73 Tenn. 232 | Tenn. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the court.
Bill to enjoin the prosecution of a suit at law upon a note, and to set aside the note on the ground of surprise. The chancellor dismissed the bill, and the complainant appealed.
The complainant is a farmer, with a wife and six children, two girls and four boys, five of them under age. He owns land worth about $1,300, and a few hundred dollars of personalty. He is a man who has lived a retired life, attending exclusively to the business of his farm, and never mingling with the world in a public capacity. His oldest son was about twenty-two years of age when the note in controversy was executed. He had developed a disposition to recklessness and improvidence. In June, 1876, this son applied to the defendant, the Lookout Bank of Morristown, to borrow money, and the bank discounted for him a note for $35 at sixty days, purporthig to be endorsed by his father, his uncle and a third person. A few days afterwards the son again applied to the bank to discount a note for $900, with the same endorsers, dated June 21, 1876, at sixty days, which was done. On the next day the bank, at the instance of the young man, again discounted a similar note for $900, with the same endorsers, having the same time to run. The officers of the bank seem not to have been acquainted with the young man or
The complainant himself testifies that during this interview, owing to the suddenness of the communication and the nature of the calamity, he was incapacitated from entering into any contract with full knowledge of its scope. The other persons present admit the distress and agitation of the complainant, but say
The proof of his brother and his neighbors is that he was thoroughly unnerved by the calamity, “almost in a state of mental aberration,” to use the language of a neighboroand a physician, and “well nigh crazy,” to use the words of other witnesses. In a few days he sent back the $900 note he had received and demanded his note. The other $900 note was sent to him by the bank on the 11th of July, and on the next day both of these notes were delivered to one ■of the officers of the bank, who received them, he says, to be used against the son, who had been arrested. Shortly afterwards the complainant was sued at law upon his note, and subsequently, on April 17, 1877, filed this bill. Owing to the absence of his lawyer, complainant seems not to have taken legal ■advice until eight days after the execution of his note.
The principal of equity jurisdiction on which this bill rests is thus stated by Judge Story: “ Cases of surprise and sudden action without due deliberation may properly be referred to the same head of fraud or imposition. An. undue advantage is taken of the party under circumstances which mislead, confuse or disturb the just result of his judgment, and thus expose him to be the victim of the artful, the importunate, or the cunning. It has been very justly remarked by an eminent writer, that it is not every surprise which will avoid a deed duly made. Nor is it fitting, for it would occasion great uncertainty, and it would be impossible to fix what is meant by sur
When a court of equity relieves on the ground of surprise, it does so because something has been done which was unexpected, and operated to mislead or confuse the party on the sudden, and on that account has been deemed a fraud. Earl of Bath and Montague’s case, 3 Ch. Cas., 56, 74, 114; Evans v. Llewellyn, 2 Bro. C. C., 150. The mere fact that a transaction has been improvident and precipitate, and entered into without independent professional advice, will not vitiate it, if the parties were on equal terms, in a situation to act for themselves, and fully understood
Beyond all question the complainant was in no condition of mind in the brief interview between him and the bank officers on the occasion when the note in controversy was given, under the terrific domestic calamity suddenly sprung upon him, to act freely and intelligently. 'Without imputing any improper motives to the bank officers, it is obvious that the course taken by them led to that suprise which was unexpected, and operated to mislead and confuse the complainant, and must, in view of the condition of his mind and the absence of friends, be held to amount to legal fraud. A father, overwhelmed by the information that his eldest son had been guilty of forgery, upon the spur of the moment, and doubtless in the vain hope on his part of saving the family honor, executes a note for a larger sum of money than his entire property would bring at forced sale. His state
The chancellor’s decree will be reversed, and a decree rendered in favor of complainant, and the defendant will pay the costs of this suit and of the suit at law.