Palatucci v. Woodland

70 A.2d 674, 166 Pa. Super. 315, 1950 Pa. Super. LEXIS 347
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 6, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 70 A.2d 674 (Palatucci v. Woodland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palatucci v. Woodland, 70 A.2d 674, 166 Pa. Super. 315, 1950 Pa. Super. LEXIS 347 (Pa. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

Argued October 6, 1949. Joseph Palatucci, appellee, entered judgment on January 8, 1947, on a note in the amount of $1,600.00 given by Lewis W. Woodland and Elizabeth M. Woodland, husband and wife. Lewis W. Woodland died on June 9, 1947. Execution issued on the judgment on March 4, 1949. On March 25, 1949, Elizabeth M. Woodland, appellant, filed her petition to open judgment averring that (1) she received no consideration for the execution of *Page 317 the note, and (2) she signed the note under duress. An answer was filed denying the material averments of the petition and depositions were taken. After argument the court below discharged the rule to open judgment and this appeal followed.

The depositions disclose that Lewis W. Woodland borrowed $1,600.00 from appellee, and gave him two checks therefor, one dated September 6, 1946, in the amount of $1,000.00 and another check dated September 17, 1946, in the amount of $600.00. The checks were deposited for collection in the early part of October, 1946, and were returned dishonored because of insufficient funds. Upon the return of the checks so marked, appellee, on or about October 7, 1946, called at the Woodland home and exhibited the two checks to the appellant.

There is some disagreement as to what was said during the conversation in the Woodland home between the appellant and appellee. Appellant stated the appellee threatened that if she did not sign a judgment note in the amount of the two checks ($1,600.00), he would have her husband arrested and prosecuted criminally for issuing bad checks; that she was compelled by this duress to execute the note. She testified: "And then Mr. Palatucci told me that he had spoken to one of the officers at the bank about the checks being no good and about my husband issuing them. And he told me that my husband could be arrested and prosecuted for issuing the bad checks. And I asked him not to do anything because my husband was very sick in the hospital at that time and had had a heart attack, and I thought any other excitement would be very serious for him. So he told me that if my husband and I would sign a note he would give me back the two bad checks which he said my husband had given to him." Appellee denied any threat was made. He testified: "Q. Did you make any threats to Mrs. Woodland that you were going to have her husband arrested on account of these checks? A. No, sir. *Page 318 I had no reason because I knew Mr. Woodland was a man of his word and if anything turned out and he would get back to work it would have been O.K. . . ."

Appellee further testified that as a result of his conversation with appellant it was mutually agreed she and her husband would execute a note covering the indebtedness of $1,600.00, after the appellee prepared the note and mailed it to her. The evidence established that Mrs. Woodland did receive the note by mail and it was then taken by her to the hospital where both she and her husband signed it. Mrs. Woodland then mailed the sealed note to appellee on or about October 15, 1946. Upon receipt of the note appellee then forwarded the two dishonored checks to appellant by mail.

The Act of 1945,1 P. L. 625, § 1, 48 P. S. § 31, empowered a wife to make any contract that could be validly made by an unmarried woman and removed the exception that she could not become an accommodation maker or endorser or surety for another. Hence, appellant was fully empowered to execute the note here involved without consideration moving directly to her from appellee.

Apparently, the appellant has abandoned her argument that lack of consideration invalidated the judgment. She now says: "It is conceded by [her] that standing alone, the lack of consideration did not invalidate the judgment since the note was executed under seal." As stated in Shinn v. Stemler,158 Pa. Super. 350, 352, 45 A.2d 242: "The note was under seal, and a seal imports a consideration and creates a legal obligation; it follows that upon a note under seal want of consideration is no defense in Pennsylvania (citing cases)." Considering appellant's concession and the form of the note, we need not labor the question to show an existing consideration. *Page 319

The appellant does urge in substance that there was no accrual of benefit to her and that such circumstance corroborated her position that duress was exercised upon her by appellee to secure the note. Whether or not duress was resorted to by appellee may best be gleaned from the pertinent conversations and the relationship of the parties. Nowhere do we find either a threat or a declaration of intent to arrest the husband; there were no unfriendly or impatient demands or arguments. Appellant's husband was a stock broker's customers' man and appellee was his client, — one who retained absolute trust and confidence in Woodland even after the checks were dishonored. The appellant herself knew appellee prior to their conversations about the checks and the note. He had been a neighbor of the Woodlands at Margate, New Jersey, in the summer of 1943, where they saw each other practically every day; he had called at their Philadelphia home on a number of occasions. In these circumstances it would naturally follow that the appellee, knowing the husband was in a hospital, would convey any unfavorable information to the wife rather than to him, and probably would first suggest to her how to overcome the adverse situation.

The testimony of appellant is merely to the effect that Palatucci told her that her husband could be arrested and prosecuted. The appellee did not say that, if they did not sign the note, he would arrest Woodland. Cf. Union National Bank v.Dersham, 15 W. N.C. 541. There is no evidence the appellant's signature was induced by fear that the alleged threat would be carried out. Appellant's recital of the negotiations leading up to the execution of the note, which took approximately one week, and which were conducted by the use of the mails, effectively repels any suggestion the alleged threats were persuasive. She had ample time and ample opportunity, if she so desired, to consult counsel before executing the note in question. *Page 320

"Ordinarily, when no proceedings have been commenced, threats of arrest, prosecution, or imprisonment do not constitute legal duress to avoid a contract; the threats must be made under such circumstances that they excite the fear of imminent and immediate imprisonment": Sulzner v. Cappeau-Lemley MillerCo., 234 Pa. 162, 167, 83 A. 103; Moyer v. Dodson, 212 Pa. 344,61 A. 937; Harris v. Tyson, 24 Pa. 347; Cf. Restatement, Contracts, §§ 492, 493; 17 Am. Jur., Duress and Undue Influence, § 22, pp. 899-902. "It is the declared law in this state that to avoid a contract alleged to have been procured by intimidation it must be made to appear that such intimidation existed either as the result of personal infirmity or from circumstances likely to coerce a person or ordinary firmness. The quality of firmness is assumed to exist in every person competent to contract unless it appears that by reason of old age or other sufficient cause he is weak or infirm.

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Bluebook (online)
70 A.2d 674, 166 Pa. Super. 315, 1950 Pa. Super. LEXIS 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palatucci-v-woodland-pasuperct-1949.