106 Mass. 291 | Mass. | 1871
The answer insists upon two grounds of defence; first, that the note was obtained from the defendant Jaques by duress and threats of unlawful imprisonment; second, that it was given upon an agreement to suppress a criminal prosecution, and is therefore illegal and void.
The case finds that there was an unsettled account between Jaques and the plaintiffs, and that he insisted that, if any balance was due to them, it was much less than they claimed. They on their part not only insisted that he was in debt to them in the Bum of $700, but that he had been guilty of the crime of embezzlement. They had communicated to his father, and also to the
The definition of duress as given by the learned judge in his charge to the jury is substantially correct. He went on however to instruct them in substance that if Jaques admitted that lm owed the plaintiffs the amount of the note, and the parties assumed at the time that such was the fact, that fact “ would repel any inference of duress, although the facts attending the making of the note in other particulars would indicate that the making of the note was under the influence of duress.” We do not concur in that view of the law. If he had embezzled their funds, they had a right to have him prosecuted. If he owed them a
It appears to us also that the position of the case was such that the instruction requested in the defendants’ third prayer, or something substantially like it, was appropriate and ought to have been given. There had been a charge of embezzlement, and a threat of criminal prosecution against Jaques just before the final settlement, and Clark had been sent to New York by the father “ to ascertain what the trouble was.” There was evidence tending to show that the threats were repeated, and it is impossible to say that those threats may not have had some influence on the minds of both defendants at the time when the note was given. It appears to us to have been a mistake on the part of the judge to refuse to give such an instruction, on the ground that there was no evidence of any charge of a felony at the time of the settlement. It is not necessary to show that it was expressly repeated at the moment of settlement. Such a charge had been made a very few days before, and nothing is reported to show that it had been retracted. It is at least possible that the settlement may have been made under the pressure of that charge. It was entirely a question of fact, whether the note was extorted from the defendants by the fear of a prosecution against Jaques, and by “torturing the compassion” of his relatives and friends. If a promise or understanding, that the threatened prosecution should be stopped, entered into, or made any part of the consideration of the note, it would be enough to render it invalid, and of no bindXtg force against either of these defendants. Upon this question the jury have had no opportunity to pass.
As the case is to go back for trial, it becomes necessary to -add that we see no ground for considering Clark as an original joint promisor, or as under any liability other than that of indorser.