Spear v. Ryan

208 P. 1069, 64 Mont. 145, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 153
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1922
DocketNo. 4,837
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 208 P. 1069 (Spear v. Ryan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spear v. Ryan, 208 P. 1069, 64 Mont. 145, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 153 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE FARR

delivered the opinion of the court.

Complaint in usual form on a promissory note. Judgment for plaintiffs, and defendants Frank C. Walker and Margaret O’Meara appeal from the judgment and from the order denying their motion for new trial. L. N. Brainerd was the special agent of the Aetna Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, and C. L. Spear was the special agent of the Phoenix Insurance Company, Limited, of London, and as such they bring this suit. John P. Ryan, one of the defendants, ■was an insurance agent or broker doing business in the city of Butte, Montana, and wrote insurance as agent for these two companies. He became in arrears in remitting for insurance premiums collected, and when an adjustment of the premiums collected and unaccounted for was required of him by Bra-ineid and Spear on behalf of their respective companies, an adjustment and settlement of the premium accounts with these companies was agreed to in writing, pursuant to the terms of which, and as a part satisfaction of the accounts' [148]*148in question, the defendant Eyan paid Brainerd and Spear in behalf of their respective companies $1,173.69 in cash, and gave them city of Butte warrants totaling $530, bill of sale of a Chalmers automobile, an assignment of the equity of himself and wife in some real estate in Butte, and a note for $1,000 signed by Eyan and the defendants Frank C., Walker and Margaret O ’Meara. By the agreement of settlement, Eyan acknowledged that he was indebted to the insurance companies “in the sum of $2,789.39, more or less, as per statement designated ‘tentative agreement of account,’ which are the considerations for this undertaking and which are hereby made a part hereof. It is specifically understood and agreed, however, that the said agreements of account are subject to change and correction as errors or omissions are proven.”

Attached to this agreement is what is termed a “tentative agreement of account,” which contains the items of accounts, with the policy number of each, the name of the insurer, the agent’s commissions, and the premium. The note sued upon is the note specified in this agreement of settlement as a part satisfaction of the accounts therein mentioned, which the defendants Frank C. Walker and Margaret O’Meara executed, as they say, as accommodation makers. The defendant Eyan was not served with summons, and did not appear.

The defendants Walker and O’Meara in their amended an-swer, in paragraph 3 thereof, sought to defend upon the ground that, when the note was made and delivered to the plaintiffs, the plaintiffs well knew that the defendants were accommodation makers of the note, and that no consideration of any kind or character whatsoever passed to the answering defendants, and that as to them the note was without consideration. This paragraph of the amended answer was, on motion, stricken out, and error is assigned to this ruling of the court. This portion of the answer stricken did not constitute a defense. The defendants Walker and O’Meara were two of the makers of the note, and they were primarily liable for its payment, even though accommodation makers. (Merchants’ [149]*149Nat. Bank v. Smith, 59 Mont. 280, 15 A. L. R. 430, 196 Pac. 523; In re Stinger’s Estate, 61 Mont. 173, 201 Pac. 693.) It necessarily follows that the court properly refused to admit in evidence the testimony offered as to want of consideration in support of that portion of the answer stricken from the record.

There is no merit in the defendants’ contention that by virtue of the provisions of the contract of settlement the note sued on became non-negotiable. While the note was given, so far as John P. Ryan is concerned, pursuant to the contract, there is no reference in the note to the contract. Upon its face it was a negotiable promissory note, and was sued on by the payees therein named.

In subdivision 2 of the answer, paragraph 3, the defendants Walker and O’Meara sought to defend on the ground that duress had been imposed on their codefendant, Ryan, in connection with the execution of the note, in that prior to the time the note was executed Ryan was the agent of these two insurance companies, and during the course of his employment as such agent he “collected large sums of money belonging to the said plaintiffs, and he was accused by the said plaintiffs with the conversion and embezzlement of large sums thereof, to-wit, in excess of $1,000, and was then and there threatened by the plaintiffs, C. L. Spear and L. N. Brainerd, with prosecution, arrest and detainment unless he would secure the said plaintiffs by delivering to them a negotiable instrument in manner and form ag that alleged in plaintiffs’ complaint, and the said defendant John P. Ryan, by virtue of the threats aforesaid, and being then and there actuated by fear of arrest, prosecution and detainment of his person, and to avoid the said threats being carried out, was induced to and did execute and procure the execution of the said note as alleged in plaintiffs’ complaint, and did deliver it to the plaintiffs; and these defendants further allege that if said threats had not been made the said note* would not have been executed or delivered.” These and other portions of the amended [150]*150answer were on motion stricken, and the action of the court in so doing is assigned as error.

The legal question presented by this assignment is: Will duress imposed upon a principal, causing him to enter into an obligation, avoid the obligation of his sureties, if the latter at the time of executing the obligation know of the circumstances establishing the duress? By this portion of the amended answer which was stricken out Walker and O’Meara sought to defend upon the ground that they had signed as sureties, and only for the accommodation and benefit of Eyan as principal, and it is upon the legal principles governing such a situation that a determination of the question must be based.

It is the general rule, subject to but few exceptions, that a contractual obligation cannot be avoided because of duress imposed on a third person. In other words, the law does not regard a person under duress who enters into a contract to relieve another person and not himself. There are certain exceptions to this rule, recognized by some but not by all of the authorities, in favor of a husband and wife, parent and child, and other persons sustaining such a close relationship to the threatened individual as that in fairness it may be said that the threats coerce their judgment and actions, and any one of these excepted classes may, under some authorities, avoid a contract made to relieve the other from duress (9 Euling Case Law, subject, “Duress,” sec. 16, p. 726; 3 E. C. L., subject, “Bills and Notes,” sec. 317, p. 1103), but none of these exceptions are involved in the instant case.

In Huscombe v. Standing, Cro. Jac. (Eng.) 187, one of the earliest cases in point, it appeared that the defendant having been sued on a bond, on which he was surety for one Street, entered a plea that the bond was obtained by duress of his principal. The plaintiff demurred to this plea, and without argument it was held that “It was not any plea for the surety, although it had been a good plea for the said Street, for none shall avoid his own bond for the imprisonment or danger of any other than of himself only.”

[151]*151In Oak v. Dustin, 79 Me. 23, 1 Am. St. Rep. 281, 7 Atl. 815, in referring to the earlier eases of Springfield Card Mfg. Co. v. West, 1 Cush. (Mass.) 388, and

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Bluebook (online)
208 P. 1069, 64 Mont. 145, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spear-v-ryan-mont-1922.