133 Ala. 489 | Ala. | 1901
“Whenever a conveyance or contract is obtained by actual duress, equity will grant relief, defensively or affirmatively, by cancellation, injunction, or otherwise as the circumstances may require. In determining what constitutes duress — what force or threats — equity follows the law.” — 2 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur., § 950. “Under the common-law rule, an act could be avoided for duress per minas only when the threatened danger to avoid which it was done was either loss of life, loss of a member, mayhem, or imprisonment. The avoidance of an act for duress per minas was said by the old authorities, still adhered to by the English courts, to have been limited to these cases because the law afforded an adequate redress for the infliction of any other injuries, and for this reason
Some of the cases above referred to take no note of a distinction in England and in some of the United States betAAreen cases AAhere money is paid to secure possession of goods unlawfully withheld from the oavuer, and cases where a note or other form of obligation is given by the owner to regain possession of goods so detained. This is not surprising. When the matter is attentively examined, the Avonder is, not that these courts have taken no heed of such supposed distinction, but that any court ever did. In the former class of cases all the courts, English and American, hold that money so paid may be recoAmred in an action of indehit
The exigencies of this case do not require us to decide whether in all cases where a contract is made to recover possession of goods unlawfully ivithheld from the owner, such contract may be avoided for duress. But upon the authorities and considerations to which we have adverted, Ave do hold, confining ourselves to the case before us, that AAdien the possession of one’s goods is unlawfully held against him, and he has such an important, urgent and immediate occasion for their possession and use as cannot be subserved by a resort to the courts to recover them — “such an immediate want of his goods, that an action of trover [or detinue] would not do his business.” — Astley v. Reynolds, 2 Strange, 916 — he may avoid any contract he enters into with the wrongdoer in order to regain possession of them. The bill of complaint brings this case within this ruling. It shoAVS an equity in the complainants to have the note and mortgage executed by them to the respondent to regain possession of their horses and wagons, cancelled and aAroided; and the chancellor erred in dismissing it for Avant of equity. The bill is perhaps faulty in some respects — as, for instance, in not positively aArerring with more particularity the immediate injury that would have ensued to complainants’ business from the longer detention of their property by the respondent — but it is not open to any of the objections taken by the demurrer. That should have been overruled.
The decree of the chancery court is reversed, and a decree will be here entered overruling the demurrers and denying the motion to dismiss for want of equity.
Reversed and rendered.