Gray v. Freeman

84 S.W. 1105, 37 Tex. Civ. App. 556, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 558
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 4, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 84 S.W. 1105 (Gray v. Freeman) 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
Gray v. Freeman, 84 S.W. 1105, 37 Tex. Civ. App. 556, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 558 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

This is a suit originally instituted by Sam Freeman, Sr., against A. A. Gray, J. M. Taylor and Sam Freeman, Jr., to cancel two deeds of trust; the first executed by Sam Freeman, Jr., and the other by Sam Freeman, Sr., on the same tract of 30 acres of land in Guadalupe County, the first dated May 29, 1902, being given to secure a debt due by Sam Freeman, Jr., to Gray, the latter to same trustee to secure the same debt. The ground of cancellation of the first deed of trust was that Sam Freeman, Jr., had no interest in the land, and the second that A. A. Gray and Theo. Gibbs, his agent, had procured its execution by threats to imprison Sam Freeman, Jr., if the debt incurred by him was not secured. Sam Freeman, Sr., died pending the *560 suit and his son George Freeman intervened claiming to have purchased the land from his father and setting up the same grounds for cancellation of the deeds of trust. A trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee. This appeal is being prosecuted by Gray and Taylor. They complain only of the cancellation of the deed of trust given by Sam Freeman, Sr.

We find that on May 28, 1903, A. A. Gray, who resides in Bexar County, Texas, in company with Theo. Gibbs, his agent and attorney, went first to the residence of Newt Dibrell, in Guadalupe County, seeking for Sam Freeman, Sr. The wife of Newt Dibrell was the daughter of Sam Freeman, Sr. Not finding him there, Gibbs told Newt about Sam Freeman. Jr., having procured money from Gray by representing that he was the owner of the land in controversy, and that he had committed a penitentiary offense. Newt although greatly disturbed would not- agree to stand for the debt but told Gray and Gibbs where Sam Freeman, Sr., could be found in Gonzales County. They sought and found the elder Freeman, who was a blind negro over seventy years old. Gibbs led him off to a secluded spot and told him that his son had committed a penitentiary offense and by promising his son immunity from punishment if the debt was secured, so worked on the fears of the weak old man that he executed the note, and mortgage on the land. Gibbs took the acknowledgment to the instrument, which was signed by the mark of the old man as he could neither read nor write. Sam Freeman, Sr., gave appellee a deed to the land.

It would be interesting, if not instructive, to follow the law as to duress by putting in fear from its early conception, when the rigorous test of what a man of courage' would do under like circumstances was applied to every individual, down through its successive steps to the modern theory that there can be no legal standard- as to the power to resist wrong and oppression, but that every case must be judged by the parties to it and the facts and circumstances surrounding it. There has been manifested a remarkable tenacity, upon the part of courts, to adhere to the doctrine of a legal standard and the ancient rule though modified and changed from the standard of resistance of a courageous man to that of a man of ordinary firmness, is still adhered to in some courts. Again it has been held that mere threats of a criminal prosecution do not constitute duress unless there is a threat of immediate and unlawful imprisonment. This doctrine has been also modified and it is held that the guilt or innocence of the wronged party, or the lawfulness or unlawfulness of the threats are immaterial.

Speaking on this subject, in the case of Ins. Co. v. Kirkpatrick, 20 So. Rep., 651, the Supreme Court of Alabama said: “It was never contemplated in the law that either the actual or threatened use or misuse of criminal process, legal or illegal, should be resorted to for the purpose of compelling the payment of a mere debt, although it may be justly owing and due, or to coerce the making of contracts or agreements from which advantage is to be derived by the party employing such threats. Ample civil remedies are afforded in the law to enforce the payment of debts and the performance of contracts, but the criminal law and the machinery for its enforcement have a wholly different pur *561 pose, and can not be employed to interfere with that wise and just policy of the law that all contracts and agreements shall be founded upon the exercise of the free will of the parties which is the real essence of all contracts.”

In the case of Galusha v. Sherman, 81 N. W. Rep., 495, 47 Law Rep. Ann., 417, the question of duress is discussed by the Supreme Court of Wisconsin in an able manner, and after following the history of the evolution of the position of courts on the subject, the modern doctrine is thus forcibly and clearly stated. “The making of a contract requires the free exercise of the will-power of the contracting parties, and the free meeting and blending of their minds. In the absence of that, the essential of a contract is wanting; and if such absence be produced by the wrongful conduct of one party to the transaction, or conduct for which he is responsible, whereby the other party for the time being, through fear, is bereft of his free will-power, for the purpose of obtaining the contract and it is thereby obtained, such contract may be avoided on the ground of duress. There is no legal standard of resistance which a party must exercise at his peril to protect himself. The question in each case is, was the alleged injured person, by being put in fear by the other party to the transaction for the purpose of obtaining an advantage over him, deprived of the free exercise of his will-power, and was such advantage ¿hereby obtained? If the proposition be determined in the affirmative, no matter what the nature of the threatened injury to such person, or Ms property, or the person or liberty of his wife or child, the advantage thereby obtained can not be retained. The idea is that what constitutes duress is wholly a matter of law and is simply the deprivation by one person of the will-power of another by putting such. other in fear for the purpose of obtaining, by that means, some valuable advantage of him. The means by which that condition of mind is produced are matters of fact, and whether such condition was in fact produced is usually wholly matter of fact, though of course the means may be so oppressive as to render the result an inference of law. It is a mistaken idea that what constitutes duress is different in case of an aged person or a wife or child than in case of a man of ordinary firmness. . . . The means used to produce that condition, the age, sex and mental characteristics of the alleged injured party, are all evidentiary, merely, of the ultimate fact in issue, of whether such person was bereft of the free exercise of his will-power. Obviously what Avill accomplish such result can not justly be tested by any other standard than that of the particular person acted upon. His resisting power, under all the circumstances of the situation, not any arbitrary standard, is to be considered in determining whether there was duress.”

The language quoted, we think, gives the law correctly and it is sustained by ample authority. Perkins v. Adams, 17 Texas Civ. App., 331; Obert v. Landa, 59 Texas, 475, 78 Texas, 33; Bank v. Sargent (Nev.), 91 N. W. Rep., 595; Bond Assn. v. Klee (Neb.), 97 N. W. Rep., 476; Cribbs v. Sowle (Mich.), 49 N. W. Rep., 587; Taylor v. Jacques, 106 Mass., 291; Bryant v. Peck, 154 Mass., 460; Schoener v. Lissauer (N. Y.), 13 N. E. Rep., 741; Parmentier v. Pater (Ore.), 9 Pac. Rep., 59; *562 Earle v.

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.W. 1105, 37 Tex. Civ. App. 556, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-freeman-texapp-1905.