Perkins v. W. B. Adams & Co.

43 S.W. 529, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 331, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 372
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 17, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 43 S.W. 529 (Perkins v. W. B. Adams & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perkins v. W. B. Adams & Co., 43 S.W. 529, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 331, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 372 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by W. B. Adams & Co. against Mellie Perkins, as the wife, and the other appellants as the children and heirs, of J. M. Perkins, deceased, upon a promissory note executed on January 29, 1892, by J. M. Perkins to Ivey Bros, for the sum of $250, payable on or before January 21, 1893, with 10 per cent interest from its date, and to foreclose a mortgage on eighty acres of land, executed by J. M. Perkins and Mellie Perkins at the same time to the payees of the note to secure its payment.

Appellees alleged in their petition that they were the owners and holders of the note and mortgage, and prayed judgment for the debt, interest, and costs as a charge upon the mortgaged premises only, and foreclosure of their mortgage lien.

The appellants answered by general and special exceptions to the petition, and specially admitting the execution of the note and mortgage as alleged, but alleged that there was no consideration for their execution, but averred that at the time they were executed J. M. Perkins was aged *332 and enfeebled in mind and body and without mental capacity to understand the nature of his act, and that Ivey Bros., the original payees, knowing of his unsound mental condition, wrongfully took advantage of it and induced him to execute the note and mortgage without any consideration therefor.

That Ivey Bros., knowing that J. M. Perkins was aged and enfeebled in mind and body, a short time prior to the execution of the note and mortgage, claimed an indebtedness against said Perkins and his two sons in the amount for which the note was given, and asserted that Perkins’ sons had fraudulently disposed of personal property which they had mortgaged to them for the purpose of securing their respective indebtedness, and the;/, the said Ivey Bros., communicated to J. M. Perkins a threat that they would prosecute his sons criminally and send them to the penitentiary for fraudulently selling mortgaged property, if he did not make them a note and give security for the full amount of his and his sons’ indebtedness to them, and that on account of his enfeebled physical and mental condition he was by such threat overcome by fear for his sons, and induced thereby, without consideration, to execute said mortgage. That at the time they were executed, and prior thereto and afterwards until his death, J. M. Perkins was in such a weak and unsound state of mind as to be wholly unable to resist the influence brought upon his mind by the threats of Ivey Bros, against his sons; that substantially the same threats against her sons were made to Kellie Perkins by the original payees in the note, and that through fear of their execution she was caused to sign the mortgage executed by her husband. That J. K. Perkins, deceased, was not indebted to Ivey Bros, in the sum claimed, or in any amount whatever, and that by reason of his mental infirmity and the influence of fear for his sons, occasioned by said threats, under which the note and mortgage were issued, they were without consideration and void.

Upon the trial of the cause, which was before a jury, the appellants, for the purpose of obtaining the right to open and close the argument, admitted that appellees had a good cause of action as set forth in their petition, except in so far as'it might be defeated in whole or in part by the facts alleged in their answer constituting a good defense.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of appellees for the amount of principal and interest due on the note, but made no mention in the verdict of the mortgage given to secure it. Upon this verdict, and the admission of appellants, made as aforesaid, the court entered judgment against appellants, to be satisfied out of the mortgaged premises, together with foreclosure of the mortgage hen thereon. From that judgment we have this appeal.

Opinion.—There was no error in the court’s overruling appellant’s special exception to appellee’s petition! It did not seek to establish a personal obligation against Kellie Perkins, or against any of the other appellants, but only to fix the amount of the alleged indebtedness as a *333 charge upon the mortgaged premises, and to have it satisfied therefrom hy foreclosure sale; If the property mortgaged was not a part of J. M. Perkins’ estate, and not claimed hy appellants, they could not he affected in any way hy its being subjected to appellee’s demand. In the absence of allegations and proof to the contrary, it must be presumed community property of J. M. Perkins and wife, since it was possessed by them at the time their marriage was dissolved by the farmer’s death.

The evidence tends to show that J. M. Perkins -and his adult sons, Lee amd John, in 1891 and 1892, traded with Ivey Bros., a firm of merchants doing business in Devine, running accounts with said firm; that in January, 1892, J. 3VL Perkins and his said two sons were indebted in their separate and individual accounts to Ivey Bros, in the aggregate amount of $257, of which $64 was on account of J. M. Perkins, and the balance on account of Lee and John.

That about January 20, 1892, Ed Ivey, a member of the said firm, sent J. M. Perkins a message by J. A. Wright to the eff ect that John and Lee .Perkins were indebted to his firm on accounts, and had given a mortgage on personal property to secure such indebtedness; that subsequently, with the intent to defraud their creditors, they had sold such mortgaged property; that he, J. M. Perkins, was also indebted to them, and that if he did not make Ivey Bros, a note secured by a mortgage on land for the entire sum due by himself and sons, they would prosecute John and Lee for fraudulently selling mortgaged property and send them to the penitentiary.

That J. M. Perkins was then about 76 years old, in feeble health, infirm of body and mind, and on that account easily excited to fear for the safety of hi's sons by threats of the nature embodied in the message sent him by Ed Ivey; that said message was communicated to him by Wright, and that on account of Ms infirmities his volition was overcome by it, and, to save his sons from the -threatened prosecution, he was induced to execute the note and mortgage sued on. The evidence also tends to show that Ms wife, Kellie, through fear of such threat and to relieve the anxiety of her husband, joined with him in -the execution of the mortgage.

Without expressing o-r intimating any opinion as to whether the evidence is sufficient to establish such facts, we have stated what it tends to prove, simply for the purpose of enabling us to discuss intelligibly the assignments of error relating to such evidence.

The fact is uneon-tradioted that the note and mortgage were assigned to the appellees long after maturity. Nor is it controverted that appellants, other than Kellie Perkins, are -the children and heirs at law of J. K. Perkins, deceased.

The court instructed the jury that appellants by their answer sought to avoid the note and mortgage on the grounds (1) that there was no consideration for their execution, and (2) that at the time they were executed J. K. Perkins was not of srafficient mental capacity to make a binding contract.

With reference t-o the first ground of avoidance stated, it charged the *334 jury, that if they believed from the evidence that J. M.

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43 S.W. 529, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 331, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-w-b-adams-co-texapp-1897.