144 Wis. 190 | Wis. | 1910
Lead Opinion
The defendants II. P., A. J., and J. O. Jamie-son were the owners of the defendant Bank of Poynette and also the owners of a large amount of other property at Poy-nette, Arlington, and in that vicinity. Fred 0. Price, a son of plaintiff, had been in the employ of defendants for several years prior to 1906 in the capacity of clerk, bookkeeper, and general utility man of the defendant hank. Early in 1906 it was discovered that Fred C. Price had misappropriated a large amount of money belonging' to the defendant hank. Fred admitted his guilt and turned over such property as he had to the defendants. Other relatives of Fred also turned over property to defendants to help make up the shortage; At first the amount of the shortage was not known, hut upon investigation it turned out to he $57,857.59. Before the amount of the shortage was known and on February 16, 1906, the plaintiff and his wife made a deed of certain lands in the county of Columbia to defendant A. J. Jamieson to secure payment of the amount of shortage of their son, Fred C. Price, which might be discovered upon full investigation, and defendant A. J. Jamieson executed and delivered an agreement to the effect that upon payment in full to defendants of all sums misappropriated by Fred C. Price without loss or expense to defendants he would reconvey to plaintiff the described premises conveyed to him. At this time it was not supposed that the amount of the shortage was as large as it was afterwards found to be. After the full amount had been ascertained Other relatives turned over other property to make up the amount. Fred C. Price was not retained in the employ of defendants after January 4, 1906, and one Stroud,
From the time of the discovery of the misappropriation
The evidence further tends to show that plaintiff was called to the defendants’ bank on or about May 23, 1906, and demand made by defendants that he make an absolute deed of
Eurther recital of the evidence would seem unnecessary. It is ample to support the verdict to the effect that plaintiff was induced by threats to sign the bill of sale, and that such threats so affected the plaintiff’s mental condition that at the time he signed the bill of sale he was incapable of the free exercise of his will power. The plaintiff at time of signing was seventy-four years of age, greatly distressed, and willing to do any thing possible, as the evidence tends to show, to save his son from arrest. This seems manifest from the fact that he turned over everything he had, including his little homestead and even his woodpile, when in fact, as appears from the defendants’ receipt in evidence, the full amount of the shortage lad been paid without the property covered by the bill of sale. But whether the articles covered by the bill of sale were necessary to complete the amount of the shortage or not is not material, since the evidence is ample to support the verdict that the bill of sale was executed by the plaintiff while
“Duress, in its broad sense, now includes all instances where a condition of mind of a person, caused by fear of personal injury or loss of limb, or injury to such person’s property, wife, child, or husband, is produced by the wrongful conduct of another, rendering such person incompetent to contract with the exercise of his free will power, whether formerly relievable at law on the ground of duress or in equity on the ground of wrongful compulsion. . . . There is no legal standard of resistance which a party so circumstanced must exercise at his peril to protect himself. The question in each case is, Was the alleged injured person, by being put in fear by the other party to the transaction for the purpose of obtaining an advantage over him, deprived of the free exercise of his will power, and was such advantage thereby obtained ? If the proposition be determined in the affirmative, no matter what the nature of the threatened injury to such person, or his property, or the person or liberty of his wife or child, the advantage thereby obtained cannot be retained. • The idea is that what constitutes duress is wholly a matter of law and is simply the deprivation by one person of the will power of another by putting such other in fear for the purpose of obtaining, by that means, some valuable advantage of him. The means by which that condition of mind is produced are matters of fact, and whether such condition was in fact produced is usually wholly matter of fact, though of course the*199 means may be so oppressive as to render the result an inference of law.”
The controlling'element in such cases seems to he whether the means used, considering all the circumstances of the case, are such as to prevent the free exercise of the will power. Galusha v. Sherman, supra. In McCormick H. M. Co. v. Hamilton, supra, there had been threats of criminal prosecution which it was claimed induced the signing of a mortgage. Ho physical restraint had been exercised, but the threat was of imprisonment of the son of the person induced to sign the mortgage, and it was held that such threats were sufficient to unduly influence and overpower the person signing the mortgage so that she did not act of her own free will and therefore did not sign away her homestead of her own free will, and that such acts should be declared void.- Uor is it necessary that threats should be made directly. If they are made to a third person, with intent that they be communicated, and they are so communicated, that is sufficient. Schultz v. Catlin, 78 Wis. 611, 613, 47 N. W. 946.
Mack v. Prang, 104 Wis. 1, 79 N. W. 770, is quite in point. In that case there were threats to imprison Prang for embezzlement unless Mrs. Prang would give a mortgage. She at first refused, considered the matter for a day or two, and then executed the mortgage to prevent her husband from being sent to jail. The court said (pages 4 and 5) : “Facts substantially similar to these have frequently been held to constitute duress which renders voidable a security or contract executed under their influence.” See, also, City Nat. Bank v. Kusworm, 88 Wis. 188, 59 N. W. 564. It is true that in order to constitute duress “the threat must be of such a nature, and made under such circumstances, as to constitute a reasonably adequate cause to control the will of the threatened person, and must have that effect, and the act sought to be avoided must be performed by such person while in such condition.” The following cases are mainly relied upon by appellant:
On tbe point of tbe right to recover for tbe $200 certificate of deposit, tbe court is of opinion that there is ample evidence to support tbe answer of tbe jury to tbe fourth question of tbe special verdict to tbe effect that the plaintiff was tbe owner of said certificate.
It is further argued by counsel for appellant that tbe answer to tbe third question of the special verdict is uncertain, defective, and meaningless, hence there should be a new trial. By tbe answers to tbe first and second questions of tbe special verdict tbe jury found unequivocally that tbe defendants, or some of them, to induce tbe signing, threatened tbe plaintiff, and that plaintiff was induced by such threat to sign tbe bill of sale. To tbe third question,. “Did such threat so affect tbe plaintiff’s mental condition that at tbe time be signed tbe bill of sale be was incapable of tbe free exercise of bis will power?” tbe jury answered “Tes, partially.” Tbe question arises as to tbe proper construction of this answer, or what did tbe jury mean by it when considered in connection with questions 1 and 2 of tbe verdict. Tbe jury by their answers to the first and second questions bad found that defendants made tbe threat to induce tbe signing, and that tbe plaintiff was induced by tbe threat to sign. These questions standing-alone would seem to negative tbe idea of tbe free exercise of tbe will power by plaintiff in signing tbe bill of sale. But we are met with tbe answer to the third question, and it is said by appellants’ counsel that this is a decisive question and is meaningless and therefore tbe verdict cannot stand. And it
Error is assigned upon rulings on evidence, and also upon remarks of the judge upon the trial. It is sufficient to say that we find no error in these respects. We desire to say in passing that no opinion is expressed on the sufficiency of the evidence as to the validity of any instrument executed by- the plaintiff in the transaction in question, except the bill of sale.
We find no reversible error in the record, therefore the judgment of the court below must be affirmed.
By the Court. — The judgment is affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). The evidence to show duress was slight, but was perhaps sufficient to carry the case to the jury. Accepting the verdict as a verity, it, in connection with the uncontradicted evidence in the case, shows that the parties to this action were particeps criminis in compounding a felony. This being so, the law should leave them where it found them, and refuse to afford relief by restoring to one of them the property which he parted with as a consideration for the unlawful promise exacted.
Furthermore, I think that a finding that the plaintiff was partially incapable of exercising his free will when he signed the bill of sale by reason of the threats made, negatives the idea that he signed the same under legal duress. As I understand the rule, the threats must produce such a condition of mind as to destroy the free agency of the person threatened, in order to constitute duress. Batavian Bank v. North, 114 Wis. 637, 90 N. W. 1016; Galusha v. Sherman, 105 Wis. 263,