Brooks v. Berryhill

20 Ind. 97 | Ind. | 1863

Perkins, J.

Suit by Moses Brooks against Alexander 8. Berryhill and Rebecca G. Berryhill, for tbe foreclosure of a mortgage. Complaint in the usual form. *

Alexander 8. Berryhill made default. Rebecca G. Berryhill, who is the wife of Alexander, was permitted to appear and defend in her own right, the mortgage being upon her separate property.

Her answer consisted of several paragraphs, but they set up, in substance, two grounds of defence: 1. A special non est factum, verified by oath. 2. Duress.

There was judgment below for Mrs. Berryhill. The facts are shortly these:

Alexander 8. Berryhill was a clerk and salesman for Moses Brooks in Cincinnati, Ohio, while his family residence was in Madison, Indiana.

Berryhill became a defaulter, as clerk and salesman, to the amount of several hundred dollars. Mr. Brooks filed an affi*98davit against him, in the Police Court of Cincinnati, for embezzlement, and procured a warrant for his arrest. He was ai’rested by Hazen, the Chief of Police of Cincinnati, and while under arrest, it was arranged between Brooks, Hazen and Berryhill that, if the latter would go to Maclison, in custody of the officer, and procure a mortgage on a farm owned by his wife, called Beechwood, to secure the amount of his defalcation, he was to be discharged from further prosecution. The visit to Madison was made, the mortgage obtained, Berryhill was discharged, the affidavit and writ against him destroyed, the prosecution abandoned, and Berryhill then enlisted in the army and left for the South.

The above is a general statement. But it is proper that a more particular statement should be made of the evidence touching the manner in which the mortgage was obtained from Mrs. Berryhill. It appears to have been in the night of the 28th of January, 1860. The following is Mrs. Berryhill’s testimony:

“ She said that she was the wife of said Alexander 8. Berryhill ; that said mortgage was executed under the following circumstances, to-wit: On the evening of the execution of the mortgage, said Berryhill, who then resided at Cincinnati, came to her house and came up stairs to her room, and told her he was in difficulty with the plaintiff; that he wanted her to sign a paper which would relieve him of the difficulties ; that she said to him she would do so, only that she could not make a mortgage on the said farm, Beechwood, the land described in the mortgage; that she thought that she could not mortgage said land; that said Alexander told her it was not a mortgage at all, and she relying on that statement, went down stairs and signed the paper then lying on the table in the room, without looking at it, or reading it, or being told what it was, or knowing what it was, only believing that it was not a mortgage, and that she would not have *99•signed it had she known that it was a mortgage; that she was crying, and in great distress, and did not notice who were there, as it was dark. Her husband has only been here once since making said mortgage, and then only a short time.”

Mr. Hazen, the police officer, says he went to the house of Berryhill on the night of the 28th of January, 1860, in Madison ; that he went in company with Berryhill and a notary public, who had a prepared mortgage with him. There was no other person at the house except Mrs. Berryhill. He and the notary went into the parlor, and the mortgage was laid down upon a table. Mrs. Berryhill was up stairs; her husband went up after her; he returned without her. “ The second time he went up, he brought her down. The first that I saw of her, she was coming down stairs. She stopped at about half the way down. She was crying, and did not want to come down any further. Her husband remarked to her that it was all right, and to come down and sign it. She asked who those men were; he replied to her that one was his friend, and the other was the officer. She came into the room. The notary showed her where to put her name. She threw down the pen and said she would not sign it, when her husband told her that it was all right, and if she did not sign-it he would have to go with the officer, and perhaps to jail.She then signed it, and immediately dropped the quill, and went up stairs crying, having her handkerchief to her face.I had the embezzlement warrant in my possession, and I considered Mr. Berryhill under arrest till I got the mortgage. He knew I had the warrant, and I told him I should take him back to Cincinnati if the mortgage was not made. I had arrested him at the Burnet House in Cineinnati. I had no warrant or authority from any Indiana officer to arrest or hold him.”'

It is not clear that the foregoing evidence does not estab*100lish the answer of non est factum. If Mrs. Berryhill signed the mortgage under the false representation and belief that it was an instrument of a different character, can it be said' that she ever consentingly signed the mortgage ? See Awde v. Dixon, 5 Eng. L. and E. Rep. 512; Seeles v. The People, 2 Am. L. Reg. (N. S.) 344, note. But however that may be, the defence of duress is well made out.

S. C. Stevens, for the appellant. .C. E. Walker and Geo. W. Bichardson, for the appellee.

If a man voluntarily pays money under a mistake of law, he can not recover such money back. Jenks v. Lima Township, 17 Ind. 326. But if he pays money, illegally exacted, to effect a release of person or goods, he may recover back money thüs paid. Ibid.

So if he executes an instrument to free himself from false imprisonment, actual or threatened, he may avoid the instrument. Foshay v. Ferguson, 5 Hill. (N. Y.) Rep. 154.

So, if he executes a deed to obtain deliverance from imprisonment under legal process maliciously sued out. Ibid. Chit. Cont., 7 Am. Ed., p. 207, note.

And if husband or wife, or parent or child executes a deed to obtain deliverance of the one or the other from illegal duress, the instalment may be avoided. Chit. Cont. 208.

. The case at bar falls within these principles. The husband, Mr. Berryhill, was held in illegal custody, at Madison. The Cincinnati writ was no‘justification to the officer in Indiana, beyond his jurisdiction. He threatened to take Mr. Berryhill out of the State, if the mortgage was not executed. Mrs. Berryhill signed the mortgage, unwillingly, through the influence of this threat.

And it is plain that a jury might well infer from the evidence that the criminal prosecution itself was gotten up simply for the purpose of extorting the mortgage.

Per Curiam.

The judgment below is affirmed, with costs.