Copeland v. Mickie

17 La. 286
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 17 La. 286 (Copeland v. Mickie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Copeland v. Mickie, 17 La. 286 (La. 1841).

Opinion

Mokpiiy, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action is brought to annul and set aside a sale alleged to have been extorted from plaintiff by threats and violence on the part of defendant, and to claim $30,000 in damages. The petition charges, that on the 8th of April, 1835, plaintiff became a partner in equal right with the defendant in the ownership and cultivation of a tract of land near the mouth of Red River, con[177]*177taining about nineteen hundred acres, together with eleven slaves and all the improvements, stock, farming utensils, &c., appertaining to it; one undivided half of all which property was conveyed to the petitioner by defendant, by a deed executed before John B. Dawson, the parish judge of West Feliciana. That on the same day the defendant also sold to plaintiff an undivided half in the property of certain other slaves and two horses, then employed on and attached to the plantation. That these sales were made in pursuance of a contract of partnership antecedently agreed on, and accordingly defendant and plaintiff in the character of partners, jointly and alternately in the absence of one another, managed and conducted the plantation and slaves up to the 24th of December, 1835, when the defendant without any pretext of bad [289] management or provocation on the part of plaintiff, but solely with a view to wrest from Mm by force and violence his just rights in and to the said property, armed with deadly weapons, dirks and pistols, and in company with others, particularly with one James Bass, did seek, pursue and find plaintiff at the house of one Hamilton Orr, in the parish of Pointe Coupée; and then and there in a rude, violent and menacing manner demanded of Mm a rescission of the sales of the property held in partnership between them, to which demand the plaintiff promptly refused to accede. That thereupon the said James F. Mickie supported by his companions drew his pistol and with the same inflicted several blows on the head of plaintiff, declaring that in the event of further resistance or refusal to comply with his demand, he would shoot him; that plaintiff believing his life to be in danger from the threats and acts of the said Mickie and his party, suffered himself to be taken without resistance across the Mississippi, into the parish of West Feliciana, in the direction and course of the plantation of one Francis Bouth; that the party having plaintiff in duress met with the said Bouth and one John Harmanson, who from their remarks and manner at once betrayed a perfect understanding of, the treatment meditated against the plaintiff; that he was then handed over to the said Bouth and Harmanson who conveyed him to the house of one Peggy Philips, declaring that their object was to force Mm to surrender all his interest in the partnership to defendant; and that if he would not do it voluntarily he should be lynched into it; that defendant and his party finding that persuasion was of no avail, took the petitioner at some distance from the house and there told him in a tone and manner indicative of force and violence, not to be misunderstood, that they were then prepared to deal with him as he might refuse or comply with the proposition made to him for tbo last time to surrender to defendant all his interest in the partnership, property for $3000; that the plaintiff finding himself in the power of an [290] armed party and conscious that resistance was useless, assented to every thing proposed; that he was then conducted to the dwelling house of said Bouthat a late hour of the night and confined under the guard of John Harmanson in a separate apartment until a deed of conveyance for his interest in one half of the property was prepared, when he was taken into the presence of Judge Dawson for the purpose of signing the said deed, which from fear and’ terror the petitioner signed in the night of the 24th December, 1835.

The petition further charges that plaintiff’s interest as partner in and to' [178]*178said plantation and slaves as also one half of the crop was fully worth $30,000 on the 24th of December, 1835; and that said interest was thus forcibly, violently and knavishly wrung and extorted from him for the inadequate sum of $3000, which from fear and terror he was constrained to receive; but that since he has made a tender to the defendant of $8000, and demanded the restitution of his rights as partner to the said property, or the payment of the said sum of $30,000, with either of which demands defendant has refused to comply.

The answer admits the reconveyance to defendant of plaintiff’s interest in the partnership property for $3000, paid to him in defendant’s draft on the house of Shipp, Ferriday & Oo., at Natchez, the proceeds of which the plaintiff received on the Sth of January, 1836: it avers that said sum was more than equal to the value of such interest, as plaintiff never paid one cent on account of the property sold to him on the 8th of April, 1835, and never advanced any money towards supporting the expenses of-the plantation and negroes; the answer further avers that defendant’s association with plaintiff had become disagreeable and insupportable to the former, in consequence of a report unfavorable to the character and conduct of the plaintiff, which report he took no pains to investigate although it had acquired currency in [291] their neighborhood; that by reason of this, respondent solicited a settlement of their affairs, which resulted in a reconveyance of the property sold to him by defendant; the answer denies that there, was any force or threats used to obtain such ’ reconveyance, or that any tender in law or in fact was ever made to defendant of the $3000, but that on the contrary plaintiff received and kept said sum, thereby approving and satisfying the contract and depriving himself of the right to sue for its rescission.

On these pleadings the parties went to trial before a jury, who gave a verdict rescinding the sale of the 24th of December, 1835, and decreeing defendants to pay $8184, for rents and revenues arising from the plantation, and the additional sum of $6000 for further damages. After a strenuous but unsuccessful effort to obtain a new trial, the defendants appealed.

Before considering the merits of this case, it is proper to notice an error •■assigned by the defendants as apparent on the face of the record. It is, that • although the death of James F. Mickie was suggested of record below, the • cause was afterwards tried without citation to, or any answer filed by the heirs of defendant, and that therefore the judgment was illegally rendered •■against them; they being in no manner parties to this suit. 'When the record was brought up last year, a cwiiorari was prayed for by the appellee, on the .ground that an answer filed in the name of the representatives of the defendant, who had died after issue joined, was not to be found in the record, and was supposed to have been omitted in it by mistake. A certified copy of his answer has been filed in this court on the 8th of February last, from which it appears that David O. Mickie and N. S. Nichols, styling themselves sole • surviving heirs of the late James F. Mickie, appeared below to defend the suit; leave of the court having first been obtained. They denied all the alle.gations of the petition,-adopted the answer of the original defendant as their .own, &c. This .answer is signed by Johnson, Bullard & Thomas, as attorneys; [179]*179and the clerk certifies it to he a true copy of the original answer of the [292] heirs of James F.

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Bluebook (online)
17 La. 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/copeland-v-mickie-la-1841.