Francis v. Hurd

71 N.W. 582, 113 Mich. 250, 1897 Mich. LEXIS 766
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 71 N.W. 582 (Francis v. Hurd) 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
Francis v. Hurd, 71 N.W. 582, 113 Mich. 250, 1897 Mich. LEXIS 766 (Mich. 1897).

Opinion

Long, C. J.

This action was brought to recover the sum of $500, claimed to have been paid by plaintiff to the defendant under duress. The declaration avers the circumstances under which the money was paid substantially as follows:

1. That the plaintiff is the mother of Ella Francis, now Mrs. Urch, a young lady about 28 years of age, who had been in the employ of defendant in his store as a clerk and saleswoman.
2. That on July 14, 1892, defendant falsely and fraudulently claimed and pretended to plaintiff that her daughter had been guilty of stealing, taking, and carrying away defendant’s goods.
3. That her daughter was about to be and would be arrested on complaint of defendant for such larceny unless plaintiff paid defendant $500.
4. That plaintiff was so wrought upon and agitated by such unlawful claim and pretense that she paid the $500.

It appears that the plaintiff’s daughter, at the time of the payment of the money, was a woman about 28 years of age. She commenced work for defendant as a clerk in 1887, and had become principal clerk in the store. Her parents lived on a farm near Lansing, and were customers of defendant, who dealt in dry goods, clothing, boots, and shoes, and had so dealt for some 18 years, in North Lansing. When Miss Francis entered defendant’s employ, there was a dressmaking establishment in the same build[252]*252ing over defendant’s store. Defendant removed Ms stock to another building, and soon after the dressmaking establishment was removed over the new location. The dressmaking business was conducted by Miss Towne, a friend of plaintiff’s daughter, and with whom the daughter much of the time roomed and boarded. She was rooming and boarding there in July, 1892. Miss Francis commenced work for |2.50 per week, but her pay was increased from time to time until, in July, 1892, she was receiving $7.50 per week.

As early as 1889 defendant was told by one of the clerks that he believed Miss Francis was taking money from the store. Later another clerk told him the same thing. Defendant then talked, with Miss Francis about it. She denied the charge, and defendant says he then believed the clerks were mistaken. In May, 1892, defendant overheard a lady clerk talking about the dresses Miss Francis was having made (she was about to be married), and that she would not need to buy any for a long time. Defendant claims that he thought this strange, as he was owing her some $650 on her wages, and she seemed to be buying nothing at the store. On July 12, 1892, one of the clerks said to the defendant that he could stand it no longer, that he had seen Miss Francis taking goods out of the store when the defendant was absent, and that she had taken a lot of shoes that day. On the next day the defendant took a search warrant, and, with an officer, went in the evening to the dressmaking rooms of Miss Towne over the store, where they found a large quantity of goods in packages claimed by defendant to be his. They then went to the house of Miss Towne, where she and Miss Francis were. They denied that any of defendant’s goods were there, but, upon search being made in the rooms, they found other goods claimed by defendant. Some of the goods found at the house were claimed by Miss Francis, and were given up to her. The balance of the goods were all turned over to the defendant. Later Miss Francis and Miss Towne asserted title to a few of [253]*253the articles taken, and all the rest were put back into the stock of the defendant, and retained by him. The articles taken on the search warrant' are too numerous to mention. They consisted of dress goods, mitts, gloves, shoes, napkins, towels, sheeting, table linen, handkerchiefs, laces, veiling, ribbons, etc., amounting at retail prices to upwards of $600.

On the trial Miss Francis was called as a witness, and acknowledged that she took these goods from the store of the defendant. The reason given by her for taking them was that she intended to return some; that she had heard Mr. Hurd was in debt, and she was in doubt about getting her pay, but when he settled with her she intended to allow him for the goods. She was asked if she had kept any account of the goods, and said she had not, only in her head. Being asked how much she figured the goods in her head, she said about $75; asked how long before that she conceived the idea of taking the goods for her pay, she said, “Some seven or eight weeks.” She had been taking goods for some two years prior to this.

It appears that on the morning of July 14th the officer went to the farm of Mr. Francis, and told him about the occurrence. Both parents came to Lansing. Mr. Francis went to see defendant, and Mrs. Francis went to see her daughter at the home of Miss Towne, talked with her there, and went to defendant’s store, where she found her husband and defendant in conversation. Defendant told of the goods he had found, and stated his belief that Miss Francis had been taking goods for a long time, and that he could not tell how much he had lost. There was no talk of a settlement at this interview. Plaintiff and her husband then went to see their daughter, and talked the matter over with her. They also talked with the officer and Miss Towne. They then, returned to the defendant’s store, and at this interview there was talk of a settlement. Plaintiff was asked, on the trial:

“How did you come to make a settlement, and what was there to it ?
[254]*254“A. Well, Mr. Francis asked him what was the least that he could settle for, and he said $2,000 and her wages, and make up B. & L. money to $500, and that was the least, and that was less than half of what he expected to get. * * * Mr. Francis said that he could pay no such sum, and that he would have to take her body, — she was out from under his reach; and he said that he would have to have her arrested, or something of that kind, — that would only take her body, — and that was the last that he said. Mr. Francis then said, ‘Come, we are going home.’ But I did not go. I stayed there, I presume, two minutes, and Mr. Hurd came up and said, ‘You can settle it.’ He said he would settle it for $500 and her wages. * * * I said, ‘I will give it.’ * * * The next day we came to town. Mr. Francis-did not go to see Mr. Hurd again. I did, after I got the money. I borrowed the money myself of Mr. Wilbur, — gave my note for it. * * * Then I went and got a receipt made out, and took it to Mr. Hurd, and he signed it, to the amount that he was owing Ella and the amount that I paid him. I paid him the money. * * * The receipt was drawn at Mr. Twaits’ office. No one went with me to get the re'ceipt drawn. My husband did not go with me.”

According to the testimony of the plaintiff and her husband, nothing was said by defendant about arresting their daughter at any time while the settlement was being made. But plaintiff contends that, during the night when the goods were taken, the defendant was at the house of Miss Towne with the officer nearly all night, urging Miss Francis to go out to her father that night and have it settled up. Plaintiff, however, does not claim that her daughter told her of any threat of arrest. She had seen the goods found by Mr. Hurd. Her daughter had told her that she had taken goods which she had neither paid for nor charged on the books, and she had talked with her daughter about making a settlement. She knew no complaint had been made, and she understood she had authority to make a settlement for her daughter, and allow Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
71 N.W. 582, 113 Mich. 250, 1897 Mich. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/francis-v-hurd-mich-1897.