182 Mo. App. 531 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1914
This is an action to recover money paid by plaintiffs to defendant upon certain notes executed by plaintiffs, which, after maturity and after the same had been paid, came into the hands of the defendant; plaintiffs having1 paid defendant the amount of such notes to prevent the sale of their property under a deed of trust securing said notes. The cause was tried before the court and a jury, resulting in a verdict and judgment for plaintiffs, and the defendant has appealed to this court.
On June 25, 1908, plaintiffs executed and delivered to one Vogelsang and his wife their three principal promissory notes, two for $300 each and one for $400, together with certain interest notes, all secured by a deed of trust on plaintiffs ’ house and premises at 3525' N. Market street in the city of St. Louis. The two notes for $300' each were due and payable one year and two years respectively after date, and the note for $400 matured three years after date. About a year after the execution of such notes and deed of trust, i. e., shortly after one note for $300 had matured, plaintiffs caused all of said notes to be paid in full. It appears that the transaction respecting the payment of these notes was conducted through an attorney who represented plaintiffs, and that the payees delivered the notes and the deed of trust to such attorney. The notes, which had been endorsed by the payees in blank, were not cancéled or marked paid; neither was the deed of trust securing them released
The note for $400 having matured June 25, 1911, and the two notes for $300 each being, then due according to the spurious extensions endorsed thereupon, and plaintiffs not having complied with defendant’s demand for payment of such notes, defendant,- in August, 1911, proceeded to foreclose the said deed of trust upon plaintiffs’ property, and caused a notice of the sale thereof under such deed of trust to he published in a newspaper in the city of St. Louis. To prevent the sale of their property under the deed of trust, plaintiffs paid to defendant the amount of all of said notes.
The above-mentioned note for four hundred dollars is not here in controversy. That note had not matured when defendant purchased it; aifd plaintiffs, conceding that defendant was a holder thereof in due course, did not seek to recover the amount paid defendant thereon. This suit, however, is for the recovery of six hundred dollars, the amount of the two notes for three hundred dollars each, with interest thereon, and proceeds upon the theory that the payment thereof to defendant, to prevent the sale of plain
I. It is insisted hy learned counsel for appellant that the latter’s demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained upon the ground that the evidence failed to show legal duress, so as to warrant the submission of such question to the jury. We think, however, that the facts adduced in evidence were sufficient to make it a question for the jury whether the payment to plaintiff of the amount of these two notes was made under a species of duress, within the meaning of that terms as viewed by our courts. Though it he true that, at the early common law, nothing short of a reasonable apprehension of imminent dangér to life, limb, or liberty was sufficient to constitute legal duress, so as to entitle one to recover hack money paid under coercion, the strictness of the common law, doctrine on this subject has been greatly relaxed within modem times. Thus the courts now generally recognize the doctrine that threats to destroy property, duress of goods, and acts of like character, under oppressive circumstances, may constitute duress; and that, in general, such compulsion or constraint as compels one to act against his will, virtually depriving him of his free moral agency in the premises and of power to refuse compliance with the unlawful demand of another, regardless of the manifestation or apprehension of force, may constitute what has been termed moral duress, and that a payment of money made under such circumstances will not he regarded as voluntary. The doctrine is one sounding in equity, and proceeds in general upon the theory that it would he inequitable and' against good conscience for money or property so obtained to he withheld from the plaintiff. [See Brown v. Worthington, 162 Mo. App. 508, 142 S. W. 1082; Fout v. Giraldin, 64 Mo. App. 165; Wells v. Adams, 88
In Fout v. Giraldin, supra, plaintiffs mortgaged their land to secure a loan, and, as further security for the latter, assigned the rents of such land and other lands. When a part of such loan became due, plaintiffs tendered payment of all thereof, being entitled to pay all of the same at such time, but the mortgagees refused to accept such tender and to release their security unless they were paid a certain further sum of money to which they were not entitled under such circumstances. Plaintiffs, in order to secure a release, complied with the unlawful exactions of the mortgagees. This court held that the sum thus wrongfully exacted from the plaintiffs could be recovered by them, as having been paid under duress.
In Brown v. Worthington, supra, the plaintiff contracted with the defendant for the purchase of a drove of hogs at a stipulated price. In reliance upon such contract plaintiff resold the greater part of the hogs to a third person. Defendant refused to comply with his contract and deliver the hogs unless an additional sum of money were paid him, which payment plaintiff was compelled to make in order to avoid a breach of his own contract to deliver the hogs which he had sold to such third person. We there affirmed a judgment for plaintiff upon the ground that the facts warranted the jury in finding that the amount exacted by defendant, over and above the contract price, was paid by plaintiff under a species of duress.
We are referred by learned counsel for the appellant to Wood v. Telephone Co., 223 Mo. 559, 123 S. W. 6, and particularly to the language there quoted
The Wood case, supra, was before this court when Brown v. Worthington, supra, was decided, as will appear by reference to the brief of appellant in the latter case; and it was evidently not deemed controlling authority for the question then before the court. And neither do we think that it is controlling upon the facts of the record now before us.
And in Brewing Co. v. St. Louis, supra, where plaintiff’s only alternative was to submit to an unlawful exaction or discontinue business, the Supreme Court held that the money paid under such coercion or compulsion could be recovered as having been paid, not voluntarily, but under a species of duress. And it is there said, in effect, that the strictness of the original rule on this subject has been so far relaxed that the payment of illegal charges or exactions, constrained by urgent business exigencies, is not to be regarded as a voluntary payment, and that an action will lie to recover the money so paid.
In the case before us, the notes in question were purchased by defendant after maturity, and hence the latter took them subject to such lawful defenses as the makers might have in the premises. They had in
II. At the request of plaintiff, the court instructed the jury that if they believed from the evidence that defendant bought the notes in question after maturity, and that they were sold by the said attorney without plaintiffs’ knowledge, consent or authority, and that the endorsements thereon extending the time of payment were made without plaintiffs ’ direction, authority or consent, and that the proceeds of the sale thereof were not delivered or accounted for to plaintiffs, and that the latter did not consent to or ratify the sale of such notes or the said appropriations of the proceeds thereof, or the making of such endorsements thereon, and that plaintiffs on the demand of the defendant
This instruction — the only one given for plaintiffs —is subject to the precise -criticism as was that discussed in Brown v. Worthington, supra, and beyond doubt, we think, it was reversible error to give it. It omits altogether to reckon with the ultimate fact to be found by the jury, which pertains to the condition of mind on plaintiffs’ part produced by the alleged wrongful conduct of the defendant, and fails to require the jury to find that the facts hypothesized in the instruction did- operate so as to virtually take away plaintiffs’ free agency, or that the exercise of their free will power was thereby so far overcome that they may be regarded as having been coerced into making such payment by a species of moral duress.
As said in Brown v. Worthington, supra, this instruction seems to assume, as a matter of law, that if the facts hypothesized were found to be true, then moral duress appeared. “Such is not true unless the jury believed those facts and circumstances cast a restraint upon plaintiff sufficient to overcome the will of a person of ordinary firmness so as to destroy his free moral agency.” [See also Wood v. Telephone Co., supra, l. c. 558.]
As to the crucial question involved, viz., the alleged duress, the instruction authorizes a recovery upon the finding alone that plaintiffs paid the notes in question, and interest, “in order to prevent a sale of their said home under said deed of trust.” The latter, as to which there was no dispute, was insufficient; for the court could not declare, as a matter of law, that a payment made in order to prevent the sale of
Other questions are raised relative to the instructions, but it is unnecessary to notice them here. For the error noted, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded. It is so ordered.