49 Tenn. 136 | Tenn. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The complainant executed a deed of conveyance, bearing date 8th December, 1862, to Larkin W. and Elijah R. Hammons, minor children of C. A. Hammons, for the tract of land therein described, situate in Cannon county, and containing 65 acres and two rods, more or less, by estimation, as stated in said deed, for the consideration of nine hundred dollars; of which amount, the deed recites that eight hundred dollars had been paid, and the
It appears from the record, that, during the late civil war, and up to the time of the execution of said deed, Cannon county was in possession, or subject to the control, of the Confederate military forces; and that the following order, issued by a military officer in command,was printed as a circular or hand-bill, and generally posted throughout the country, viz:
“ Headquarters Cavalry Brigade, 1 “McMiNNville, July 25, 1862. J
“Any person who shall refuse to receive Confederate money, or shall say or write anything to depreciate the same, shall be subject to a fine and imprisonment, or confiscation of property, either or both, as the nature of the case may indicate. The asking of exorbitant prices for goods, or the commodities of life, such as would indicate a want of confidence in Confederate money, is prohibited; and any person so offending, shall be subject to fine and imprisonment, or confiscation of property, either or both, as the nature of the cate may. indicate.
“N. B. Forrest,
“ Brig.-Gen., Commanding Brigade.”
Hammons, expecting to be soon put upon active duty, and, perhaps, to be engaged in the then approaching battle of Murfreesboro, became anxious to purchase the complainant’s land, and to have it conveyed to his children, either to protect it against his creditors, or to provide for the possible contingency of his early death. Certain parol negotiations occurred between him and the complainant, from which it was manifest that the complainant, who was somewhat embarrassed in his circumstances, was quite unwilling to receive Confederate notes in payment, yet fearful to risk the consequences of a direct and positive refusal. Hammons, on the other hand, was equally determined to avail himself of the well grounded apprehensions of complainant, to take advantage of the circumstances which surrounded him, and to extort, from his fears, a conveyance of the land. Having received one thousand dollars, in Confederate notes, either for his services as a substitute, or as an agent to purchase hogs, he invested a portion of the money in that way, and told one of the witnesses, in substance and with an oath, that complainant had agreed to sell him the land, and that he would compel him to do so. He went to the house of complainant, who was engaged at the time in shoemaking,
One witness, who does not appear to be related to either of the parties, proves that in the Fall of 1862, he, the witness, was “backward about taking Confederate money, and Col. Hardy said to me, - (him,) ‘if you refuse to take that money I will carry you to headquarters quicker than you ever went;’ and the penalty for
In the case of Rollings v. Cate,
But there is a marked distinction between that • case and the ease now under consideration. Here, a stringent-military order is established by proof. Here, it is shown that the order was published throughout the country. The order, itself, contains a threat of fine, imprisonment and confiscation. It was issued by an officer of high rank, and circulated by soldiers who were in arms. It was not a mere brutum /ulmén, but was vigorously executed, and created general trepidation and alarm. The defendant, Hammons, himself a soldier, artfully turned the order to his own private' and personal advantage. He did not use it in aid of the cause which he had hired himself to support as a soldier, but employed it as a means of coercion, to compel a contract which he could not otherwise have obtained; and, with the view of arousing to the greatest extent the fear of his victim, actually misrepresented it, and threatened, with it and by its assumed operation, the life of the complainant, and not merely his imprisonment or the confiscation of his property. Con-
'From the evidence in this case, we have no doubt that the complainant executed the deed under the fear of death, or at least of imprisonment or confiscation; and, although it is not in proof that at, or immediately before, the -precise moment of signing the deed, any threat was made, we are satisfied from .the facts and circumstances appearing in the record, that the defendant did, in the first instance, by his threats, arouse the fear of death, imprisonment or confiscation; that he never disabused or sought to disabuse the mind of complainant of the impression thus created; but, on the contrary, continued from time to time, to deepen and enlarge them; and that the ■fear: thus created and continued was present and existing when complainant executed the -conveyance. The Confederate notes were left with him forcibly, and against his will, and in despite of his timid but earnest remonstrance. While he held only a title bond for his land, Hammons was the busy and active agent in- employing his own counsel to prepare a deed to complainant in its place, and also .to prepare a deed from complainant to his (Ham-mons’) two minor sons, who had no agency. in procuring
Aside from the question of duress, it is apparent, from the evidence, that the defendant, Hammons, who was insolvent before he received the one thousand dollars' in Confederate notes, perpetrated a fraud upon complainant, in assuring him that they were as good as gold; in promising him to take them back if they could not be used in the payment of his debts, and in refusing to do so when complainant offered to return them. It has been earnestly contended, in argument, that complainant did use $405 of the Confederate “money” paid to him by Hammons, in a payment to Stone, administrator of Ranes, from whom the land -was originally purchased; but although it is in proof that Hammons was present at the time, or upon the day when the payment was made, it is not shown by the declarations of the parties or otherwise, that the “money” so paid was any part of
A "tender of the Confederate “money,” however, at or since the commencement of the suit,, would have been an idle ceremony, as it had become utterly worthless. But it is in proof that at the time *of the contract Confederate notes had a marketable or commercial value; and although it was small, it is-equitable .and just that as complainant does not show what became of the Confederate' money he received, he should account for its value at' the time he received it, and that defendant, Hammons, should account for the rents', and profits of the' lands, minus the value of any betterments, actually enhancing its value, which he has placed upon it since he took possession.
Other propositions have been vehemently urged in argument by the defendants; but after a very- careful exam-
Let the decree of the Chancellor be affirmed, with the modifications above indicated.
1 Heis., 97.