Woodham v. Allen

62 P. 398, 130 Cal. 194, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 816
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1900
DocketL.A. No. 625.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 62 P. 398 (Woodham v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodham v. Allen, 62 P. 398, 130 Cal. 194, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 816 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

GRAY, C.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment for defendant following an order sustaining a demurrer to the complaint.

The complaint sets forth that on the nineteenth day of August the defendant filed a complaint against and caused the arrest of one Newman on a charge of larceny of defendant’s goods, and about the same time accused Woodham, the husband of plaintiff, with complicity in said crime and with knowingly and feloniously receiving said goods from Newman after *196 they had heen stolen, and demanded that Woodham pay him four hundred dollars, claimed by defendant to be the value of said goods. Woodham refused to comply with this demand, and thereafter, on August 23, 1895, defendant threatened plaintiff that if the four hundred dollars were not immediately paid to him he would procure the arrest of her said husband on a charge of felony in having knowingly received the stolen goods. Plaintiff, under fear of said threat', believing that defendant would carry the same into execution, agreed to comply with the demand and pay defendant the four hundred dollars, and thereupon, in the language of the complaint, “on said day, the twenty-third day of August, 1895, under fear of said threat, the plaintiff, instead of the payment of money to the defendant, made, executed, and delivered to the defendant six promissory notes aggregating the sum of two hundred and eighty-six dollars, signed the same herself and procured each of the said notes to be signed by A. R. Haines, a merchant and manufacturer of Los Angeles, a man of property, a wealthy man, and a man of good commercial and bankable credit, and at the time the said notes were so as above made, signed, and delivered, as aforesaid, by this plaintiff and the said A. R. Haines, they were the property of this plaintiff, and were then and there in the aggregate of the cash value of two hundred and eighty-six dollars, and under the continuance of the fear and duress, as aforesaid, and for fear that the defendant would, unless she paid the said notes, carry into effect the threats he had made in respect to her said husband, and with a continuance of said threats, she paid to the defendant the money, to wit, two hundred and eighty-six dollars, the amount as aforesaid expressed in said notes, with the interest accrued thereon. Also, the plaintiff was constrained and obliged to pay said notes, because, the said A. R. Haines having signed the said notes, he maintained that they were his notes; that he had not signed them under any manner of duress, and that he did not know that they had been extorted from the plaintiff by the defendant, and said to plaintiff, ‘If you do not pay them I will, as I don’t propose to have my name dishonored in the nonpayment of notes.’

*197 “That on the same day, and as a part of the same transaction, and in pursuance of the same threat to accuse plaintiff’s said husband of a felony as aforesaid, and as a part of and to make up the said sum of four hundred dollars, in which the ■defendant demanded that the plaintiff pay him, and in that behalf, the plaintiff delivered to the defendant goods, wares, .and merchandise of the value of one hundred and fourteen dollars, which when added to the value of the amount stated in the notes aforesaid aggregated the sum of four hundred dollars. 'That the plaintiff would not have procured the said notes to have been so as above executed and delivered to the defendant, and would not have delivered to him the goods and merchandise so as above stated, and would not have paid the said notes, except that she was in fear that the defendant would procure her said husband to be arrested on the charge of felony as aforesaid.

“That the plaintiff’s said husband was not guilty of the ■charge threatened to be made against him by the said defendant, her said husband having in the due course of business purchased the said goods from the said Newman, who was then and there the confidential clerk and salesman of the defendant, and having paid therefor the full value of said goods, to wit, the sum of one hundred and thirty dollars cash; and now the plaintiff brings this action for the recovery of the said sum of four hundred dollars from the defendant, with interest thereon, claiming that the same was unlawfully extorted from her as aforesaid.”

Judgment was demanded for four hundred dollars, with interest from the 23d of August, 1895, and costs. The demurrer to the complaint was based on the grounds of insufficiency of facts; that it affirmatively appeared from the complaint that the transaction out of which the pretended cause of action arose was unlawful and void, and that the complaint was uncertain in several specified particulars. Eespondent in his very able brief sets out in logical and concise form six reasons why the demurrer was properly sustained, together with six particulars wherein the complaint is claimed to be deficient. AYe will notice these reasons and particulars in the order in which they appear in said brief.

*198 1. It was not necessary to allege in the complaint that the sum sought to be recovered had not been paid, because the complaint was not based on any contract, either express or implied, but on the contrary every sentence of it sounded in tort. Plaintiff might have declared on an implied contract, but she did not; but chose rather to set forth the tortious acts of defendant showing that he had obtained money and goods from her by threats and menace, and then, after reciting the facts, the pleader, apparently to place the action where she wanted it and where there could be no question that it was brought for a tort, concludes as follows: “And now the plaintiff brings this action for the recovery of the said sum of four hundred dollars from the defendant, with interest thereon, claiming that the same was unlawfully extorted from her as aforesaid.’"

The allegation of nonpayment is required in a complaint on the theory that a failure to pay constitutes the breach of the-contract sued on. (London etc. Fire Ins. Co. v. Liebes, 105 Cal. 203.) Where there is no contract there can be no breach;, and where the complaint, as here, is distinctly based on the tort of the defendant, and nothing is said as to any agreement implied or express, the allegation of a breach would be inappropriate as well as unnecessary.

3. It does appear from the complaint that defendant obtained the money and property from plaintiff by means of a menace(Civ. Code, secs. 1569, 1570), for the complaint alleges that the plaintiff would not have delivered the goods nor paid the notes except that she was in fear that the defendant would procure-her said husband to be arrested on the charge of felony as he had threatened to do. (Civ. Code, sec. 1568.)

3. Taking the allegations of the complaint as true, no felony had been committed by plaintiff’s husband, and there could be no compounding of a felony where none existed. (Heckman v. Swartz, 50 Wis. 267.) Nor could the plaintiff be said to be in pari delicto with defendant in her efforts to stifle a prosecution. against her innocent husband. The stifling of a prosecution threatened against an innocent man, by the payment of money, cannot be wrong in an equal degree to the threatened prosecution itself. Especially must this be so where menaces, and coercion are used to compel the payment of the money.

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Bluebook (online)
62 P. 398, 130 Cal. 194, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodham-v-allen-cal-1900.