but, under our statutes, if he does so, he must obtain the license, and if he carries on such business without paying the license tax and obtaining the license, he is guilty of a misdemeanor. The offense consists not in doing the business, for that is not prohibited, but in failing to pay the license tax. The statute was passed, not to protect the public, not to protect the borrower, nor to prevent the loaning of money at interest, but for the purpose of raising the revenue to be derived from the license taxes to be collected from those persons who should engage in the business of loaning money at interest. . . .”

*46In Wood v. Krepps, 168 Cal., 382, 143 P., 691, an authority much cited on this subject, the foregoing from Vermont Loan & Trust Company v. Hoffman, supra, is approved, and the Court concludes as to the case before it as follows: “The Legislature may, within the limits of the Constitution, prescribe traffic regulations, and may impose upon a business a tax, and require persons intending to engage in such business to obtain, before doing so, a license; and we think the Legislature might go one step further and say that whoever should engage in any business upon which a license tax is imposed without first paying such license tax should not only be fined and imprisoned, one or both, but that such person should not recover upon any contract made by him while engaged in such business without a license. But the Legislature has not done so, nor has it shown any intention to attend such forfeiture upon a person violating the statute. Having specified the penalty for a violation of the statute, and further provided for the collection of the license tax with damages, we are authorized to and do conclude that the Legislature did not intend that any further punishment should be inflicted.”

When the object of a statute requiring those who transact certain business to be licensed is the production of revenue and not the regulation of the business, in the interest of public health, morals, or policies, contracts made in the course of such business are valid. Wood v. Krepps, supra, 141 P., 691, 692; Mandelbaum v. Gregovich, 17 Nev., 87, 28 P., 121; Howard v. Lebby, 197 Ky., 324, 246 S. W., 828.

The statutes discussed in Coates v. Locust Point Company, 102 Md., 291, 62 Atl., 625, and in Banks v. McCosker, 82 Md., 518, 34 Atl., 625, required a license to do the particular business and made it a misdemeanor to do business without it. The Court said: “When the law declares the consequence of its violation, the contract can in no sense be regarded as illegal unless the law itself, either by its manifest intent or in express terms, so declares it. The provisions of the Code referred to neither directly nor indirectly refer to any consequences save the payment of a fine.” The Court held the business not to be illegal. Sunflower Lumber Co. v. Turner Supply Co., 158 Ala., 191, 48 So., 510; Armstrong v. Tolar, 11 Wheat., 258, 6 L. Ed., 468; Larned v. Andrews, 106 Mass., 435; Hughes v. Snell, 28 Okla., 828; Fairley v. Wapoo Mills, 44 S. C., 227, 22 S. E., 108; S. v. Pierce Co., Super Ct., 42 Wash., 675, 85 P., 669. Citations may be made in almost unlimited number.

The Motor Vehicle Act, N. C. Code, 1935, sec. 2621, et seq., requiring that licenses be procured for motor vehicles used upon the highways, is. based upon the servitude put upon the highways by such use, and the advantage which the improved highways may afford the business in which the motor vehicle is employed. Sec. 2621 (31) (c). The difference in the cost of license is based — roughly, it may be — upon the usage to which the road is subjected, either by the weight of the loading *47or by tbe frequency of the use, or both. The license pertains to the motor vehicle and not to the business in which it is used.

Yarious statutes denounce as misdemeanors acts and omissions in connection with the procurement and use of motor vehicle licenses, and the use of the road without proper license. They are far too numerous to mention here, and most of them have no relation to the matter at hand. The most restrictive of these statutes are quoted in defendants’ brief, which relies particularly on sec. 2621 (29), which statute makes it a misdemeanor to operate a motor vehicle without a license; and we assume that this may be construed to mean without the appropriate license designated by the law.

Practically all of the authorities cited in defendants’ brief, in support of their position that the plaintiff was engaged in an illegal business, deal with laws referable to the exercise of the police power and these laws bear directly upon the business concerned.

In Lloyd v. R. R., 151 N. C., 536, 66 S. E., 604, the Court was dealing with a personal injury action, growing out of chapter 456 of the Public Laws of 1907, relating to hours of labor — distinctly a police regulation — and the citations are all pertinent to that principle. In Courtney v. Parker, 173 N. C., 479, 92 S. E., 324, the Court was dealing with chapter 77 of the Public Laws of 1931, regulating the conducting of business under an assumed name, and making certain conditions precedent thereto —again a police regulation. In Godwin v. Telephone Co., 136 N. C., 258, the Court declined to compel the installation of a telephone in a bawdy house in aid of a business per se illegal. In Finance Co. v. Hendry, 189 N. C., 549, 127 S. E., 629, the statute considered was again —C. S., 3288 — regulating the carrying on of a business under an assumed name. In Fashion Co. v. Grant, 165 N. C., 453, 81 S. E., 606, the Court was dealing with contracts made in violation of the express provisions of chapter 167, section 1 (a), of the Public Laws of 1911, forbidding agreements that the purchaser should not sell the same commodity in his store manufactured by other parties. In Pfeifer v. Israel, 161 N. C., 409, 77 S. E., 421, and Pfeifer v. Drug Co., 171 N. C., 214, 88 S. E., 343, the Court was dealing with the unlicensed sale of liquor. In Young v. Stevens, 75 Ark., at page 183, and in Stephenson v. Primrose, 8 Port. (Ala.), 155, 167, the Court dealt with matters strictly of a police nature. Indeed, the position of the Supreme Court of Alabama on this subject may be found in Morgan v. Whatley, 205 Ala., 170, 87 So., 846, 849, and in Sunflower Lumber Co. v. Turner Supply Co., supra, and it is contrary to the position taken by the defendants.

There seems to be no authority for the position that the failure to procure proper licenses for the trucks employed in the plaintiff’s business would so affect the business as to make it illegal and bar recovery, and we are of the opinion that there is nothing in the cited statutes which can have that effect.

*48It must be observed further with regard to this part of the answer that the plaintiff is also charged with fraud and misrepresentation and a violation of the criminal law in procuring the licenses for his trucks and trailers. There is no logical connection between such fraud, if it existed, and any defense which is competent for the defendants to make in this action.

Since the matter stricken out constitutes no valid defense, there is nothing of which the defendants can complain. But it is not improper to refer briefly to the propriety of allowing the motion to strike out.

The matters alleged in the answer could hardly be considered as entirely without prejudicial effect on plaintiff’s case. The answer prominently features a reduction in the price of gasoline as being a desirable result, a point on which there is some unanimity of opinion; and it may not be merely casual that, in a selective paragraph, the spearhead of this attack on plaintiff’s position is directed toward Alamance County, from which the jury must be drawn, and where the case must be tried. Also, since the plaintiff is charged with a violation of the criminal law and of defrauding the State of its revenues in a way calculated to be offensive to taxpayers, this would hardly recommend his cause to the jury.

The defendants have been deprived of no competent defense which may not be adequately presented under the present pleadings, and the judgment is

Affirmed.