131 Mass. 51 | Mass. | 1881
At the trial, the evidence tended to show that the plaintiff sued the male defendant upon several promissory notes purporting to have been indorsed by him; that the defendant set up in that suit that the notes were not indorsed by him, but his pretended signatures were forged by his son; and that a settlement of that suit was made, under which the defendant gave his note for one thousand dollars, secured by a mortgage of real estate.
In the case at bar, the defendant seeks to avoid this mortgage upon the ground that he was induced to execute it by duress. The evidence tended to show that he was induced to execute it by threats of the prosecution and imprisonment of his son. The court instructed the jury as to what would constitute duress, without objection being taken; and then ruled in substance that the defendant could avoid the mortgage by proof of duress to his son. The plaintiff excepted to this ruling, and the first question is as to its correctness.
At common law, as a general rule, the defence of duress per minas must be sustained by proof of threats which create a reasonable fear of loss of life, or of great bodily harm or of imprisonment, of the person to whom the threats are made, and one
The question whether this exception extends to the relation of parent and child does not appear to have been expressly adjudicated. But we find many dicta of judges and statements of authors, entitled to great respect, which show that from the earliest times it has been considered as the settled law that the relation of parent and child was within the exception.
In a note to Bayly v. Clare, 2 Brownl. 275, 276, in the Com mon Bench, Michaelmas term 7 Jac. 1, it is said that “the husband may avoid the deed that he hath sealed by the duress of imprisonment of his wife or son, but not of his servant.” This is evidently the same case stated by Sergeant Rolle in Ms Abridgment, as follows: “ A servant shall not avoid Ms deed made by duress to his master. M. 7. Ja. B. per Coke. But a son shall avoid his deed by duress to his father. M. 7. Ja. B. per Coke. The husband shall avoid a deed by duress to his wife. M. 7. Ja. B. per Coke.” 1 Rol. Ab. 687, pls. 4-6.
Lord Bacon, under the maxim, Persona conjuncta cequiparatur interesse proprio, wrote, “ So if a man menace me, that he will imprison or hurt in body my father or my child except I make unto him an obligation, I shall avoid this duress, as well as if the duress had been to mine own person.” Bac. Max. reg. 18.
The same law is explicitly laid down without question by the author of Bacon’s Abridgment and by Mr. Dane and by Mr. Justice McLean. Bac. Ab. Duress, B. 5 Dane Ab. 166, 375. McClintock v. Cummins, 3 McLean, 158, 159.
In Wayne v. Sands, 1 Freem. 351, the point decided was that a plea, that one Robinson was jointly bound with the defendant, and that Robinson entered into the contract by duress, was bad. The reporter attributes to Wylde, J. the remark that, “ if the duress be to a father or brother, and a son enter into bond, this is a duress to the son,” and to Twisden, J. the remark that “a man shall in no case avoid his deed by a duress to another, let him be related how he will.” The case is too imperfectly
We are not referred to any modern authorities opposed to the views of the learned judges and authors whom we have cited. The exception in favor of husband and wife is not based solely upon the legal fiction that they are in law one person, but rather upon the nearness and tenderness of the relation. The substantial reasons for the exception apply as strongly to the case of a parent and child as to that of a husband and wife. No more powerful and constraining force can be brought to bear upon a man, to overcome his will and extort from him an obligation, than threats of great injury to his child. Both upon reason and upon the weight of the authorities we are of opinion that a parent may avoid his obligation by duress to his child, and therefore that the ruling of the Superior Court upon this point was correct.
The plaintiff contends that the defence of duress was not open under the pleadings. In a case where the plaintiff declares upon an executory contract, if the defendant relies upon duress, he must specify it in his answer. It is then a substantive fact in avoidance of the plaintiff’s case, which must be set up. Gen. Sts. c. 129, §§ 17-27. But this is a suit under the Gen. Sts. c. 137, and the St. of 1879, c. 237, in which the plaintiff sets up that the defendants are in the possession of certain land which they hold “ unlawfully and against the right of said plaintiff.” The provisions of the practice act above cited do not apply to it. Taylor v. New England Coal Mining Co. 4 Allen, 577. Any evidence, which goes to show that the deed under which the plaintiff claims the right of possession is invalid, is admissible under the general issue, as it sustains the defendants’ denial of the plaintiff’s allegations. The evidence of duress was therefore properly admitted. Exceptions overruled.