Spahr v. Hollingshead

8 Blackf. 415, 1847 Ind. LEXIS 55
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 8 Blackf. 415 (Spahr v. Hollingshead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spahr v. Hollingshead, 8 Blackf. 415, 1847 Ind. LEXIS 55 (Ind. 1847).

Opinion

Perkins, J.

This was a bill in chancery by David M. and Philip Spahr against Mary Jane Hottingshead. The object of the bill was to obtain from her a reconveyance of eighty acres of land, the surrender of a promissory note held by her against the plaintiffs for 50 dollars, and a perpetual injunction restraining the collection of certain judgments at law. The death of David M. Spahr since the filing of the bill is suggested upon the record. The bill was demurred to, the demurrer sustained, and the bill dismissed.

The material facts charged by the plaintiffs are, that, on the 10th of October, 1843, said Mary Jane appeared before a justice of the peace of Jay county, and made oath that she was pregnant with a child which, if born, would be a bastard, andl that said David M. Spahr was the father thereof; that the justice, on her examination, recognized David to appear at the next succeeding term of the Jay Circuit Court to answer the complaint; that said Mary Jane also commenced, about the same time, a suit at law against said David for an alleged breach of a marriage promise; and that her father gave out in speeches that he should, in due time, also prosecute him in an action for the seduction of his said daughter; that said Mary Jane, her father, their attorneys, and others, their friends, were representing that all said suits could and would be sustained; and that the plaintiffs in this suit were apprehensive of an effort being made to sustain them by perjury. The bill further states that, at this point in the proceedings, an offer of compromise was tendered on the part of Mary Jane and her father, by which it was proposed to abandon the prosecutions already commenced by said Mary Jane, and that threatened by her father, on condition that judgments for costs should go in the suits pending against David; that a note for 50 dollars by the father and son jointly should be given to Mary Jane; and that there should be deeded to her by the father, Philip Spahr, the eighty acres of land described in the bill; which compromise, it is alleged, was entered into on those terms, the judgments suffered, the note given, and the land conveyed. The bill then avers that these suits, instituted and threatened, were all groundless; that Mary Jane was not, as she and her father well knew at the [417]*417time, pregnant; that there was no breach of marriage promise and. no seduction; that the representations in regard those matters were all false and fraudulent, and the proceedings gotten up to harass said David and frighten him into a marriage of said Mary Jane against his inclination; that when the compromise was made, said Spahrs supposed that Mary Jane was pregnant by some one, and that as _ she had once, though falsely, sworn it to be by said David, they expected she would so swear again after her delivery, and that in that event it might be impossible for David to escape the consequences of the charge, however innocent he might be.

J. Smith, for the plaintiff. O. H. Smith and T. J. Sample, for the defendant.

Before filing this bill, the plaintiffs tendered a release to Mary Jane and her father of all benefits of said compromise and giving them full right to recommence their prosecutions and also demanded a reconveyance of the eighty acres land, a surrender of the 50 dollar note, and a discharge from the judgments for costs.

The demurrer to this bill admits the truth of its allegatio: so far as they are well made, and it seems to us they show a ground for relief. A compromise obtained by fraud cannot stand. This bill shows that in this case to have been so obtained. There is authority, that the compromise of a suit in which the plaintiff could not have recovered any thing on account of having no ground of action, cannot be sustained for want of consideration. Smith on Contracts, 50

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Bluebook (online)
8 Blackf. 415, 1847 Ind. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spahr-v-hollingshead-ind-1847.