94 Ohio St. 171 | Ohio | 1916
The substance of the pleadings heretofore stated sufficiently shows the issues upon
Harry N. Hills, a brother of the defendant in this action, in the year 1900 opened a private bank in Gambier, Ohio, known as the Gambier Savings Bank, and as the president and general manager continued such business about five years. During that period he had borrowed large sums of money from the bank, executing his individual notes and pledging as collateral security therefor his equity in a Pike county farm, shares of stock of The Cashier Mining & Milling Company and The Oppenheimer Institute, and also a life insurance policy upon his own life in the sum of $10,000.
In 1905 The Gambier Banking Company was organized under the laws of the state and took over all the assets of the Gambier Savings Bank. Harry Ñ. Hills then ceased to have any connection with the bank except as a debtor, the successor bank having among its assets the notes of Harry N. Hills and the property heretofore referred to as collateral security.
In the year 1909 the state superintendent’ of banks ascertained that The Gambier Banking Company had not assets sufficient to meet its obligations and that it was in an unsafe and unsound condition to transact the business for which it was organized. Under authority of Section 730, General Code, he required the bank to make good such deficiency in its assets or suffer its doors to be closed and fits business liquidated. In accordance with the requirement of the superintendent of banks the
Among the assets which came into the hands of the superintendent of banks was the note of the defendant Frank A. Hills, herein sued upon.
At the close of the evidence counsel for plaintiff below, plaintiff in error here, moved the court for a directed verdict against the defendant and also
In our opinion the trial court might properly have stated to the jury that under the facts disclosed by the record the defenses of want of consideration and failure of consideration were not available to the defendant. However, the court did instruct the jury in substance that if they found from the evidence that at the time the note sued upon was made the bank was in a failing condition, and.that the note was executed for the purpose and with the result of enabling the bank to continue its business for some period, that would constitute a sufficient consideration for the note, and that the closing of the bank subsequently because of further impairment of its assets would not constitute a failure of consideration of said note. The jury could not have understood this instruction otherwise than as a direction not to consider the defenses of want of and failure of consideration, set up in the amended answer. By such instruction, therefore, the trial court did in fact sustain the motion óf counsel in such respect and properly took from the jury the consideration of the defenses indicated.
We are also in accord with the contention of counsel for plaintiff in error that there was no evidence warranting the trial court in submitting to the jury an issue of payment. The defendant pleaded the payment of $11,741.69 into the assets of the bank by Frederick P. Hills and Dr. G. N. Ferris, as a settlement of his note, and that question was submitted to the jury in the face of the statement made by the defendant himself that “he refused to contribute anything to that end” and the undisputed evidence that no reference whatever was made to the note of the defendant, directly or indirectly, either in the conversation at the time such sum was furnished by Frederick P. Hills and Dr. G. N. Ferris or in the receipt then given. Frederick. P. Hills, who now claims to have then represented his brother, the defendant, testified
The trial court might well have followed the admonition of the judge announcing the opinion in the case of The Cincinnati Gas & Electric Co. v. Archdeacon, Admr., 80 Ohio St., 27, who there said: “It is subversive of the public interests and promotive of no right of either party to continue a contest before a jury when nothing is involved but the application of the law to a state of facts conclusively established.”
However, the defense of duress is available to the defendant, and as against that defense there are no facts warranting the imposition of the principle of estoppel. It clearly appears from the record that neither the defendant nor his brother, Frederick P. Hills, nor his brother-in-law, Dr. G. N. Ferris, prior to or at the time such notes were executed, had any relation whatever to the bank, either as officer, director or stockholder, and that neither of them was a debtor or creditor of the bank, and that neither would be affected financially if the bank were closed by order of the state superintendent of banks and its business liquidated. The only motive apparent, therefore, for the giving of their notes was to avert the threatened criminal prosecution of Harry N. Hills. There is evidence that the president, vice president and cashier of the bank, in their endeavor to procure the execution of these notes, had impressed upon the brother and brother-in-law of Harry N. Hills the very
It further appears from the record that these representations and threats were communicated by Frederick P. Hills to his brother, the defendant, and there is evidence in the record that by means of such threats the defendant was coerced into signing the note, and that but for such representations and threats he would not have executed the note now sued upon. The evidence further indicates that these threats were made under such circumstances as to constitute a reasonable and adequate cause to control the will of the defendant, and that it was intended that they should be communicated to and influence the action of the defendant and induce the execution of the note. It was, therefore, competent to show that they were in fact communicated to the defendant and also to show what, if any, effect they had in inducing the defendant to sign the note. Objection made to such evidence was, therefore, properly overruled. Fountain v. Bigham, 235 Pa. St., 35; Henry et al. v. State Bank, 131 Ia., 97, and Sharon v. Gager, 46 Conn., 186.
' In our opinion the evidence disclosed by the record justified the submission of but one issue to the jury — that of duress — and the record does not
The verdict returned by the jury is a general verdict. No request for a special verdict was made and no interrogatories submitted; hence it is not disclosed upon which defense the verdict was based. If any presumption is to be indulged it would be that the verdict is not based upon defenses which were not supported by any evidence whatever. The rule laid down in Sites v. Haverstick et al., 23 Ohio St., 626, approved and followed in Beecher v. Dunlap et al., 52 Ohio St., 64, and McAllister v. Hartsell, 60 Ohio St., 69, clearly applies and requires an affirmance of the judgment. Applying that rule to the instant case we hold that where, upon the issues made by several defenses to a claim sued upon, a general verdict is found for the defendant, it not being disclosed by answers to interrogatories or otherwise upon which issue the verdict was based, and the record disclosing no error touching either the presentation or submission of at least one of such issues, a finding upon which in favor of the prevailing party would justify a general judgment, which is rendered, error of the trial court in the submission of other issues will be disregarded.
Judgment affirmed.