Lyon v. Waldo

36 Mich. 345, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 145
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 36 Mich. 345 (Lyon v. Waldo) 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
Lyon v. Waldo, 36 Mich. 345, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 145 (Mich. 1877).

Opinions

Graves, J:

For some years before August 26, 1871, and thereafter until June 27, 1872, complainant was the wife of the defendant Jerome B= Waldo, and as husband and wife they lived together at Williamston, in Ingham county, up to the date first mentioned. At or just previous to that time she became satisfied that he was guilty of criminal intercourse with a woman living a few rods distant, and she hence withdrew from him at that date with the fixed purpose of not living or coliabiting with him longer, and which purpose she has kept; and with the further purpose of obtaining, as the bill states, a separate maintenance.

Desiring legal advice and assistance, she came to this city and consulted with and employed Mr. Wiley, a lawyer then in practice here. She seems tq have placed her inter[350]*350ests entirely in liis hands, and to have empowered him, so far as she was capable, to take such steps as he in his discretion might deem best, and she seems to have fully acquiesced in his doings as they occurred, and to have sanctioned the whole as though done by herself in person.’ Under his direction, and on her complaint therefor, a warrant was issued by a magistrate against Waldo, then her husband, for the crime of adultery, and given to an officer for service. This was on Saturday, the 26th of August, and the officer, following Wiley’s directions, deferred service until the next -day, Sunday, in the evening, when, and about half-past ten, Waldo was arrested at the house of the woman before mentioned, under circumstances nearly or quite conclusive that he was then at least criminal. On the succeeding Tuesday, being the 29th of August, he appeared before the magistrate under arrest upon the warrant. The prosecuting attorney having consented that Wiléy, who had made a request therefor, should have control of the prosecution, the examination was by consent adjourned until the 4th of September, at four o’clock in the afternoon. On the forenoon of Monday, the 28th of August, and being the day succeeding the arrest, negotiations were begun between Wiley and Waldo on the basis of a pecuniary benefit from Waldo to complainant on the one hand, and a stoppage of the prosecution, on the other,* and during the interval between the amicable adjournment of the examination on the 29th of August and the 4th of September, to which the adjournment extended, the negotiations terminated in an agreement. Waldo paid Wiley one hundred dollars in cash, gave his note for four ¡hundred dollars more, which he paid subsequently, and paid as costs of the criminal proceedings twenty-six dollars and forty cents. He also gave Wiley, in trust for complainant, his bond, conditioned for the payment for her benefit of two hundred dollars every six months during her natural life, and with a stipulation to pay the round sum of five thousand dollars and all arrears of. interest, as a fixed gross amount in case of default on any half-yearly payment, and [351]*351to secure performance ©f this bond Waldo, together with his brother James and wife, gave a mortgage on real estate. On the other hand, the criminal prosecution was stopped by Wiley’s direction, and was not resumed. Neither was any other instituted, and the offense was treated as a matter settled and barred.

During the entire transaction Wiley was allowed to guide, control and use the prosecution in the name of the people, without interference, to obtain the money and securities before mentioned, and they were given and taken as satisfaction for the offense imputed, the costs and charges of the magistrate and arresting officer, the individual charge made by Wiley, and to secure the stifling of the pending criminal prosecution.

Within two or three days, and on the fifth of September, complainant filed her bill against Waldo for a divorce from the bonds of matrimony, and the specific charge in the’ bill was an act of adultery alleged to have been committed on the evening of the arrest, and which was considered provable by the arresting officer and a person who attended him. No claim for any allowance was preferred, and no allowance was made.

Waldo offered no defense, and on June 27th, 1872, divorce was granted. A few days later, and in the next month, he married the worn an implicated in the previous charges against him, and a little more than two years thereafter complainant married her present husband, Mr. Lyon.

Waldo proceeded to make the stipulated, half-yearly payments, and continued doing so up to the payment due August 29, 1874, but after paying that, he refused paying further.

Wiley died intestate in April, 1874, and complainant filed the present bill in her own name to foreclose the mortgage and claimed the gross'sum of five thousand dollars and back interest.

The defendant, her former husband,, answered and urged several grounds of defense, the most material being that [352]*352the mortgage was contaminated by- unlawful consideration and hence was not enforceable.

After examination the circuit judge became convinced that the recourse to the criminal law on the part of complainant was not in good faith; that the prosecution was moved and used for the purpose of private gain and advantage and not to vindicate public justice, and that in fact-the giving of the mortgage was brought ábout directly by the influence of the proceeding, and that the giving up of the prosecution was matter of consideration; but he came to the conclusion after all, that the security was not made thereby utterly uncollectible, but only voidable, and that Waldo’s subsequent acts of payment confirmed it and rendered it enforceable; and acting .in this view he allowed a decree of foreclosure, and Waldo appealed.

Now there is no room for controversy about the facts. There is no evidence to show that the securities were given or received as a provision for complainant’s maintenance as a married woman apart from her husband. On the contrary, the proof is strong that the arrangement contemplated a speedy dissolution of the marriage • at complainant’s instance. And again, there is no evidence to show that the existence of the securities had any influence upon the matter of alimony or allowance in complainant’s suit for divorce. That the criminal proceeding was made use of solely to drive the accused to make over or secure to the accuser and her agent something like an estimated one-third of his property, and that the mortgage originated in the execution of this plan and as part of its fruit, and that a portion at least of its consideration was the suppression of the prosecution, are facts substantially admitted, and in such a state of facts I cannot concur with the circuit judge. It is of no consequence whether what was obtained did or did not exceed the claims of moral justice. The question concerns the means employed to get what was obtained. The law wisely and sternly disallows the use of measures which dishonor it and falsify its processes and pervert the duty of its [353]*353ministers to reach ends which in the abstract may be excellent, and the nature of the thing and the principle on which the court acts in entertaining such objections in cases to enforce contracts are inconsistent with the notion that acts of part performance can obviate the difficulty or reverse the duty of the court.

Where a contract is tainted with illegal consideration it is rendered incapable of confirmation by acts of part performance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 Mich. 345, 1877 Mich. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-waldo-mich-1877.