Judges: Tuthill
Filed Date: 5/24/1921
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/27/2024
Judgment unanimously affirmed, with costs, on the opinion of Tuthill, J., at Trial Term. Kilet, J., not sitting.
The following is the opinion of the court below:
This action was commenced on or about September 5, 1919, to set aside a deed executed and delivered by the plaintiff to the defendant, his wife, on October 24,1916, and also a separation agreement between the parties of like date, on the ground of fraud and duress.
The contention- of plaintiff is that during the night of
The plaintiff further claims that the defendant caused his arrest, alleging that he assaulted her; that he was subsequently indicted for assault in the second degree and_ was in jail awaiting trial for about two months; that his counsel betrayed him; that he pleaded guilty to assault in the third degree and received a suspended sentence under a misapprehension and misrepresentations; that he was bewildered and incompetent to execute the deed and separation agreement, and did so without comprehending the nature of his act, all of which he asserts was the result of a conspiracy in which his wife was the principal. The defendant’s motives, plaintiff asserts, were to secure his equity in the property he conveyed and his wife’s desire to rid herself of him . after she had completely stripped him of his property. It will serve no useful purpose to recite all the details given by the plaintiff of the alleged assault. I am satisfied from plaintiff’s statement and observing him as a witness that his story is the result of a fertile imagination and the brooding over his troubles until it has become almost, if not quite, a delusion. In many respects his statements of the occurrences between himself and his wife on the night in question are not only most improbable but unbelievable. For instance, he swears that during the battery, “ She struck me in the back with a cobble-stone, and broke the sixth vertebra in the spine. * * * Then she came back and kept hanging [around] and finally she up and gave a stamp on the left foot and took the toenail off clean.” In describing a portion of the scene he says: “ Then she went in the next room, in the dining room; came back and laid on the bed beside me with her left hand off of the bed with a stone in it. Then in a couple of minutes gave a lunge on her feet and grabbed her hands on her wrists; grabbed her hair over her face and jammed her head on the left side of the door.” To expect belief in such and similar testimony of plaintiff is overtaxing credulity.
Previously and particularly during the summer of 1916, there had been domestic trouble between the parties, resulting
The only question of moment is whether the plaintiff executed the deed and separation agreement under duress of imprisonment. The rule of law applicable is. stated by Judge Cooley in Feller v. Green (26 Mich. 70, 72) as follows: “ To make out the defense of duress of imprisonment, it must appear that the party’s action has been influenced by the restraint. If he has only .paid, or secured' a just debt, while held in custody, the transaction is not to be avoided, unless he did so because of the custody.' The question is one of fact, whether he was coerced, or acted willfully; and the conclusion of coercion is not a necessary and unavoidable one from the fact of unlawful restraint.”
Under the evidence I cannot find that the plaintiff’s arrest and holding for the grand jury, and trial, were for an improper purpose, without just cause or for unlawful purposes. He had reputable and learned attorneys .to advise him and I have no doubt whatever they gave him their best judgment and sincere and conscientious advice, and that the plaintiff
After a careful consideration of the evidence and especially the plaintiff's, upon which the material part of his cause of action rests, I am satisfied that justice requires the dismissal of the complaint, with costs.