Williams v. Thomas

194 P. 500, 58 Mont. 576, 1920 Mont. LEXIS 170
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 1, 1920
DocketNo. 4,206
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 194 P. 500 (Williams v. Thomas) 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
Williams v. Thomas, 194 P. 500, 58 Mont. 576, 1920 Mont. LEXIS 170 (Mo. 1920).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE COOPER

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complaint is upon a promissory note in the usual form. The answer denies liability and affirmatively alleges that the note sued on was paid as is evidenced by a certain instrument and release in writing on or about November 7, 1914, discharging the obligations of the defendant thereon. The reply denies the averments of the answer, and alleges affirmatively that the release secured by defendant is void for want of consideration, because prior to its execution defendant threatened a criminal prosecution and imprisonment, and that he would institute an action for slander against plaintiff if he did not desist in demand for payment of the note in suit and did not execute a release discharging defendant from liability thereon, for the reason that such demands and insistence of payment of said note tended to ruin defendant’s credit in the town of Broadview, where he was then engaged in the mercantile business; that plaintiff, being out of possession of said note and being from time to time intimidated by such threats and believing that such actions could be maintained if he insisted upon payment of said note, had failed to enforce collection thereof, and being ignorant' and mistaken in his legal rights in the premises, executed a release prepared by an attorney for the defendant; that before and at the time of the execution of the release the defendant well knew that plaintiff was ignorant of and misapprehended hi® legal rights in the premises and did not rectify the same, but, on the contrary, induced and caused plaintiff to believe that he, defendant, could prosecute him criminally and sue him for slander, although defendant himself well knew he could not prosecute plaintiff criminally, or otherwise. That until advised by counsel now representing him immediately prior to the bringing of this action, plaintiff was ignorant and mistaken as to his legal rights, was not advised of his right to rescind the release, of his right to collect said note, nor that he could not be subjected to criminal prosecution, or other legal action.

The cause was tried upon the pleadings as they were tendered by the parties; a verdict returned in favor of the plain[578]*578tiff, and judgment rendered thereon. Motion for a new trial was made and overruled, and appeals were taken from the judgment and from the order of the district court denying a new trial.

Motions were interposed by defendant at the end of plaintiff’s case and at the close of the evidence challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to support the plea of ■ confession and avoidance and the right of the plaintiff to rescind for the release given. These motions were overruled and the ease was submitted to the jury upon the pleadings, the instructions of the court and the evidence. If the result reached by the jury fairly responds to the issues made by the pleadings and finds support in the evidence directed to the only substantial issue of fact in the ease, viz., want of consideration for the execution of the release relied upon to defeat the note, the verdict and judgment will be allowed to stand.

Appellant’s assignments of error are ten in number. Seven of them (1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 9 and 10) impeach the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict and findings of the jury. These will be grouped and considered together.

The evidence touching the manner in which the original [1] indebtedness between the parties was created, the evidence as to the correctness with which defendant kept account of the dealings between them, the events leading up to the giving of the note, as well as the execution of the release purporting to discharge the liability of the defendant thereon, the threats - of prosecution and of the institution of a civil suit for damages which it is claimed induced the plaintiff to execute the release, and all the incidents attending and illuminating the transactions between the parties in all its essential particulars, was sharply in conflict. The conclusion of the jury upon the evidence was that no consideration passed to the plaintiff for the release so made, and that the acts of the plaintiff in respect thereto were not free or voluntary upon his part. That issue was fairly placed before the jury, upon the pleadings and the evidence, unaffected by any error of law upon the part of the court. There was no dispute concerning the execution of the release, so that, if [579]*579untainted by fraud, threats, undue influence or advantage taken of the necessities or weakness of the plaintiff as a means to bring about its making, the apparent purpose for which it was made was fully accomplished. Until the integrity of the instrument had been effectively assailed, it imported the effect its terms imply. Upon this showing, the burden then passed to the plaintiff, and obliged him to satisfy the jury by a preponderance of the testimony that the release was given under the overpowering influence of threats or fear, without consideration, and was in fact no release at all. Primarily, the question was whether that requirement had been met by the proof adduced by the plaintiff for that purpose. That, issue was found in plaintiff’s favor. It was then for the trial court, in passing upon the motion for a new trial, to say whether the evidence upon which the verdict stands was sufficient in substance to sustain it. Upon this controlling question, the evidence, it is true, was in sharp conflict; but, by the jury, it was held to be of preponderating influence against the validity of the release, and by the trial court sufficient in weight to uphold the judgment. By that we are bound. (Harrington v. Butte & B. Min. Co., 27 Mont. 1, 69 Pac. 102.)

Upon the pleadings, made up as they were, and the theory [2] of the case adopted as it was by the plaintiff and followed by the defendant, there was no room for any issue other than the consideration for the instrument by which defendant sought to be exonerated from liability upon the note in suit. If the note had been paid in fact, or the liability of the defendant thereon discharged in some other manner, and the plaintiff acted in its making as a free agent, uninfluenced by such threats, impositions, fear or menace as would unseat the will, then the verdict and judgment should have been the other way. But if the defendant made threats to imprison the plaintiff if he did not execute the release, and they were sufficient in severity and apprehension to overcome his mind and to subject his will to that of the defendant, that of itself would be sufficient to overthrow the instrument and to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict at the hands of the jury. (Rev. Codes, see. 4976; 1 Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, 14th ed., [580]*580see. 342; Bishop on Contracts, secs. 716, 717.) As was said by Lord Ellenborough in a case involving a similar principle: “This is not a ease pcur delictum; it is oppression on one side and submission on the other; it never can be predicated as Par delictum, when one holds the rod and the other bows to it.” (Smith v. Cuff, 6 Maule & S. 160, 105 Eng. Reprint, 1203; see, also, Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, sec. 942, and cases there cited.)

The ultimate fact for determination here is whether the release was due to the free and voluntary operations of a mind unfettered by fear or apprehension, or of a mind subservient to dictation or to an unlawful intimidation or compulsion of another.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 P. 500, 58 Mont. 576, 1920 Mont. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-thomas-mont-1920.