115 Mich. 506 | Mich. | 1898
(after stating■ the facts). 1. Complaint is made that the court erred in instructing the jury: “If you find that the note was obtained from Chapoton upon threats of criminal prosecution, plaintiff cannot recover.” Counsel for defendants cite only one authority to support this instruction, viz.: Hackley v. Headley, 45 Mich. 574. The action in that case was upon a promissory note. The defense was duress, in that the plaintiffs took an unconscionable advantage of defendant’s financial straits, thereby compelling him to accept $2,000 less than was his due. The defense was held bad. This case was approved and followed in Goebel v. Linn, 47 Mich. 489.
Chapoton had been for a long time in the employ of plaintiff, who claimed he had embezzled large sums of money. Plaintiff testified that Chapoton admitted the embezzlement; that it was agreed to amount to $2,700; that Chapoton agreed to give four notes of $675 each, to
“Defendant Chapoton gave evidence tending to show that, a short time before these notes were given, Beath claimed that he (Chapoton) had embezzled money from the said Beath, and that he threatened to prosecute him, and put him in jail, and disgrace him; * * * and that he would not have executed such notes except for the fear of criminal prosecution, and on account of the threats so made by said Beath.”
This statement is the sole foundation for claiming duress.
If Chapoton had embezzled money, and notes or other evidences of debt, with security, were given by Chapoton in settlement and acknowledgment of the debt, he could not defend upon the ground that plaintiff threatened criminal prosecution if his honest debt was not acknowledged and secured. Wolf v. Troxell's Estate, 94 Mich. 573. The law does not permit a criminal, who has stolen property, to defend against the debt, or its written acknowledgment, on the ground of threatened prosecution or imprisonment. Such a rule would often be attended with disastrous results. A party might settle his peculation by giving his notes, payable after the statute of limitations could be pleaded in bar of the original debt. If, instead of an indorsed note, Chapoton had given a note and mortgage for $2,700 (and he admits that he agreed to this amount, and to give four promissory notes therefor), would he be permitted to avoid his just liability by saying, ‘ ‘ True, I owed it, but plaintiff threatened to prosecute me if I didn’t pay it, and therefore I secured my honest debt?” The consideration for the note in such cases is not the avoidance of a criminal prosecution, but the just debt.
A. was convicted of larceny, and sentenced to pay a fine of $1,000, and was confined in prison. He executed a mortgage to the county for $1,000, in condition of which he was pardoned. He filed a bill in equity to set
“Duress hy threats exists, not wherever a party has entered into a contract under the influence of a threat, but only where such a threat excites a fear of some grievous wrong, as of death, or great irremediable injury, or unlawful imprisonment.” 6 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 64.
Threats of criminal prosecution, unaccompanied by threats of immediate imprisonment, do not constitute duress. Harmon v. Harmon, 61 Me. 227 (14 Am. Rep. 556); Buchanan v. Sahlein, 9 Mo. App. 552; Bodine v. Morgan, 37 N. J. Eq. 426; Dunham v. Griswold, 100 N. Y. 224. “Threat of legal process is not duress, for the party may plead, make proof, and show that he is not liable.” Preston v. City of Boston, 12 Pick. 14. In Bodine v. Morgan, supra, the defendants, father and son, were charged with fraudulently taking and appropriating business orders. The father settled, and gave a mortgage of $5,000. His defense was substantially the same as that here set up. The court used the following language:
“ But, further, the threat to arrest him for his unlawful appropriation of their orders and goods to his own use unless he should indemnify them, constituted, if it was made, no duress; and, if the mortgage had been given under the pressure of such a threat, it would not have affected its validity.”
It was incumbent upon defendant Chapoton to establish two facts, — the illegality of the demand and the duress.
2. Complaint is made of the following instruction:
“It is not necessary that Beath shóuld have known exactly the fraudulent representations made by Chapoton in order to get Watson to indorse the note. If he (Beath) had sufficient knowledge to put him upon inquiry, so that he could have found out that Watson had been so induced by fraudulent representations, then the plaintiff cannot l’ecover.”
If there were no evidence in the case to which this instruction was applicable, it would be error under the rule
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered.