Farmers National Bank v. Francis

164 P. 146, 100 Kan. 225, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 298
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 7, 1917
DocketNo. 20,512
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 P. 146 (Farmers National Bank v. Francis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers National Bank v. Francis, 164 P. 146, 100 Kan. 225, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 298 (kan 1917).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

West, J.:

The plaintiff bank sued to recover on two promissory notes of $144.41 each with interest and another for $36.05, all signed by the defendants February 16, 1910. From a judgment for $241.41 the defendants appeal. The answers, in ad[226]*226dition to a general denial and an allegation of an unlawful alteration, set up the defense of duress. It was averred that the plaintiff’s cashier represented to the defendant, J. K. Francis, that his son, W. G. Francis, had sold cattle upon which the plaintiff had a mortgage, and that unless the amount of his indebtedness were paid or secured at once the bank would prosecute him and send him to the penitentiary; that such indebtedness amounted to $722.05; that if J. K. Francis and his sister, Emma Snook, the other defendant, would execute five notes for $144.41 each the bank would not prosecute the son, but would accept such notes in full settlement of the claim against him; that the father believed and relied on these statements and signed the notes solely to save his son from a criminal prosecution ; that he took them to his sister and repeated to her the statements that had been made to him by the cashier, and she, believing and relying thereon, signed the notes solely to protect her nephew from arrest and imprisonment; that after-wards, on finding that the son had not been guilty of any crime and had not defrauded the bank, they demanded the return of the notes which had not yet been paid and the repayment of what the bank had received on account of the others. The jury made special- findings that the signatures were not obtained by duress and that the notes were not altered after their execution and delivery. Error is assigned on giving instructions Nos. 9 and 18 and on refusing a new trial, and it is asserted that there was no evidence to warrant'the jury’s special findings as to duress.

Instruction No. 9 was to the effect that when a note has been obtained by duress and the maker thereafter pays a part of it or renews it he is held to have waived the right to defend on the ground of duress “unless it is shown that at the time such payment or renewal was made that he was still deprived of his freedom of mind or will by reason of such duress.” It is contended that this was equivalent to telling the jury that notwithstanding the defendant’s refusal to ratify the execution of the notes upon learning of the fraudulent statements by the cashier the defendants could not escape liability unless it was shown that at each time they paid one of the notes these false statements were repeated. The charge hardly bears this con[227]*227struction, and in instruction No. 8 the jury were told, touching the plaintiff’s claim that the defendants had by their acts ratified the notes, that “such conduct would not constitute ratification so long as the influence of duress continued and so long as the minds of the aggrieved defendant or defendants continued to be dominated by the threats.” It will be observed that instruction No. 9 assumes that the subsequent payment therein mentioned was made “with the knowledge of such circumstances.” Certainly if one who has been induced by duress or fraud to sign a note makes a payment thereon after he knows the circumstances he should not.be relieved from liability, uni-less he made such payment under the .influence of the same duress or fraud which induced him to sign it in the first place,

Instruction No. 18 was in these words:

“A mere preponderance of evidence is not sufficient in law to establish duress or fraud as claimed by the defendants in this case. The law requires that the proof of duress or fraud must be clear, convincing, and decisive.”

Counsel present numerous definitions of the latter word, and argue therefrom that this charge placed the defendants in the attitude of having to prove duress beyond reasonable doubt. To this counsel for the plaintiff respond that the language used means substantially the same as that repeatedly approved by this court, such as “strong and convincing,” “strong and satisfactory,” “decided and satisfactory,” and one decision from another state that the evidence must be satisfactory and conclusive. It is further suggested that if there be any slight - distinction between the language used and that judicially approved it is too slight for a ground of reversal because practically nonprejudicial. The jury were previously told at least half a dozen times, in effect, that the defense of duress must be established by a preponderance of the evidence. Instruction No. 17 advised the jury that whether the evidence preponderated in favor of one side or the other jnust .be determined from its weight and probability and not from the number of witnesses. Then followed the instruction in question. ' The court takes the view that the jury were not misled by the word “decisive” in'connection with the other language and other instructions and that no error was committed in this respect.

[228]*228The jury were charged that duress exists when the person signing the notes is induced so to do “by reason of being put in fear by threats of arresting him or one of his relatives and .charging such person with a crime, when the threats and the fear induced thereby are such as to deprive the party signing the note, and do deprive such party, of the exercise of his free will in the signing of the notes.” Further, that in addition to threats to prosecute the son “it must also appear that there was an express or implied promise on the part of Stelson not to prosecute said Walter Francis if the notes were given. And it must further appear that such threats so operated upon the minds of the defendants as to deprive them of their freedom of mind and will for the time being, and that they signed said notes solely by reason of such threats.” Also that unless the statements made by the cashier Stelson to the defendant John K. Francis were made to Mrs. Snook at the direction and by the authority of Stelson they should find against Mrs. Snook.

Instruction 11 was as follows:

“The jury are instructed that if the witness Stelson stated to the defendant John K. Francis, in substance, that unless he fixed up the matter of Walter G. Francis selling mortgaged property by giving notes signed by him and defendant Emma Snook, that\the bank would send and get Walter and it would mean from three to five years in the penitentiary, and that said Stelson further stated to said John K. Francis that if the notes were given that the matter would be dropped, and that said John K. Francis was thereby solely induced to sign said notes, such action upon the part of said Stelson would amount in law to duress by the plaintiff bank upon the defendant John K. Francis.”

No complaint is made of any of these instructions. And in view of this fact it is necessary to revert to the evidence in order to see whether the jury had any evidence on which to base their findings that there was no duress. Plaintiff’s counsel take the position that the defendants, as “exhibits,” so impressed the jury that their verbal testimony was deemed entirely negligible, but their own counter-abstract contains the following among other items of the cashier’s evidence:

“Q. Then you said to him you would either get him or get the cattle? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You did not say anything about the penitentiary? A. No, sir, I do not think so.
[229]*229“Q. Never said a word about the penitentiary? A.

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Bluebook (online)
164 P. 146, 100 Kan. 225, 1917 Kan. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-national-bank-v-francis-kan-1917.