Spoerer v. Wehland

100 A. 287, 130 Md. 226, 1917 Md. LEXIS 117
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 14, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 100 A. 287 (Spoerer v. Wehland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spoerer v. Wehland, 100 A. 287, 130 Md. 226, 1917 Md. LEXIS 117 (Md. 1917).

Opinion

Constable, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellees, complainants below, filed a bill praying that the appellants be enjoined from transferring a promissory note then in their possession and given them by the appellees, and further praying that the said note should be returned. The lower Court granted a preliminary injunction, and required the appellants to show cause why the note should not be returned. Upon answer being filed and issue joined, testimony was taken, and the lower Court passed a decree granting the relief prayed. It is from that decree that this appeal arises.

The bill alleges that the said note was given to the appellants to pay an indebtedness of the appellees’ son to the appellants, at a time when the appellees were bereft of their free will, through fear brought on by intimidation and threats practised upon them by one of the appellants and their attorney.

It is not our intention to relate in detail the testimony, taken by both parties, but to give the substance and the conclusions we have reached from a careful consideration of it. The appellees are elderly people living in Howard County, *228 who have been engaged in farming for a long time. The appellants are the members of a co-partnership, engaged in the automobile, automobile accessories and repair business in Baltimore. William D. Wehland, the son of the appellees, had located in Baltimore and had formed a partnership, with three others^ for the purpose of dealing in automobile tires. The affairs of this latter firm, apparently, did not prosper, and on December 23rd, 1915, the appellants were the holders of two of its promissory notes for amounts total-ling $529. 'On December 20th, 1915, a bill for a receiver and an injunction had been filed against the firm, and bankruptcy proceedings were imminent, and on December 24th, 1915, the firm filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy. The day before the said petition was filed the appellant's met at their attorney’s office to consult about the claims they held against the insolvent firm. About, five o’clock P. M., and within five minutes' after the conference began, one of the appellants, together with the attorney with a blank form of promissory note, started, in an automobile, for the home of the appellees. The result of the trip was that they had the appellees sign the said blank note for five hundred and twenty-nine dollars, payable six months after date, to the order of the appellants, and endorsed, without recourse, the two notes of the son’s firm, to the appellees.

What transpired at the home of the appellees to induce them to sign the,note, taking the burden of the son’s firm’s debt from the shoulders of the appellants:, is told in some detail by the appellees, but is not contradicted in detail by the appellant present and his attorney, they, apparently, relying upon the fact that no express threats were used.

In this the appellees agree with them, but contend, although no direct threats were used, that, nevertheless, it was plain to them, and they so understood, that unless they assumed the debt their son was to be arrested. Erom our reading of the whole record we can reach no other conclusion, but that the intention of the visit was to bring about that *229 impression in the minds of the appellees. The testimony shows that upon their arrival at the house, Mr. Wehland was not at home, and they spent the time, awaiting his arrival, in talking generally to Mrs. Wehland, not mentioning to her the purpose of their visit. Upon the arrival of Mr. Wehland, the appellant, immediately, plunged into the business at hand, and told them that there was, a rumor in the city that there was a warrant out for the arrest of the members of the son’s firm (and this is corroborated by the appellant’s testimony) upon the charge of selling consigned goods and not making return .for the same. It was told them that this was a serious charge, making the offenders liable to a fine of five hundred dollars and imprisonment in the penitentiary. It was explained to them what was meant by consigned goods. After these explanations had been made, the appellant said to them, and we are using the exact words the appellant used in testifying: “Now, as to our account, you know they are consigned goods.” 'Could there have been a more veiled threat employed that this preparation and culminating question? We do not think the appellees made any mistake in implying what they did and what, in our opinion, they were intended to imply.

Both Mr. and Mrs. Wehland testified that they were excited and dazed by the news of their son’s predicament, and that the shock upon them was great, since they had always had had such good reports of him,. The appellant testified that the Wehlands knew absolutely what they were doing, but in answer to a question as to whether Mr. Wehland was excited, said: “He was about the same as Mrs. Wehland; excited about Will being mixed upi with this bunch.” However, there was a witness, wholly disinterested, one who came to the house just as the appellant and his attorney were leaving, and he described their condition as follows:

“Mrs. Wehland seemed to him much excited and worked up-, so did Mr. Wehland; that Mr. Wehland did not say as much as Mrs. Wehland; that Mr. Wehland does not talk very *230 much, and did not tails very much then; that Mrs. Wehland was very much excited and looked as though she was' about ready to cry. That Mr. Wehland was quiet, and, of course, he was excited and appeared to be angry.” It does not take any great flight of imagination to believe that this witness truly described the mental condition of these old people, after listening to.' the story of their son from the lips of these business, men.

The rule' applicable to cases of this character is well stated in Central Bank v. Copeland, 18 Md. 305, and has been generally’cited and-quoted with approval in this and other jurisdictions, and is as follows: “The element of obligation upon which a contract may be enforced, springs primarily from the unrestrained mutual assent of the contracting parties, and where the assent of one to a contract is. constrained and involuntary, he will not be held obligated or bound by it. A contract, the execution of which is induced by fraud, is void, and a stronger' -character can not reasonably be assigned to one, the execution of which is obtained by duress. Artifice and force differ only as modes of obtaining the assent of a contracting party, and the contract to. which one assents through imposition or overpowering intimidation, will be declared void, on an appeal to either a court of law or equity to enforce it. The question whether one executes a contract or deed with a mind and will sufficiently free "to make the act binding, is often difficult to determine, but for that purpose a Court of Equity, unrestrained by the more technical roles which govern courts of law in that respect, will consider all the circumstances from which rational inferences, may be drawn, and will refuse'its aid against one who; although apparently acting voluntarily, yet, in fact, appears to have executed a contract, with a mind so- subdued by harshness, cruelty, extreme distress, or apprehension short of legal duress, as to overpower and control the will.”

In 9 R. C. L., sec. 16, p-.

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Bluebook (online)
100 A. 287, 130 Md. 226, 1917 Md. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spoerer-v-wehland-md-1917.