Broadwell v. Broadwell

194 N.W. 555, 223 Mich. 641, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 851
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1923
DocketDocket No. 53
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 194 N.W. 555 (Broadwell v. Broadwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broadwell v. Broadwell, 194 N.W. 555, 223 Mich. 641, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 851 (Mich. 1923).

Opinion

Sharpe, J.

Defendant was granted a decree of divorce on the cross-bill filed by her to plaintiff’s bill therefor. Prior thereto, the parties, in contemplation of divorce proceedings, had entered into an agreement, by the terms of which defendant released all her rights to support and maintenance. The trial court found that this agreement was'executed by her under duress, set it aside and decreed defendant $5,000 in money—

“toward alimony and to cover the defendant’s cost and expenditures in the support and education of their daughter, Virginia, since the separation of the parties to this case,”

out of which she must pay an unpaid bill due the Liggett School, which Virginia had attended, and on which bill suit had been brought, $1,000 for attorney’s fees and costs and disbursements of suit to be taxed, and a one-fourth undivided interest in substantially all of the property owned by plaintiff. From this decree plaintiff appeals. No question is raised concerning the provision in it for divorce, which was granted on the ground of extreme cruelty. It is insisted that the property settlement should be declared binding and conclusive of defendant’s rights in plaintiff’s property.

To fully understand the claim of duress as made by defendant, it is necessary to set forth at some length the facts disclosed by the record. The parties were married in Indiana on July 21, 1897. Both' had been married before and each divorced, the defendant in 1893 and the plaintiff in 1897. Before marriage their relations had resulted in the birth of a child, Virginia, on April 25, 1896. They came to Detroit in 1899 and have since resided there. Each had some money, the defendant perhaps the greater amount. Some property was purchased in their joint names. In 1908 all of this property was transferred [643]*643to her. In 1910 the plaintiff made a trip to Isle Royale in connection with some mining property there in which he had an interest, and on his return in October he found that the defendant had left their home. They have not lived together since that time.

In November, 1910, defendant filed a bill for divorce through her attorney, Clarence E. Wilcox. ' In December of the same year she filed another bill to quiet title in her to certain lands, the description of which she claimed had been fraudulently inserted in a deed executed and delivered to plaintiff. In both of these cases the plaintiff was represented by Edmund C. Shields. After many conferences and much negotiation between counsel and the respective parties, the settlement agreement in question was entered into on February 11, 1911. By its terms, the parties agreed upon a division of all the property interests owned by them jointly and severally and conveyances were after-wards executed and delivered pursuant thereto. It Is her claim that she was induced to enter into this agreement by threats of the plaintiff to reveal the fact that their daughter Virginia had been born out of wedlock and that she otherwise would not have executed it. The plaintiff denied that any such threats were made. The trial court found that such threats were made. He said:

“I have come to this conclusion not only from the testimony of the defendant herself, but also from a careful consideration of the testimony of Mr. Wilcox.”

As to such threats the defendant testified:

“q * * * What efforts, if any, were made to induce you to sign, to make that settlement, were you willing to make it?
“A. I-was not willing to make any settlement with him.
“Q. How did you come to do it?
“A. I thought he should be punished for what he had done, but under the circumstances he told me un[644]*644less I took his offer why he would disclose the secrets that were dear to some one close to me, and would take my life, in some way, or the lives of those that were dear to me.
“Q. What was that secret?
“A. That was Virginia.
“Q. About her birth?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Let me see, he said, unless you signed that—
“A. Unless I took the offer that he gave me he would disclose everything.
“Q. Who did he say he would disclose it to?
“A. He would tell everyone that he knew, he would disgrace me as far as he could.
“Q. What effect did that have on you ?
“A. It made me extremely nervous, and I thought if he paid the $70 a month and I could get along with the Colonial and other things, and he lived up to the contract there might be a way out, and in time perhaps he would see the injustice that he had done us.
“Q. Did he say the agreement was that you were to get $70 every month, as you understood it?
“A. Until the divorce.
“Mr. Kennary: I object to that.
“Q. Until the divorce was granted?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Did you tell this to Mr. Wilcox what he had threatened to do by the way of such disclosure?
“A. I never did.
“Q. Did .Mr. Wilcox know these things with reference to your marriage?
“A. He never did, he never knew.
“Q. Where were you two at the time he was making these threats?
“A. He would meet me, we went into the office, and these would be the things he would say to me just before we went into the office.
“Q. What office?
“A. Mr. Wilcox’s. Once he met me in the elevator and turned to me in the hall and he wrote me a letter, wrote me a piece of paper, and had that not been destroyed that would be all I would have to show.
“Q. What did he say on that letter or that piece of paper?
[645]*645“A. He made all these threats, as to what.he would do unless I accepted.
“Q. Just give us the language as written on that paper?
“A. As near as I can remember, he said if I went any further in the matter and refused to accept this settlement, I cannot tell you just the words — I will tell you in substance, that he would ruin both my children by the disgrace that he would advertise.”
Mr. Wilcox was called as a witness by plaintiff without having had any opportunity to refresh his recollection from memoranda in his office. He testified:
“Q. And you, as her attorney, at that time considered that she was receiving a fair, equitable settlement of the property that she listed?
“A.

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Related

Broadwell v. Broadwell
245 N.W. 511 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 N.W. 555, 223 Mich. 641, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broadwell-v-broadwell-mich-1923.