Tisdale v. Bryant

177 P. 510, 38 Cal. App. 750
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 23, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 1892.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 177 P. 510 (Tisdale v. Bryant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tisdale v. Bryant, 177 P. 510, 38 Cal. App. 750 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The action was for the partition of some four hundred and eighty acres of land in Kings County, it being alleged in the complaint that the plaintiff and the defendant Melodile Bryant each owned an undivided one-half interest in the land. The other defendants had liens on the property and they made no contest, but appellants in their answer denied that respondent had any interest whatever in the land, and they claimed that Melodile Bryant was the sole owner thereof. They also filed a cross-complaint, seeking thereby to set aside a certain agreement, attached to their pleading and marked, Exhibit “B,” of the date of September 1,1915, executed by them on the one part, and by respondent and Edgar R. Bryant, now deceased, on the other. Their attack upon the agreement is based upon the claim that said respondent and Edgar R. Bryant coerced them into signing said agreement, by taking advantage of their financial neces *752 sities and embarrassment in connection with securing the money with which to pay off a three thousand five hundred dollar mortgage on appellants’ eighty thousand dollar Modesto ranch, which mortgage was about to become due and could not be renewed. They sought also to have a deed executed by appellants to Edgar B. Bryant, the predecessor in interest of respondent, on the fifth day of July, 1901, set aside on the ground of fraud in procuring the same.

In addition, they brought an independent suit to accomplish the same purpose, alleging in their complaint substantially the same facts as appear in the cross-complaint herein. It is admitted that these two pleadings involve the same legal principles and the decision as to one will cover and determine the other.

In this agreement of September 1, 1915, appellants promised “to join in an equal division of the lands” involved in the partition suit, and “never again to question the validity of the deed executed by Melodile Bryant and Calhoun Bryant to Edgar B. Bryant on the 5th day of July, 1901.” The particular feature of this agreement, however, concerning which appellants complain, and on account of which they asked to have the agreement set aside, was the promise therein contained on their part “to assume to pay certain indebtedness and evidences of indebtedness, amounting to the sum of about $4,300, growing out of the affairs of the Bryant Investment Co., and plaintiff’s management thereof, and other matters from which said Calhoun Bryant and Melodile Bryant were to have been released from paying.” The claim seems to be that the invalidity of this covenant vitiates the whole agreement, as the former is an inseparable part of the contract, and the said promise to pay the indebtedness is sought to be nullified for the reason already stated. But under the authorities, it is plain that the facts alleged do not amount to duress or coercion and compulsion as recognized by the law, and, for this reason: that it appears the advantage, if any, was taken of appellants’ necessities for the legitimate and lawful purpose of obtaining from them a promise to pay a debt which they actually owed. The authorities on this point are cited in the brief of respondent, to which appellants have made no reply, and they seem decisive of the question.

Cable v. Foley, 45 Minn. 42.1, [47 N. W. 1135], was a case where plaintiff, being without means to pay his men, defend *753 ants refused to pay Iiim what they then owed him, unless he would sign three written contracts unfavorable to him. He signed them and afterward sued the defendants to recover the excess he would have been entitled to if he had not been so coerced into said settlement. The trial court directed a verdict for the defendants, and in sustaining its action, the supreme court said: “The mere threat to withhold from the party a legal right which he has an adequate remedy to enforce is not in the eye of the law duress. Certainly not such as will avoid the execution of a contract.”

In Hackley v. Headley, 45 Mich. 569, [8 N. W. 511], the defendants, being indebted to the plaintiff in a large amount on a logging contract, and taking advantage of the fact that plaintiff was in great need of money with which to pay his woodsmen, who were cutting logs for plaintiff, refused to pay him what was due him unless he would take two thousand dollars less than what he was entitled to and receipt in full for all claims against the defendants. Plaintiff took the lesser sum and gave the defendants a receipt in full and subsequently sued them for the two thousand dollars, relying upon duress to avoid the contract.

Judge Cooley, speaking for the court, said: “In what did the alleged duress consist in the present ease ? Merely in this: That the debtors refused to pay on demand a debt already due, though the plaintiff was in great need of the money and might be financially ruined in case he failed to obtain it. It is not pretended that Hackley and McGordon had done anything to bring Headley to the condition which made the money so important to him at this very time, or that they were in any manner responsible for his pecuniary embarrassment (except as they failed to pay the demand). The duress, then, is to be found exclusively in their failure to meet promptly their pecuniary obligation.’’ It was held that it would be “a dangerous, as well as a most unequal, doctrine” to enunciate that the contract was invalid because of the financial necessities of the plaintiff.

In Silliman v. United States, 101 U. S. 465, [25 L. Ed. 987], the owners of certain barges which were employed by the quartermaster’s department, claimed that they were forced by duress of their property to sign new charter-parties at a reduced rate, but it was held “that neither the forcible retention of the barges nor the refusal to pay the compensation *754 agreed upon constituted duress.” The court declared: “We are aware of no authority in the text-books or in the adjudged eases to justify us in holding that the last charter parties were exacted under duress.”

Fuller v. Roberts, 35 Fla. 110, [17 South. 359], involved the foreclosure of a mortgage to secure the payment of a note for one thousand dollars. The defense was based upon duress, it being the claim that the note and mortgage were given to secure the dismissal of certain proceedings begun by the plaintiff. The lower court sustained a demurrer to the defense, and in upholding this ruling, the supreme court of Florida said: “Legal duress implies that a party has been unlawfully constrained by another to perform an act under circumstances which prevent the exercise of free will. The act of the party compelling the unwilling obedience of another must be unlawful or wrongful, and there can be no duress of goods in law where the act done or threatened is nothing more than what the party had a legal right to do,” citing cases.

In Morton v. Morris, 72 Fed. 392, [18 C. C. A. 611], the plaintiff brought an action to foreclose two certain mortgages executed by the defendant in settlement of their business affairs.

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Bluebook (online)
177 P. 510, 38 Cal. App. 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tisdale-v-bryant-calctapp-1918.