Citation Numbers: 5 Tenn. 5
Judges: Cüriam
Filed Date: 5/15/1817
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The daughter of Elizabeth Jones * lived with her several years, and married Click, at the age of 16 or 17 years. And the son of Elizabeth Jones obtained for his mother» from Click, a bill single for $336 or thereabouts, payable one day after date, and dated the 10th of August, 1808. She assigned to Gillespie on the 24th of the same month. He commenced an action of debt against Click, and recovered. The plea put in by Click’s counsel was, “ that the bill single was obtained from him by duress of imprisonment,” and the evidence on the trial proved only duress by threats to kill, and so was not suitable to the plea. This, however, is only on the amended bill, not served upon the defendant, Jones, nor answered by her, but upon Gillespie only. There being a verdict against the defendant at law, he moved for a new trial, and to amend the pleadings, but was refused by the court. One witness now proved, that when the bill single was executed, Christopher Jones, the son of Elizabeth, came to the house of Click with a knife in his hand, and threatened to cut the throat of Click if he would not execute the bill single; and made many other threats, and that thereupon Click executed; that several men were there at the time, whom the witness named : Stout, one of the subscribing witnesses, who now lives in Washington County ; Willet, another subscribing witness, hath removed to distant parts; one Click, a brother of the obligor, was also there, and he, having lately returned from the army, lives also in .some of the adjacent counties. She did not hear Christopher Jones say for what he claimed the bond in behalf of his mother. Another witness, a few days after the execution of the bill single, heard Christopher Jones admit that he had used the means
First, was this bond procured by threats ? for if not it was voluntary, and binding both in law and equity. The objection of the want of consideration cannot be urged against a voluntary bond, or in any case save only that where a consideration was expected, and fails. The threats are' proved by one witness; her evidence is not clear and satisfactory, she does not detail circumstances, she relates only the naked fact. Christopher Jones’s confession is confirmatory of her testimony, but the admissions of an agent after he is functus officio are not sufficient. Peake, 18, and the notes subjoined. He ought to be sworn. Here the agent is dead, and has not been sworn ; but still she is confirmed by circumstances; others prove that there was no consideration, and Click having ran off to be married, might be, and probably was, apprehensive of his wife’s family, and of Christopher Jones, who was a person of violent and dangerous temper. That is in evidence. And besides all this,'Stout is not produced. * The obligee, or assignee, of the obligee, ought to have produced him, to show the fairness of the execution of the bill single impeached by this suit in equity. The observations of Mrs. Jones, attributing the procurement of the bill single to the machinations of Gillespie, and admitting that without them she had no charge to make against her daughter, indicate some
Secondly, can the complainant be relieved in equity ? The general rule is, that if a defendant can be sued, either at law or inequity, and can make his defense as effectually in one court as the other, and is sued at law and makes it there, that he cannot after-wards come into equity except upon peculiar circumstances, arising out of the trial and judgment, *not upon the ground, merely, that he could defend in both courts, and had not made his defense in that in which he had been first sued. Such an option is allowable only in case of ejectment, where one verdict and judgment is not a bar, as it is in other cases, to a new action. There if the plaintiff’s claim be both equitable and legal, he may the second time elect to proceed in equity, and not at law as he did before. When he can sue the second time, without being barred by the former judgment, why not sue in equity as well as at law ? But in this State this general rule is departed from where the court sees that the defendant has a valid legal defense, and has intended to make it, -both he and his counsel, and not to act so as to cause delay, and by some mistake of the counsel, the pleadings have not been calculated to bring it forward, by which means the cause is not tried upon its merits ; there a court of equity in this State will entertain the cause, for the purpose of letting the merits prevail.
The third question is, ought he also to be relieved, as against Gillespie ? The circumstance of his being an assignee after the day of payment elapsed is enough to decide this question in the affirmative ; and his conversation with Mitchell renders it wholly unequivocal. The complainant must be relieved against him also. The promises of payment made by Click after the assignment are of no avail to him ; these did not induce the assignment, they were not the cause of Gillespie’s taking it, and probably also were induced by the dread of Christopher Jones’s resentment. Gillespie had de.-' vised the plan, as Mrs. Jones said, and he did not deny, before that bill single was executed, and he had resolved upon it when he gave his advice to Mitchell.
Decree that the clerk and master shall ascertain, and report to this court to-morrow morning, the sums received by the defendant, Gillespie, upon his judgment at law against the plaintiff, together with the interest thereon to this time, and the amount of the costs at law, together with interest to this time ; and that the defendant Gillespie shall pay the same complainant within three months, otherwise the plaintiff to have execution for the same against him; and
See Armstrong v. Thompson, 3 Hay. 127; King’s Digest, 2394, 9691.