Lewis v. Doyle

148 N.W. 407, 182 Mich. 141, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 791
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 25, 1914
DocketDocket No. 63
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 148 N.W. 407 (Lewis v. Doyle) 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
Lewis v. Doyle, 148 N.W. 407, 182 Mich. 141, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 791 (Mich. 1914).

Opinions

Stone, J.

In this case the complainant filed her bill of complaint to set aside certain instruments, by the terms of which she conveyed her interest in the estate of her deceased father to the defendant.

Complainant, by her bill of complaint, claims that the instruments were procured from her under circumstances which amounted to duress, and for the sole consideration of preventing her husband from being prosecuted for embezzlement, and sent to the penitentiary.

The complainant is the daughter of Jan Van Eene[143]*143naam, and she was married to one William A. Lewis. The complainant and her husband lived in Zeeland, Mich., for a time, and in 1906 went to the State of California because of the ill health of Mr. Lewis, who had consumption. At Riverside, Cal., Mr. Lewis-secured employment with the Riverside Steam Laundry Company. He remained in the employ of the said company from June, 1907, to the last of November, 1909, when he was discharged because he had misappropriated some $1,900 belonging to the company. He had been employed as a driver of one of the wagons of the company, and his duties required him to collect the laundry and deliver the same, and also to collect the money due for the laundry work. The misappropriation was of funds so collected by him.

Upon discovering the shortage, or misappropriation, negotiations were had which resulted in the complainant conveying to the defendant all of her interest in the estate of her deceased father in Michigan, with an agreement back, to pay over to complainant any sum of money which might be received from the property in excess of the sum of. $1,900. A few months prior to the time of the discovery of the misappropriation of the money by Lewis, complainant’s father had died in Michigan and left a will by the terms of which complainant had an interest in his estate. A copy of the will had been sent to the complainant. The defendant- had been informed that the complainant had inherited some property, and he also knew that Mr. Lewis had no property. Mr. Lewis and defendant talked of a settlement of the shortage, and Mr. Lewis asked that he be given a day or two to arrange for a settlement, and informed the defendant that he desired to talk it over with his wife. Upon this branch of the case the complainant testified as follows:

“While in California, Mr. Lewis at first worked at [144]*144a grocery store, and then secured employment from the Riverside Laundry Company, and remained in their employ about-three years, until the fall of 1909. That the reason he quit the employ was that Lewis said to, complainant, his wife, that he was short in his accounts about $1,900. He came home on Tuesday; seemed to feel very 'sad; went into the parlor; sat in the Morris chair. I saw he was crying, and he said Doyle said he was- short in his accounts nearly $1,900, and he said, T am out of work.’ That was the first time that complainant knew her husband was short in his accounts. That the next day he said he asked to see the books, and that Mr. Doyle refused to show them to him. He said, ‘Now, what can you do?’ I said, ‘Will, I can’t do nothing; I have got my two little babies here, and can’t do nothing.’ He said, ‘Something must be done, because I don’t want to go to the penitentiary.’ * * * ' Three days later Mr. Lewis came home in the laundry wagon, and it was raining, and he says, ‘Now, hurry up and get ready, because Doyle wants us to come to his house;’ and I says, ‘What does he want us to come there for?’ He says, ‘He wants to talk to us.’ I says, T wonder will there be anybody else there;’ and he said, ‘No, there won’t be anybody there but me and my wife.’ I was going to change my dress; I just had a dressing jacket on and an old skirt, and I was going to change it. He said, ‘Don’t get ready; just slip on your coat and go just the way you are. There is no time to waste.’ We went down to Mr. Doyle’s. Mr. Cathcart was sitting there. Never saw him before. Then Mr. Byrne stepped in from the dining room. Mr. Byrne was a lawyer at San Bernardino. Doyle introduced us to Byrne, saying, ‘This is the man who is short in his account.’ And then Mr. Lewis produced a copy of the will, which I did not know Mr. Lewis had. Then Mr. Doyle told me, ‘You and the children go into the kitchen; Mrs. Doyle is there.’ I went and stayed 15 or 20 minutes. The door was closed behind me. I said to Mrs. Doyle, ‘I am awfully sorry I have to come on an errand like this. I hope they won’t send Mr. Lewis to the penitentiary.’ Mrs. Doyle said nothing. After awhile Mr. Doyle came in, and I went into the parlor where the men were. Mr. Byrne read the [145]*145will to me and said, ‘Now Mrs. Lewis you must sign away your whole inheritance/ and he took that paper, and he hit that like that (indicating) into my face. I thought he was going to slap me with that paper, and he said, ‘If you do not sign that paper we will prosecute your husband, and we will send him to the penitentiary. We have no time to bother; you must hurry and sign that paper/. I did not want him to go to the penitentiary. He was a consumptive husband, and I knew he could not live long. I was a total stranger in Riverside; I didn’t want Mr. Lewis to go there. * * * He took that paper and just went to me and said, ‘Now you shall sign away .your inheritance, because we have no time to bother, and you must hurry up and sign.’ I says, ‘What if you get more than $1,900?’ Then he said, ‘What the balance is we will return to you every penny, what the balance is.’ And then we came home. I signed the paper there to keep my husband from going to the penitentiary. I believed Mr. Lewis would be prosecuted for taking this $1,900 unless I signed it. * * * A week or ten days later the telephone rang and Mr. Lewis answered the phone and said, ‘Doyle wants us to go up to the courthouse and sign a paper.’ It was raining hard, and I said, ‘Why do we have to go today?’ And he said, ‘Doyle said we must go today.’ We went to the prosecutor’s office, and Mr. Lewis took me there, and I signed a paper there; do not know what I signed. I asked no questions and the paper was not read to me. Mr. Evans and Mr. Lewis were in the room when I signed the paper, and I signed that because I thought it would keep him from going to the penitentiary.”

It is undisputed that the instrument first signed by complainant was indorsed upon the back of the copy of the will, and was made to Mr. Byrne in trust for the laundry company, until the value and condition of the property in Michigan could be ascertained, with the understanding that, if the property proved satisfactory, a more formal assignment of the claim of complainant would be made to the defendant, Doyle, in trust for the laundry company. The conditions of [146]*146the property being satisfactory to the defendant, the instrument of which the complainant speaks as having been made at the prosecutor’s office was a formal assignment in the nature of a quitclaim deed, appearing in the record as Exhibit A which appears to have been signed and acknowledged by the complainant and her husband on the 9th day of December, 1909, and the acknowledgment was before Lyman Evans, a notary public, Mr. Evans being the person referred to by the complainant as the prosecutor. He appears to have been the prosecuting attorney of Riverside county.

After a careful reading of this record, we are of opinion that this case should be disposed of upon the facts and the weight of the testimony. The case must turn upon the facts as to what occurred at the home of Mr. Doyle at the time the first instrument was signed. Upon that subject the defendant, Doyle, testified.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 N.W. 407, 182 Mich. 141, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-doyle-mich-1914.