Overstreet v. Dunlap

56 Ill. App. 486, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 770
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 13, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 56 Ill. App. 486 (Overstreet v. Dunlap) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overstreet v. Dunlap, 56 Ill. App. 486, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 770 (Ill. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Mb. Pbesiding J üstioe Lacet

delivebed the opinion op THE CoUBT.

This was a suit commenced by confessing judgment by virtue of a power of attorney annexed to a promissory note given by appellee to appellants, dated July IS, 1893, for $420, due one day after date, with seven per cent interest after July 4, 1893, until paid, with $25 as attorney fees, and a credit on the back of the note of §20, of the same date of the note. The judgment was opened up at the next October term of the Circuit Court, 1893, at the instance of appellee, and he was given liberty to plead to the merits, which he did in two pleas: first, want of consideration; second, duress, in that appellants falsely accused appellee of stealing their hogs, and with one I. M. Coakley, marshal of the city of Galesburg, Ill., threatened to arrest appellee and put him in jail unless he would sign the said note; denied the stealing of the hogs and the charge was wholly false; and that by reason of such threats and in fear thereof the appellee made and executed the note in question, etc.

The appellants filed replication to the first plea, averring the note was given on a settlement of a claim for hogs which appellants had lost to the value of §600, and which he accused appellee of having taken, and appellee admitting having taken some of appellant’s hogs but not so many as claimed, gave the note in question in settlement of such dispute, etc.

Second replication to first plea, in substance the same, and avers appellants had been induced by the settlement to make no further search for the hogs they claimed to have lost.

Replication to the second plea takes issue on the allegation of duress by the threats mentioned in the plea. Appellee filed two special rejoinders to the first and second replications which were demurred to and demurrer sustained, and appellee assigns cross-error as to the action of the court. These rejoinders were a departure from the matter set up in the replications and conclude with a verification, whereas appellee should have simply taken issue to all material parts of the replications and concluded to the country.

It will not be necessary for us to consider the question further in the view we take of the case. Besides these rejoinders, issue in proper form was taken on the replications. The case was tried by a jury resulting in a verdict for defendant. Motion by appellants for new trial was overruled by the court and judgment rendered against them for costs. From this judgment this appeal is taken. The circumstances of giving the note in suit are about as follows: The appellant M. L. Overstreet, is the father of J. L. Overstreet; the former lived in Galesburg arid owns a farm some two miles and a half from it, of which his son J. L. had charge in the summer and fall of 1892; they owned in partnership 115 head of hogs and shoats, which were kept on the farm and in charge of the son. The latter made a visit to Florida about November 10, 1892, and returned about the 1st March, 1893; while he was absent he left them in charge of George Overstreet, grandson of M. L. and nephew of J. L. Over-street. Dunlap, appellee, lived about one half. mile from Overstreet’s farm, and George Overstreet boarded with him a part of the time while his uncle was gone to Florida; then one Bengstonmoved in, November 13, 1892. George Over-street boarded at Dunlap’s about two weeks, and then on the farm. He did not understand that any of the hogs were gone until his uncle returned from Florida. Soon after John’s return he and his father discovered, or thought they did, that about thirty of their hogs had disappeared. They then consulted I. N. Coakley, the city marshal of Galesburg,' and agreed to give him $50 if he would assist them in discovering who had taken the hogs. Coakley made an investigation and communicated the result to appellants, the sum of which was that he was informed by .Wilkins Secord that appellee had sold two bunches of hogs, one bunch of forty and one of forty-two, and the fact that appellee did not recognize him at the time he saw Coakley talking to Overstreet in Holcum’s office, and did not thereafter until the former saw him at ‘Goff’s.

On the 18th July, 1893, M. L. Overstreet and Coakley got into a buggy with him and went out north, and they met appellee opposite Frank Goff’s barn, who was a brother-in-law of appellee, and there they requested a private interview and went into Goff’s barn with him, and there accused him of stealing or of taking, as appellant insists, appellant’s hogs, and demanded that appellee pay for them, and that he sign two judgment notes, which Overstreet had taken with him already prepared, one for $120 and one for $50, the latter to compensate him for Coakley’s fee as detective. Considerable conversation and dispute ensued in regard to this matter, the result of which was appellee signed the larger of the two notes, the one in suit, and Overstreet indorsed a credit on it of $20 at the time, and the other note was not signed.

What was said and done at this interview was a matter of contention on the trial, Coakley and M. L. Overstreet testifying that appellee admitted, in substance, taking the hogs, but claimed they were not worth so much as appellant, M. L. Overstreet, claimed, but finally signed the note in question. Appellants claim this to have been a conclusive compromise of a disputed claim, made in good faith, especially as to the amount, they claiming appellee virtually admitted his liability for the hogs taken, or a portion of them. The appellee, on the other hand, testified that he did not, at that interview, admit that he took the hogs, but denied it, and claimed that he signed the note in consequence of threats on the part of M. L. Overstreet and Cookley, that they would arrest him and send him to the penitentiary unless he signed the note, and Coakley claimed to have the papers then and there to arrest him, which most influenced him to sign the note. In this, appellee was supported by the testimony of his sister, Mrs. Goff, who claims that she sat at her west window in the kitchen, and looked in at the east barn door, where she could see the parties, or some of them, and heard a portion of the conversation, which, if her statement is true, goes far to corroborate appellee. Then appellee is corroborated as to some of the particulars, by Frank G-ripp, who was carrying water for hayers, and passed the barn, and saw Coakley with a red book in his hand, and held it up as though he was going to read; all the parties were together in the barn; he heard nothing said. This statement corroborates appellee somewhat as to what Cookley did at the time. Appellee testified that Coakley said at the time: “ From the confessions you have made to Over-street, it will send you to Joliet for ten years, and I want you to make this settlement at once, or I will arrest you at the crack of the whip.” He stepped back eight or ten feet and said, “ I have the papers here that will arrest you, and the papers that will convict you.” He held the paper up so that he could see there were three or four inches of writing on it, etc. The appellee produced a number of witnesses by whom he showed that he had, of his own, more hogs than he had sold, and how he obtained them, and by one witness who helped him take the lot of forty-one he had sold to Albert Felt, 1st March, 1893. And he sold another lot of twelve hogs, April 17,1893, to same party. The evidence shows that the information Coakley received, that appellee had sold one lot of forty and one of forty-two hogs was incorrect.

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Bluebook (online)
56 Ill. App. 486, 1894 Ill. App. LEXIS 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overstreet-v-dunlap-illappct-1894.