First Guaranty State Bank of Clyde v. Tipton

227 S.W. 963, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 642
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 3, 1921
DocketNo. 1179.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 227 S.W. 963 (First Guaranty State Bank of Clyde v. Tipton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Guaranty State Bank of Clyde v. Tipton, 227 S.W. 963, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 642 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HARPER, C. J.

This suit was brought to cancel a deed to certain lots in the town of Merkel, Tex., executed by Mrs. Fannie Tip-ton, plaintiff, to First State Bank of Clyde, Tex., defendant. For cause of action she alleged that no consideration passed for its execution, that she signed and acknowledged it under duress, in this, that “she was fraudulently imposed upon and placed under du *964 ress and fear of having Jier sons arrested and under these circumstances signed and executed said deed of conveyance.”

Defendant answered hy general demurrer, general denial, and specially:

“That it extended a line of credit to two of plaintiff’s sons in consideration of a chattel mortgage on certain mules; that thereafter and before the money had been used defendant learned that the stock had a prior lien upon it, and that thereupon it refused to pay any more checks; that thereupon plaintiff executed the deed in question in consideration that defendant pay the note secured by the first lien on the mules, and certain checks which had in the meantime been issued by her two sons to parties from whom they had purchased live stock; that it paid out $1,368.90 for said deed.”

—prayed that, if it be denied title and possession of the land, then that it be decreed a lien upon it for said sum.

The cause was submitted to a jury upon special issues, and upon the verdict of the jury judgment was entered for plaintiff, from which an appeal has been perfected.

The jury found that the plaintiff was induced to sign the deed by duress, and that it was intended as a mortgage.

The two first assignments urge that the evidence is insufficient to raise' the issue of duress.

[1] “Duress may be practiced upon a person by threats of a criminal prosecution against the husband or wife of such person, or against a near relation such as a parent or child, and if the dread, anxiety, and fear of disgrace excited by such threats are so potent as to overcome the free will and choice of the person affected, such duress may be pleaded to invalidate any contract, conveyance, or security extorted from him by means of it.” Black on Rescission and Cancellation, § 235; Medearis v. Granberry, 84 S. W. 1070; Dimmett v. Robbins, 74 Tex. 441, 12 S. W. 94; Cook v. Moore, 39 Tex. 255; Olivari v. Menger, 39 Tex. 76.

[2] Appellant’s proposition is that “threats that some one else will prosecute her sons is not sufficient to constitute duress,” and “that the threats must be made by the party who obtains the benefit.”

The evidence reveals that the appellee, Mrs. Tipton, an aged woman, the mother of two boys, was the owner of the property in controversy; that these boys, after having been given a line of credit by the appellant bank through its cashier, purchased cattle and hogs for shipment to market.

Some time after they had been buying and shipping, the cashier of the bank was informed that certain checks had been given in excess of the amount of money that the boys had to their credit. It had also been discovered that certain mules upon which the boys had executed a mortgage in favor of appellant had been previously mortgaged to the bank at Merkel. Appellant’s cashier testified;

“I told Mrs. Beulah Tipton that I was going to refuse to pay the cheeks, and that I thought they would give the boys trouble; in other words, it was a violation of law to give a check without the money in the bank. My bank did not threaten her in any way. I went down to see Mrs. Tipton to get her to make me a deed to the property and she refused. I called Mrs. Beulah Tipton to get her to fix the instrument up some way. I told her that the boys would likely be brought back and put in jail and that they would likely be unable to give bond.”

Mrs. Beulah Tipton testified:

“In 1917 my husband, Erank Tipton, and Bill Tipton, my brother-in-law, were engaged in buying some cattle, hogs, and live stock. They were doing business with the Eirst Guaranty State Bank of Clyde, Tex. Relative to Mr. Homer Shanks calling me over the telephone and me having a conversation with him during 1917, he called me over the phone, it was either Wednesday or Thursday afternoon, I do not know which, and asked me where the boys was, and I told him they were in Wichita Ealls. By ‘the hoys’ I supposed he meant my husband and Bill. He then asked me would I come to town, he wanted to see me on some very important business, and. I told him I would, and I dressed and went to town, and when I went up there he taken me off and talked to me and told me that the boys had given some checks at Cross Plains, and that they did not have money there to cash the checks when they came in, and if something was not done and done at once they would arrest the boys and bring them back there and lodge them in jail, and I told him that I would write the boys about it, because I was not informed on matters; that I would write the boys and let them come home and see about it. He said I did not have time for anything like that, that it had to be attended to at once, and that I had better let them stay there and work than to have them brought back and put in jail, as they could not give bond and better let them stay at work there, as it would contribute to our support; and he also asked me if my mother-in-law and myself were on good terms, and I told him we were, and he told me the only thing we could do was for her to let that place at Merkel stand good for those checks at Cross Plains; that he would cash those checks at Cross Plains and turn the checks over to me as they came in. I do not suppose they ever come. I have never gotten one of them back. I went and told Mrs. Tipton what he said, and she studied over it and worried over it. We had no one to advise us at all. There were none of the men folks at home, and he kept telling me that they would arrest the boys and bring them back if that was not fixed up on Saturdáy. Saturday was the last day it was to be fixed, and I told Mrs. Tipton, and so she said just for the sake of the boys she would sign the paper. He told me that it was a vendor’s lien note. I did not know what it was because I did not read it, and I would not have known if it were a vendor’s lien note if I had read it. In place of bringing it down to the *965 house himself for her to sign, he came to the show Saturday afternoon and sent Mr. Robbins, Mr. Robbins came down there and brought it, and he told Mrs. Tipton, he said it was a vendor's lien note she was signing. She read a part, but did not read it all, and she told us how it was signed, signing the homestead away, and that she was willing only to give it to keep the boys out of jail; told him that she was doing it just for the love of her boys. At that time I was staying with Mrs. Tipton. I suppose he was up there every other day until we got it fixed up. When I talked to him about the matter, and he told me that they were going to have the boys arrested and brought back, I went back and told Mrs. Tip-ton what he said. She did not want to sign it, but she did in order to keep the boys out of trouble.”

Plaintiff testified:

“My daughter-in-law told me what Mr. Shanks said.

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Bluebook (online)
227 S.W. 963, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-guaranty-state-bank-of-clyde-v-tipton-texapp-1921.