34 Kan. 223 | Kan. | 1885
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Action upon a note and mortgage. The findings of the trial court are not contested before us, and we must
“ They had come for a settlement of Rogers’s claim in the cattle; that they had a warrant for his arrest for embezzling $550, which was in his (Blake’s) possession; that unless he executed a note and mortgage, to be signed by himself and wife, upon their homestead, for $550, and also for $20 attorney-fees for Blake, $10 for the services of Underwood as deputy sheriff, and $2 for the justice of the peace, he would be arrested and taken to jail for embezzlement.”
Barrett and wife refused to do this; Blake then took the warrant from his pocket and handed it to Underwood and told him “ to read it,” which he did in the presence of all the parties, including the children. Blake then told the deputy sheriff “not to lay his hands on Barrett until he and his wife took a little more time to execute the note and mortgage” — giving them just ten minutes to do so; and Blake then threatened them “ that unless they did so in the ten minutes, Barrett would be arrested upon the warrant and taken to jail.” Barrett and his wife were alarmed and frightened by the threats and conduct of the parties, the wife being in tears; the children
From other findings, it also appears that the warrant issued by the justice of the peace for the arrest of Barrett was never returned; that no record was ever made in the docket of the justice showing the same or any criminal prosecution against Barrett; that Barrett was never arrested upon the charge, and that no further criminal proceedings have ever been had; that the sole and only object of Blake and Rogers in filing the complaint and obtaining the warrant, was to make use of the criminal process of the state to compel the execution of the note and mortgage in suit.
The note in controversy is in these words:
“$582. — Thirty months after date, for value received, I promise to pay to the order of J. C. Rogers the sum of five hundred and eighty-two dollars, with interest from date until paid, at the rate of ten per cent, per annum; if not paid annually, then to become as principal and draw the same rate of interest.
“This 3d day of January, 1881. Philip Babbett.”
Between the parties to the original transaction, of course, the payment of the note could not be enforced in the courts. It is claimed, however, by Charles B. Hatch that he is entitled to hold the note and mortgage free from any defense which the makers could set up against the payee, upon the ground that he purchased the note for a valuable consideration before its maturity, in the usual course of business, without the knowledge of any equities or defense against it. He asserts himself to be a bona fide owner of the note and mortgage for
“State oe Arkansas, County oe Washington, ss.: I, James C. Rogers, do hereby assign the within note to Charles B. Hatch, of Osage county, Kansas. Said assignment is made without recourse on me, either in law or equity.
“J. C. Rogers.
“Signed in the presence of PI. F. Raymond, Clerk Co. Court, Washington county, Arkansas.”
The question is, whether this writing can be considered in a commercial sense an indorsement. If the note was not “indorsed” to Hatch, it was not taken by him in the usual course of business by the mode of transfer in which negotiable paper is usually transferred.
“A negotiable promissory note, if payable to ‘ order/ can be assigned free from all equities only by indorsement, for there is no statute in this state that authorizes a negotiable promissory note payable to ‘ order ’ to be transferred free from all or any equitable defenses or claims, except by indorsement.” (Comp. Laws of 1879, ch. 14, §1; McCrum v. Corby, 11 Kas. 464.)
The alleged indorsement is clearly not in the usual or common form, but substantially different therefrom. The words of the indorsement, taken together, must be treated as only an assignment of the note. An assignee stands in the place of the assignor, and takes simply an assignor’s rights; but the assignment of a note will not cut off the defenses of the maker. (Trust Company v. Bank, 101 U. S. 68; Bank v. Walker, 2 McCrary, 565.) We think it will be conceded that if there were only written upon the back of the note the following words: “I, James C. Rogers, do hereby assign the within note to Charles B. Hatch, of Osage county, Kansas,” that such writing would not be considered an indorsement in a commercial sense. We do not think the additional words written upon the back, to wit: “Said assignment is made without recourse on me, either in law or equity,” alter or change the legal rights of the parties under the written assignment, and all of the writing must be treated as merely an assign
The writer of this, however, feels impelled to express his individual views upon another question, discussed at length in the briefs — that is, whether the duress in the inception of the note utterly avoids it, even if Hatch were a bona fide holder for value. The decisions generally support the doctrine that the holder of negotiable paper before maturity and without notice takes it clear of equities between the original parties, even when obtained under duress. This doctrine is declared to be necessary in order to give security to negotiable paper. (Belas v. Neddo, 1 McCrary, 206; Hagan v. Moore, 48 Ga. 156; Clark v. Pease, 11 N. H. 414.) It is doubtful whether the reasons given in the decisions are convincing or logical. There are many things to be said in favor of holding a note void, where it is signed by a party under severe threats and danger of personal violence. In such a case the party is not a free agent, and is in no default. A contract entered into under duress lacks the first essence of validity—
Mr. Daniel, in his excellent work on Negotiable Instruments, says:
“Indeed, we can discern no principle which would compel any person, whether a party to a negotiable or other kind of instrument, to pay it, when under violent duress — that is, under the compulsion of force, with the only alternative of submitting to great bodily injury or indignity. Consent is of the essence of every contract, and if it is not given, the party should not be bound, if he had no- alternative but to seem to give it of suffer grievous wrong. He creates no trust; he commits no negligence, whereby the confidence of another can be betrayed. He is in no default, having a right of self-defense in preferring his own life and safety to the chances of pecuniary injury to others; and his extorted act is nothing more or less than the act of a wrongdoer who uses his person as the instrument of forging his name.” (Vol. 1, §858, pp. 651-652.)
Prof. Parsons says, in vol. 1, Notes and Bills, p. 276:
“A distinction may perhaps be taken between notes obtained by fraud and those obtained by force or duress. In the former case, we should say that the defrauded party would generally be liable to a bona fide holder. But a note or bill obtained by duress might not be available in any hands against the party so compelled; and if the note were a good note, and a subsequent party indorsed it by duress, he would not be bound to-anyone.”
In Boscoe’s Digest of Bills and Notes, note 20, p. 117, it is said, in commenting on Duncan v. Scott, 1 Campb. 100:
“ It may be doubted whether the defendant in this case was liable even to a bona fide indorsee for value. The bill being drawn under the duress, no contract arose, and it resembles the case of a bill drawn by a feme covert, who is under a disability to contraot.”
In Richardson v. Duncan, 3 N. H. 508, it was said:
“That when there is an arrest for improper purposes, with*233 out a just cause; or where there is au arrest for a just cause, but without laAvful authority; or where there is an arrest for a just cause, and under lawful authority, for unlawful purposes, it may be construed a duress.”
It was held in Alexander v. Pierce, 10 N. H. 494, that where a promissory note is executed under menace of imprisonment, and it appeared that the menace was of an unlawful imprisonment, and that the party was put in fear of imprisonment and thereby induced to execute the note, the note was void.
In Meadows v. Smith, 7 Ired. Eq. N. C. 7, a note executed by a poor, ignorant old man for the purpose of being released from an arrest made at a late hour of night, on the groundless charge of conspiracy, was held void.
In Collins v.Westbury, 2 Bay (S. C.) 211, it was said by the court:
“So cautiously does the law watch over all contracts, that it will not permit any to be binding but such as are made by persons perfectly free, and at full liberty to make or refuse such contracts, and that not only with respect to their persons, but in regard to their goods and chattels also. Contracts to be binding must not be made under any restraint or fear of their persons, otherwise they are void, as in the case of Phans v. Huey & Franhlin, vol. 1, p. 13, (Riley’s edit.,) where a note was deemed void, both as to principal and his security, where a party of armed men, in quest of horse thieves, called at a man’s house in the. night, and Evans, one of the party, demanded of the man of the house a settlement or satisfaction for an injury he had sustained some time before, in a quarrel; and the defendant Huey, in order to compromise the matter, gave his note for twenty-eight pounds sterling, an,d the next morning got Franklin, his neighbor, to be his security. In that case, it was deem,ed duress; because .an armed party going to his house in the night-time, and one of them demanding a settlement for a former injury, was calculated to alarm a man’s fears, although no threats were made use of. This to be sure was only a nisi prius case. But it has been a leading case on the subject, and admitted as the law of duress, ever since.”
Coke said, in 2 Inst. 483:
“A man shall avoid his deed for manuas of imprisonment,*234 albeit he were never imprisoned; for a man shall avoid his own act for manuas in four cases, viz.: (1) For fear of loss of life; (2) of loss of member; (3) of mayhem; and (4) of imprisonment.”
In Forshay v. Ferguson, 5 Hill, 158, in referring to the rule laid down by Coke, Bronson, J., said:
“If a deed might be avoided nearly three centuries ago on the ground that it was procured by threats and the fear of illegal imprisonment, there can be no room for doubt upon the question at the present day. As civilization has advanced, the law has tended much more strongly than it formerly did to overthrow everything which is built upon violence. . . . I do not intend to say that a man' can avoid his bond on the ground that it was procured by an illegal distress of goods, but I entertain no doubt that a contract procured by threats and fear of battery or destruction of property, may be avoided on the ground of duress. There is nothing but the form of a contract, in such a case, without the substance. It wants the voluntary assent of the party to be bound by it.”
In Hatter v. Greenlee, 1 Port. 222, the court decided that—
“There is duress of imprisonment sufficient to invalidate acts done thereby, where there is restraint of liberty without warrant of law; or where the warrant, though legal, has been obtained upon a false charge without probable cause; or where an arrest, legal in inception, has been followed by maltreatment of the prisoner.” (26 Am. Dec. 378, and the notes cited.)
In the case of United States v. Huckabee, 83 U. S. 414, Mr. Justice Clifford, in delivering the opinion of the court, said, among other things:
“Duress, it must be admitted, is a good defense to a deed, or any other written obligation, if it be proved that the instrument was procured by such means; nor is it necessary to show, in order to establish such a defense, that actual violence was used, because consent is the very essence of a contract, and if there be compulsion, there is no binding consent, and it is well settled that moral compulsion, such as that produced by threats to take life or to inflict great bodily harm, as well as that produced by imprisonment, is sufficient in legal contemplation to destroy free agency, without which there can be no contract, because in that state of the case there is no consent. Unlawful duress is a good defense to a contract, if it includes such degree*235 of constraint or danger, either actually inflicted or threatened and impending, as is sufficient in severity or apprehension to overcome the mind and will of a person of ordinary firmness. . . . Positive menace of battery to the person, or of trespass to lands, or of destruction of goods, may undoubtedly be, in many cases, sufficient to overcome the mind and will of a person entirely competent, in all other respects, to contract, and it is clear that a contract made under such circumstances is as utterly without the voluntary consent of the party menaced, as if he were induced to sign it by actual violence; nor is the reason assigned for the more stringent rule, that he should rely upon the law for redress, satisfactory, as the law may not afford him anything like a sufficient and adequate compensation for the injury.”
In Anderson v. Anderson, 9 Kas. 112, Mr. Chief Justice Kingman, speaking for this court, said:
“The only other error urged in this court is as to the instructions. But little of the evidence is in the record, and there is nothing in the scraps preserved that tends in any way to show that the plaintiff in error was not a bona fide purchaser for a valuable consideration. So far as we can perceive, the jury decided the case on the ground that defendant in error signed the deed under duress. If she did so, she never gave that consent to the alienation of the homestead that the constitution requires, and the court submitted this question fairly to the jury under proper instructions. As we understand the law on this point the good faith of the purchaser cuts no figure, and the court correctly refused the first instruction asked by plaintiff in error.” (Brown v. Pierce, 7 Wall. 214; Chitty on Contracts, 217; 2 Gfreenl. Ev. 283; Baker v. Morten, 12 Wall. 158; Watkins v. Baird, 6 Mass. 506 — 4 Am. Dec. 170 — 173; Whitefield v. Longfellow, 13 Me. 146; Gulleaume v. Bowe, 94 N. Y. 268; Helm v. Helm, 11 Kas. 19.)
The authorities holding that duress is not available as a defense where the note is purchased before maturity for value and without notice, are to the effect that there is no distinction in fact between a note the signature to which is obtained by fraud, and one where the signature is obtained by duress. This is hardly sound doctrine. If a person signs a note “ under the compulsion of force, with the only alternative of submitting to great bodily injury or indignity,” he is certainly not a
Now a person whose signature is obtained to a note by fraud only, is in a different condition ordinarily from one who signs an instrument under threats and dangers of personal violence, or great indignity; and while fraud in obtaining the signature of a person would be fatal in a case between the original parties, yet to some “extent, both parties being in fault, neither should be allowed to take advantage of his own wrong as against an innocent party; hence the doctrine that mere fraud between the original parties will be no defense or bar to the title of a bona fide holder of the note for value. But a person who signs a note or any other obligation under threats and danger of great bodily injury or indignity, cannot be said to be at fault or guilty of wrong.
The conduct of James C. Rogers in obtaining the note and mortgage is exceedingly reprehensible, and deserving of the severest condemnation. If possible, all loss occasioned the plaintiff from his purchase of the note and mortgage should fall upon Rogers, as he evidently is the wrongdoer and ought to be made responsible for the unlawful acts committed by him.
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.