Morrison v. Faulkner

15 S.W. 797 | Tex. | 1891

This action was instituted by appellee on a promissory note alleged to have been executed by appellants as partners on October 11, 1888, to secure the purchase money of a tract of land conveyed by him to them on which foreclosure of lien was sought.

Defendants by an answer, sworn to by one of them, alleged that the note was without consideration; that it was executed under duress caused by fear of a criminal prosecution threatened by Faulkner for an offense of which they were not guilty; that title to part of the land *130 for which it was executed had failed, and defendant R.R. Morrison alleged that the note was executed by O.R. Morrison without his authority, consent, or ratification, and that it was not executed for a partnership purpose.

The cause was tried by the court and a judgment rendered for the plaintiff.

The uncontroverted evidence shows that M.C. Johnson was indebted to defendants, who were merchants doing business under the name of Morrison Bro., in the sum of $800, and that to secure this he executed to them a deed for twelve hundred and eighty acres of land, which embraced the land subsequently conveyed by Faulkner to them. At the time the deed was executed Johnson furnished defendants with a statement from the Land Commissioner or from the surveyor of the county to the effect that the land would be patented to him. After defendants received the deed with consent of Johnson they gave a mortgage on the land to a person in Galveston, from whom they borrowed $1350, explaining to the lender how they held the property; in fact, the deed seems to have been made to them with the understanding that they should use it as a security, and it was intended as between the parties only as a mortgage.

About ten months after the mortgage was executed Johnson proposed, if defendants would reconvey to him, that he would pay to them the sum he owed them, and they did so. Prior to this last occurrence Johnson had seen Faulkner, who had agreed if Johnson would convey to him six hundred and forty acres of the land to take up Johnson's note to Morrison Bro., which they had deposited in Galveston as collateral security with the mortgage on which they had borrowed money, and it was with a view to enable Johnson to carry out his agreement with Faulkner that Morrison Bro. made the reconveyance. Neither of the Morrisons had any conversation with Faulkner nor in any manner participated in the transactions between Faulkner and Johnson, but they consummated their agreement, Faulkner paying the note of Johnson held by Morrison Bro. and by them deposited as collateral security, the sum so paid going to the person from whom they had borrowed money, and Johnson conveyed to Faulkner the six hundred and forty acres of laud by a deed with general warranty, and the deed made by Johnson to Morrison Bro., as well as the reconveyance made to Johnson, contained like covenants as well as recitals that the land was patented, but both those deeds were prepared by Johnson or under his direction, and neither of the Morrisons in fact knew that they contained covenants of warranty or recitals that the land had been patented. After Johnson had conveyed to Faulkner the latter discovered that the land had not been patented, and it was subsequently ascertained that on account of conflicts with older surveys there was but little more than *131 five hundred acres that could be patented, and through the efforts of Faulkner a patent was obtained for that.

The evidence of Johnson and the Morrisons, taken by deposition, shows that after Faulkner ascertained that the land had not been patented and fell short of quantity conveyed, he made known to them that he intended to prosecute them criminally for swindling and also to institute civil action against them unless the matter was adjusted to his satisfaction, and that the Morrisons then, to avoid criminal proceedings against them which they believed Faulkner would institute, which would have been ruinous to their business as merchants as they were then situated, executed the note sued and received a deed for the land which was still stated to embrace six hundred and forty acres. This deed was a quit claim and was never recorded nor rights asserted under it, but was brought into court by the defendants, who asked that it be canceled, proposed to make any proper reconveyance, and prayed that the note sued on be canceled.

O.R. Morrison testified that he told Faulkner after the note sued on was executed that they would never pay it, but this Faulkner denied.

Faulkner testified as a witness in court, but did not deny that he had threatened to prosecute the Morrisons criminally as stated by them and Johnson, but he produced copies of letters and a telegram in which he only threatened a civil action if a settlement was not made. He also exhibited a letter written by O.R. Morrison after the date of the note sued on, in which the following language occurs: "We are under obligations to you for the way you have acted in this matter. If we had been forced to pay the note it would have put us in a tight place. We will not forget your kindness."

The evidence leaves but little doubt that from Johnson's language when the deed to Faulkner was delivered the latter understood that the land was patented.

The trial ended at 4 o'clock p. m. on the last day of the term, and on being requested to make out and file conclusions of fact and law the judge refused to do so, because the other business of the term which necessarily had to be transacted would consume his time until the hour for adjournment.

Complaint is made of this, but the judge refused for want of time, and it furnishes no just cause of complaint. Davis v. The State, 75 Tex. 434.

It is urged that the evidence was not sufficient to show that R.R. Morrison authorized the execution of the note or that O.R. Morrison had power as a partner to execute it, but we are of opinion that the evidence was sufficient to sustain a finding that R.R. Morrison consented to its execution as fully as did O.R. Morrison; and if its execution was not under duress it seems to us that it was so connected with *132 the partnership business as to authorize O.R. Morrison to execute it in the firm name.

From the facts shown it is evident that neither of the Morrisons did any act that would amount to a crime, and the most that can be said is that by receiving a deed reciting that the land was patented and in executing a deed with a like recital they may have influenced Faulkner to believe that this was true; but there is no reasonable ground shown to induce the belief that they had any intention in this respect to mislead Faulkner, who seems to have had no conversation with either of them until after Johnson had conveyed to him.

The evidence of Johnson and both of the Morrisons, uncontradicted by Faulkner, who had full opportunity to do so if their statements were not true, leaves no doubt that he threatened a criminal prosecution against them and that they believed he would carry out his threat, and that under the influence of the threat used for the purpose of coercion the note sued upon was executed.

The threat of criminal prosecution for swindling involved a threat to arrest and imprison, from which though guilty of no crime they believed they could not escape unless they executed the note sued upon or performed some other act which Faulkner had no right to require of them.

A contract made under a threat of unlawful imprisonment, the fear induced by the threat being the moving cause for its execution, is a contract made under duress and its maker may avoid it.

Plaintiff had threatened the prosecution and defendants were authorized to believe that he would carry it into execution; he had the means to put it in motion, and his telegram received just before he went to the town where they lived, in connection with former threats, was calculated to induce them to believe that he intended at once to do so if they did not accede to his demands.

If the testimony of defendants is to be believed there can be no doubt that they executed the note sued on under a well founded apprehension that if they did not the threats would be carried out, and that fear of this so operated upon their minds as to influence the act.

If there was conflicting evidence the judgment ought to be permitted to stand, but there is none on the question of duress and there is nothing in the evidence of the defendants or of Johnson to discredit their testimony. Plaintiff was on the stand, but did not controvert their statements, and under this state of facts we feel constrained to hold that a state of facts was shown which did not authorize a judgment in favor of the plaintiff.

For want of conclusions of fact and law we have been embarrassed in the disposition of this case, but we can see no ground on which the court below could have rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff other than that he may have come to the conclusion that the uncontradicted *133 facts did not show duress. If this was the conclusion we are of opinion that it was erroneous.

There was no pleading up ratification of the contract, nor evidence tending to show such facts as would amount to a ratification.

The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

Delivered March 3, 1891.

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