Girty v. Standard Oil Co.

72 N.Y. St. Rep. 538

This text of 72 N.Y. St. Rep. 538 (Girty v. Standard Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Girty v. Standard Oil Co., 72 N.Y. St. Rep. 538 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinions

BARTLETT, J.

—In the month of March, 1883, the plaintiff in this action, then upward of sixty years of age, joined with her husband, George W. Girty, in the execution of a deed whereby there was conveyed to the Standard Oil Company of New York, a house and lots in the city of Cleveland, Ohio, which property stood in the name of the plaintiff. The present suit (which was not commenced until September, 1894) is brought to set aside that conveyance, on the ground that the plaintiff was induced to sign the deed by duress, exercised upon her by her husband, acting as the agent of the Standard Oil Company, and by misrepresentations made by him in the same capacity. The duress is alleged to have consisted of threats to commit suicide, on the part •of the husband, who proposed at the same time that his wife should commit suicide with him. The alleged misrepresentations consisted in telling the plaintiff that the conveyance was simply a paper to secure the Standard Oil Company, and that she .would not lose anything bv signing it. The defense set up in the answer was that the plaintiff's husband had been in the employ of the Standard Oil Company, having charge of its moneys and books of account; that in February, 1883, it was discovered that he had embezzled upward of a quarter of a million dollars, belonging to the corporation; that he had to a great extent paid for the Cleveland property in question, which stood in his wife’s name, out of the moneys thus embezzled; and that the conveyance of that property, now sought to be set aside, was made by way of reparation for the embezzlement by the husband, and to save his good name. The defendant, however, was not called upon to offer any proof in support of these allegations in the answer; for, at that end of the plaintiff’s case, the court below dismissed the com[539]*539plaint on the merits. Fronpthe judgment in favor of the defendant, entered upon its dismissal, plaintiff,has appealed.

The trial judge found, as matter of fact, that there was no fraud, misrepresentation, duress, or undue influence in procuring from the plaintiff the conveyance mentioned in the complaint, and, furthermore, that the action was barred by the statute of limitations and the laches of the plaintiff. Tne counsel for the appellant contends that both these conclusions are erroneous. I have carefully read through this record, and it seems tome that the evidence fully justifies the decision in all respects.

The allegation as to duress was not sustained by the proof. The husband told the wife that he was accused of embezzlement, and wanted her to sign some papers; that if she signed them he would go on with the same salary in the employ of the Standard Oil Company, and nobody would ever know it: that if she did not, he would be arrested, and never could stand that disgrace, but would commit suicide, and she had better commit suicide with him. There is authority to the effect that a threat on the part of. a son to commit suicide does not, in any legal sense, constitute duress, so as to invalidate an instrument claimed to have been executed by his mother in consequence of such threat. Insurance Co. v. Meeker, 35 N. Y. 614. And it has also been held that a threat by a husband to poison himself, whereby a wife was induced to sign a promissory note, did not amount to duress in law. Wright v. Remington, 41 N. J. Law, 48. In the case last cited the supreme court of New Jersey declared that there was no trace of a doctrine in the law that the threat of a husband against himself would avoid the contract of his wife, and used this language, which is peculiarly applicable to the case at bar :

“ It may be that, had the payees of the note, or their agent, threatened to take the life of the husband unless the wife signed the note, ^and she signed under the influence of the terror excited by such threats, it would have avoided the contract. But here the threats were made by the husband against his own wife. The maker and the object of the threats were the same. Their execution was within his own power of volition. The wife knew that no harm would come to him except by his own act. The present case is utterly unlike an instance of the presence of some overshadowing danger, uncontrollable by either the wife or the person endangered.”

All this could be said just as truly of the alleged duress in the present case, if we substitute the deed for the note, and the grantees named in the deed for the payees named in the note. Considering Mrs. Girty’s testimony as a whole, I think it indicates that she was actuated in what she did, not by fear that her husband would kill himself, but by a praiseworthy desire to help him out of the difficulties in which he was plunged in consequence of the charge that he was a defaulter to the Standard Oil Company. The trial judge was at liberty to adopt this view, or any other which could fairly be derived from the evidence ; for he disposed of the case, not as upon a nonsuit, but on the merits.

[540]*540As to the suggestion that the wife should commit suicide, there is absolutely nothing in the case to show that she had the slightest fear of any compulsion in that direction. In her narrative of what occurred at the time she signed the conveyance, the plaintiff thus states the alleged fraudulent misrepresentation :

“At the time my husband asked me to sign these papers, he said I would not lose it, that it was only a matter of form ; that I should have it back again.”

It is apparent that, when this was said, she must have known the character of the instrument she was about to execute; for she had previously answered her husband, when he first asked her to give him her signature, by saying, “ George, I don’t want to sign my home away.” No phrase in common use is more expressive of the idea of conveying real property to another than the words “ to sign my home away.” Its meaning seems to me unmistakable. Its use by the plainttff leaves no doubt in my mind that Mrs. Girty was well aware of the nature of the conveyance to which she says she attached her name without reading it. If she "did not know what it was, the statements of her husband which are relied upon as misrepresentations were nothing more than consolatory assurances on his part, expressive of the hope that the property might some time be restored.

In the complaint, the value of the property, with the fixtures and chattels therein contained, is stated at $110,000. According to the plaintiff’s testimony, her only contribution towards the acquisition of this real and personal estate was $5,000, given to her husband in the 50’s. ■ She conceded that it was, for the most part, his property, standing in her name. When the charge of embezzlement was made against Mr. Girty, while he denied' the accusation in words, his conduct was such as to indicate that it'was true. But,.however great may have been the wife’s confidence in his-honesty, her evidence shows that she must have realized that a large money claim was made by the Standard Oil Company against her husband on account of his alleged defalcation, and she executed the deed to relieve him from that claim. There is no proof that the claim was not well founded, and the acts of Mr. Girty tended to show'that it was. He appears to have been retained in the service of the corporation in consequence of the conveyance, when, otherwise, he would have been discharged; and this constituted a sufficient consideration.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Eadie v. . Slimmon
26 N.Y. 9 (New York Court of Appeals, 1862)
Tyler v. . Gardiner
35 N.Y. 559 (New York Court of Appeals, 1866)
Boyd v. . De La Montagnie
73 N.Y. 498 (New York Court of Appeals, 1878)
L. M. Wiley & Co. v. Prince
21 Tex. 637 (Texas Supreme Court, 1858)
Ingersoll v. Roe
65 Barb. 346 (New York Supreme Court, 1873)
Stiles v. Stiles
14 Mich. 72 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1866)
Witbeck v. Witbeck
25 Mich. 439 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1872)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 N.Y. St. Rep. 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/girty-v-standard-oil-co-nyappdiv-1896.