Appellant sued appellee for money alleged to be due by the terms of a certain contract entered into between them. Appellee filed a so-called counterclaim against appellant, averring that the contract sued upon was obtained by threats, and asking that the instalments sued for be declared void and the contract canceled. The appellant’s complaint was then dismissed, and'the case tried on the issues made, on the counterclaim. At the request of both parties the court made a special finding of facts, and stated conclusions of law thereon. A decree was entered for the appellee, and said contract canceled. The counterclaim was in three paragraphs. Appellant’s motions that each be made more specific were overruled. The appellant then demurred separately - to each paragraph, which demurrers were overruled.
The errors assigned are: (1) The overruling of the demurrers to each paragraph; (2) the overruling of the motions to make each paragraph more specific; (3) the overruling of the motion for a new trial.
It is alleged, in substance, in the first paragraph of the counterclaim, that appellee owned 5,000 acres of land in Mexico; that he entered into a contract (made part of the complaint by exhibit) with appellant to sell said land on commission; that before any sales were made said contract was canceled; that thereafter, to wit, on April 9, 1898, Owen and' others organized under the laws of Indiana a corporation known as the Mexican Coffee & Rubber Company, and said lands were sold to such corporation; that on June 7, 1899, another corporation was organized under the laws of Indiana by Owen and others, known as the Ubero Plantation Company, which latter corporation purchased 1,000 acres of land from said Mexican Coffee & Rubber Company; that Owen was president and a director of said plantation company, owned and controlled a majority of the stock, was financially interested therein to the amount of $100,000, had interested capitalists in said plantation company, and was placing the stock thereof on the market, which stock was finding ready sale, all of which appellant knew; that, for the purpose of compelling appellee to pay him money, appellant became the owner of one share of stock, and by his attorney prepared a petition asking the appointment of a receivei for the Ubero Plantation Company; that said petition was shown to Owen and a certain other stockholder, and the threat made that unless Owen paid, or provided for the payment of, $35,000 said proceeding would be instituted; that said threat was made to other stockholders, knowledge of which came to appellee before the contract sued upon was made; that appellee offered to go to trial at once on the question of any debt due
The second paragraph sets out the same facts as the first.
The third paragraph, by exhibit, sets out in full the first contract entered into by Rose and Owen, and alleges substantially these additional facts: that both parties contemplated that the land should be sold in small tracts, not in bulk; that, for the purpose of claiming the entire commission, Rose induced Owen to organize a corporation to which the land should be conveyed; that Rose promised not to claim that the commission had accrued under the contract, but promised that said contract would be canceled and a new contract made with such corporation; that appellant asserted that said contract had never been can
The prayer of each paragraph is that the instalment sued on be declared void.
Appellant’s brief is far from being a model. The concise statement of the record consists of a statement thereof in its entirety. There is no discussion separate from the points and authorities, but only a conglomerate mass of statements of law, citations of authorities and fragmentary arguments.
The thirteenth finding of fact is in terms as follows: “It is found that Eose, some time in November, 1899, procured his son Emmett Eose to subscribe for a share of $100 of the stock of the Ubero Plantation Company upon monthly payments of $2.50 for forty months, and on June 15, 1900, nine days after Eose had begun his suit in the Superior Court of Marion County said Eose caused his son to assign his said stock to him, he paying nothing therefor, and there having been only $17.15 paid on the stock at that time. The purchase and assignment of this stock were not made as an investment, but for the purpose of making Eose a stockholder, in order that he might the better force the collection of his claim against Owen and the Mexican Coffee & Eubber Company. For several weeks prior to May 7, 1901, and up to that date, said Eose, by himself and his attorney before referred to, the latter acting for Eose and by his authority, made and caused to be made and conveyed to Owen threats that, unless Owen should forthwith pay to Eose a large sum of money, namely, $35,000, as a settlement of Eose’s alleged claim, Eose, through his attorney, would file a complaint and bring suit for the appointment of a receiver for the Ubero Plantation Company; that said attorney, acting for Eose, and by his direction, made these threats to . * * * directors of said company, and to * # * its attorney, and to * * * attorney for Owen,
The facts found fully sustain the judgment, and there being no reversible error, the judgment is affirmed.