Illinois Bankers Life Assurance Co. v. Day

1936 OK 642, 62 P.2d 970, 178 Okla. 284, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 579
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 20, 1936
DocketNo. 26475.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1936 OK 642 (Illinois Bankers Life Assurance Co. v. Day) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois Bankers Life Assurance Co. v. Day, 1936 OK 642, 62 P.2d 970, 178 Okla. 284, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 579 (Okla. 1936).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

For convenience we shall refer to the parties as they appeared in the trial court On October 1, 1929, the defendants, Mary Ellen Day and Will S. Day, borrowed $2,400 from the Porter Mortgage Company, and on that date they executed and delivered to the Porter Mortgage Company their promissory note in the sum of $2,400. As security for said note, they also made, executed, and delivered a real estate mortgage on their homestead farm. ¡Before maturity, and for a valuable consideration, and without notice of any alleged defects in said instruments, or any defenses thereto, said note and mortgage were sold, assigned, and ■delivered to the Illinois Bankers Life Association, which on November 19, 1929, for a valuable consideration, without notice and before maturity, indorsed said note and assigned said mortgage to the plaintiff herein. The defendants defaulted in the payment of an interest installment due on said note, and the plaintiff thereafter commenced this action in conventional form, in which it sought to recover a personal judgment against the defendants and to foreclose the aforesaid mortgage. The defendant Will S. Day, the husband, defaulted. Mary Ellen Day, the wife, filed her answer in which she admitted the execution of the note and mortgage, but alleged that she was compelled to execute said instruments under duress, menace, and extortion by her husband, by reason of which, in her .cross-petition, she asks for cancellation of the note and mortgage.

Plaintiff filed a reply to defendant’s answer, and as an answer to defendant’s cross-petition plaintiff alleged that it was an innocent purchaser for value of the instruments involved, without notice of the infirmity alleged.

In support of the judgment of the trial court, the defendant makes three principal contentions;

(1) That under the Constitution and statutes of Oklahoma, an encumbrance upon a homestead is void, unless the wife voluntarily joins in the execution of the instrument, and that since the proof is undisputed that the wife executed the note and mortgage involved herein under duress, practiced by her husband, the mortgage is void as against all persons, including an innocent purchaser for value before maturity.

(2) That since defendant established that the original mortgagee’s title to the note and mortgage was defective, because its agent had knowledge of the alleged duress, defendant contends that the burden shifted to the plaintiff to establish that, as an assignee, it was an innocent purchaser for value before maturity, and since plaintiff did not produce such proof at the trial, the judgment of the trial court was proper.

(3) That the note was nonnegotiable because it was not payable at a fixed time.

We shall discuss defendant’s contentions in the foregoing enumerated order.

1. Duress. The first and important question presented in this appeal is, whether or not the defense of duress is available to a wife upon the foreclosure of a mortgage on her homestead, where the note and mortgage were purchased for valuable consideration in due course before maturity, and without notice of any alleged defect or infirmity. Defendant contends that under section 2, art. 12, of the Constitution of Oklahoma, and section 9661, Okla. Stats. 1931, an encumbrance upon a homestead is void, unless the wife voluntarily joins in the execution of the instrument. Defendant contends that since the proof is undisputed that the wife executed the note and mortgage involved herein under duress, practiced by her husband, the encumbrance is void against the world, including an innocent purchaser for value before maturity. Although the constitutional and statutory provisions referred to have long been the law in this state, this court has never before been called on to pass upon the identical question. There are only a few authorities in the reported eases on the proposition. The question being a novel one, in addition to reviewing the briefs presented by counsel, we have made our own investigation of the law, and conclude that defendant’s contention cannot and .should not be sustained.

*286 The foregoing question was answered in the negative in the ease of Beals v. Neddo (Circuit Court, D. Kansas) 2 Fed. 41, wherein the court, in considering a practically analogous factual situation, declared:

“The doctrine is old and undisputable that the holder of negotiable paper, before maturity and without notice, takes it clear of equities between the original parties, and neither fraud nor duress would invalidate it in his hands.” Carpenter v. Logan, 16 Wall. 271, 275; Sawyer v. Prickett, 19 Wall. 147; 1 Jones on Mort., see. 834, and cases cited.

In this state duress in contracts is defined by statute. Section 9414, Okla. Stats. 1931, provides as follows:

“Duress consists in:
“First. Unlawful confinement of the person of the party, or of husband or wife of such party, or of an ancestor, descendant, or adopted child of such party, husband or wife.
“Second. Unlawful detention of the property of any such person; or,
“Third. Confinement of such person, lawful in form, but fraudulently obtained, or fraudulently made unjustly, harassing or oppressive.”

In the case of Pickenbrock v. Smith, 43 Okla. 585, 143 P. 675, the rule as to what constitutes duress is announced in the syllabus as follows:

“The question in each such case is: Was the person so act.ed upon by throats of the person claiming ilie benefit of the conr.ract, for tlie purpose of obtaining such contract, as to be bereft of that quality of mind essential to the making of a contract, and was the contract thereby obtained?”

In the body of the opinion of said case, we made the following pertinent statements:

“In other words, the general rule is laid down in Radich v. Hutchins, 95 U. S. 212, 24 L. Ed. 409: ‘To constitute the coercion or duress which will be regarded as sufficient to make a payment involuntary, * * * there must be some actual or threatened exercise of power possessed * * * by the party exacting or receiving the payment over the person or property of another from which the latter has no other means of immediate relief than by making the payment. As stated by the Court of Appeals of Maryland, the doctrine established by the authorities is that “a payment is not to be regarded as compulsory unless made to emancipate the person or property from actual and existing duress imposed upon it by the party to whom the money is paid.” Baltimore v. Lefferman, 4 Gill (Md.) 425, 45 Am. Dec. 145; Brumagin v. Tillinghast, 18 Cal. 265; 79 Am. Dec. 176; Mays v. Cincinnati, 1 Ohio St. 268, See, also, Cribbs v. Sowle, 87 Mich. 340, 49 N. W. 587, 24 Am. St. Rep. 166; Briggs v. Withey, 24 Mich. 136. What is there said as to compulsory payments is, of course, applicable here as to a compulsory promise to pay.”

Counsel for defendant cite one Iowa and two Kansas cases in support of the defendant’s contention, that the note and mortgage are void because of the duress practiced on the wife by her husband. In the cited case of First National Bank v. Bryan (Iowa) 17 N. W. 165, the decision of the court was based on the fact that mortgages were not intended to pass as commercial paper. This is not the general rule and is not the rule in Oklahoma.

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1936 OK 642, 62 P.2d 970, 178 Okla. 284, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-bankers-life-assurance-co-v-day-okla-1936.