Court Opinion

ID: 8023862
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:28:48.78942+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:13:55.788548
License: Public Domain

MR. JUSTICE STARK
delivered the opinion of the court.
In this action the plaintiff seeks to recover from the defendant the sum of $200 which is alleged to have been unlawfully obtained from him by the use of force, coercion and threats. The case was tried to a jury, and at the close of the testimony on the part of the plaintiff the court sustained defendant’s motion for a nonsuit, whereupon judgment was entered in its favor, from which the plaintiff has appealed. The ruling of the court on the motion for nonsuit is assigned as error.
We approach a consideration of this case bearing in mind  the rule so frequently announced by this court that on a motion for nonsuit all the evidence tending to prove the plaintiff’s case will be assumed to be true.
Upon the trial the plaintiff testified that he was a wholesale  dealer in billiard supplies at South Great Falls and occupied, as a tenant, the storeroom and basement of a building located at No. 11 Fifth Street South; that the basement was used as a workshop; that in the storeroom he used a three-burner gas-plate, which was connected with the defendant’s *304gas-main through a gas-meter located in the back corner of the basement under a stairway near a large window on the alley-side; that on some occasions the gas flowing from the meter to the gas-plate “froze,” and instead of calling upon the defendant company to send its man down to thaw out the pipe to remedy the defect, he tapped the gas-pipe leading from the outside of the building to the meter, and inserted a short piece of pipe and a device for burning gas without allowing it to pass through the meter; that the device was installed along in November or December, 1921; that he intended to take the matter up with the gas company and its officers and tell them what he had done, but had overlooked doing so; that he was willing to pay for what gas he had used and intended to do so.
On January 31, 1922, plaintiff had the gas burning through the device above described, and left his place of business for the purpose of going to the bank and postoffice. During his absence the building was set on fire by this burning gas, the fire department was called out, extinguished the flames and shut off the gas. Plaintiff did not return to his place of business until after the fire had been extinguished and the gas shut off. Meantime Mr. Bertke, manager of the defendant company, had arrived upon the scene with his attorney, and when the plaintiff approached, Bertke called out to him: “I have got the goods on you now. You are stealing gas. I will send you over the road to the penitentiary.” Bertke, his attorney, and the plaintiff went dowm into the basement, and there Bertke said: “You have burned it all winter and I want $200.” Plaintiff and Bertke then argued about the amount of gas which plaintiff had consumed through the device; Bertke claiming $200, based on an estimate of $50 per month, plaintiff insisting that he had not burned the gas on more than three occasions of thirty to forty-five minutes each, and that he could not have used to exceed $10 worth. In the course of the conversation Bertke said to his attorney: “I want you to attach everything he has got.” Testifying further as to state*305ments made by Bertke at the time, plaintiff said: “He was making threats and said he would send me to the penitentiary and attach everything I had and take everything I had away from me; that I had done a criminal offense.” During the course of the conversation a policeman came in, and plaintiff testified: “I did not know but what he was making an arrest. I believed that was what he was there for at the time. * * * Bertke said he wanted $200 right there and then or he would send me to the penitentiary.” As to the effect of this conduct upon the plaintiff he said: “In regard to my believing he would send me to the penitentiary, the way he looked, I did not know what he would do. In my state of mind he looked like an elephant to me; he scared me, that was all; I was afraid they would arrest me and prosecute me.” Under these circumstances plaintiff gave his check to the defendant company for $200, and in reference thereto-testified: “I gave the check for the purpose of avoiding prosecution or being sent to the penitentiary or jail.”
The statute relied upon by defendant to establish the fact that plaintiff was guilty of a criminal offense is section 11385, Bevised Codes of 1921, which provides that every person who, with intent to injure or defraud, procures, makes or causes to be made any pipe or other conductor of gas, and connects the same with any main, service pipe or other pipe for conducting illuminating gas in such manner as to supply illuminating gas to any burner or orifice by or at which illuminating gas is consumed, around or without passing through the meter pro-, vided for the measuring and registering the quantity consumed, or in any other manner so as to evade payment therefor, is guilty of a misdemeanor.
The consent of a party to a contract must be free. (Sec. 7473, Bev. Codes 1921.) An apparent consent is not free when obtained through duress or menace. (Id., sec. 7475.) The unlawful confinement of the person of the party constitutes duress (Id., sec. 7477), and the threat of such unlawful con*306finement constitutes menace under the provisions of section 7478.
Did the acts of the defendant, through its manager, Bertke, amount to a menace as above defined? The circumstances that defendant demanded from plaintiff the immediate payment of $200 or it would send him to the penitentiary, that thereupon the plaintiff gave the defendant his check for the sum demanded for the purpose of avoiding prosecution and imprisonment, coupled with the further facts that the plaintiff strenuously contended that the total amount of his liability to the defendant for the gas which he had consumed did not exceed in value the sum of $10, and that after obtaining this money the defendant wholly refrained from instituting criminal proceedings against the plaintiff, would have justified the jury in coming to a conclusion that the defendant’s threats to prosecute and imprison the plaintiff were not made for the mere purpose of calling to his attention the fact that he was liable to prosecution under the penal statutes of the state, but were made solely to compel the payment of a debt alleged to be due to the defendant from the plaintiff. If the defendant had actually caused the institution of criminal proceedings and the actual arrest and imprisonment of the plaintiff for such purpose, the arrest and imprisonment, so far as the defendant was concerned would have been unlawful, and so would have constituted duress under the statute above quoted, although as between the state and the plaintiff the arrest and imprisonment might have been lawful.
In Richardson v. Duncan, 3 N. H. 508, the court said: “It is now well settled, that when there is an arrest for improper purposes, without a just cause, or where there is an arrest for á just cause, and without lawful authority, or where there is an arrest for a just cause, and under lawful authority for unlawful purposes, it may be construed a duress.”
In the case of Heaton v. Norton County State Bank, 5 Kan. App. 498, 47 Pac. 576, it is said: “While it has been held that *307threats of imprisonment, to constitute duress, must be unlawful imprisonment, we think the question is, whether the threat is of imprisonment which will be unlawful in reference to the conduct of the threatener, who is seeking to obtain a contract by his threat. Imprisonment that is suffered through the execution of a threat which was made for the purpose of forcing a guilty person to enter into a contract may be lawful as against the authorities and the public, but unlawful as against the threatener, when considered with reference to his effort to use for his private benefit, processes provided for the protection of the public and the punishment of crimes. One who has overcome the mind and will of another for his own advantage, under such circumstances, is guilty of a perversion and abuse of the laws which were made for another purpose, and he is in no position to claim the advantage of a formal contract obtained in that way.” To the same effect is the case of Hargreaves v. Korcek, 44 Neb. 660, 62 N. W. 1086.
“An arrest by a legal warrant on a criminal charge, to compel the satisfaction of a mere private civil demand, is a misuse of process, and fraud upon the law, and an illegal arrest as respects the party who knowingly and purposely perverts the machinery in that way.” (Heaton v. Norton County State Bank, supra, citing Sieber v. Price, 26 Mich. 522; Thompson v. Niggley, 53 Kan. 664, 26 L. R. A. 803, 35 Pac. 296.)
In the case of Hackett v. King, 6 Allen (Mass.), 58, the trial court instructed the jury: “If the plaintiff was arrested under a legal warrant and by a proper officer, yet if one of the objects of the arrest was thereby to extort money or property from him, or to enforce the settlement of a civil claim, such arrest would be a false imprisonment by all who directly or indirectly procured the same or participated therein for any such purpose.” Upon appeal the supreme court held such instruction correctly stated the law.
The fact conditions in Bullard v. Smith, 28 Mont. 387, 72 Pac. 761, cited and relied upon by defendant, are so different *308from those here presented as to render that case of no controlling effect in this case.
The foregoing authorities fully sustain the proposition that even a lawful imprisonment for an unlawful purpose will constitute duress, and therefore the threat of imprisonment for such purpose constitutes menace under the Code sections above cited. Since the testimony on the part of the plaintiff would have justified a finding that the object of the threatened imprisonment was for such unlawful purpose, the case should have been submitted to the jury.
Defendant further contends that, since the plaintiff’s tes timony shows the $200 was paid to suppress a criminal prosecution, it cannot be recovered. The general rule is that money paid on an agreement to suppress a threatened criminal prosecution cannot be recovered, because, this being an illegal agreement, the law will not aid either party thereto; it leaves the parties where it finds them.
In pari delicto potior est conditio defendentis. (13 C. J. 492.) This rule, however, is subject to the qualification that, if the payment has been induced by duress, menace, or oppression, it can be recovered, for the reason that the parties to the agreement in such circumstances are not in pari delicto. (13 C. J. 498; Wilbur v. Blanchard, 22 Idaho, 517, 126 Pac. 1069. See, also, cases collected in note at page 43 of L. R. A. 1918C.)
The case of Union Exchange Nat. Bank. v. Joseph, 231 N. Y. 250, 17 A. L. R. 323, 131 N. E. 905, cited by counsel for defendant, is not in accord with the principle announced in the foregoing qualification to the general rule; but this ease is clearly not in accord with the great majority of the authorities, and the reasons given to sustain the same, which, in addition to holding that the parties are not in pwri delicto, also hold that it would be contrary to public policy to permit the oppressor to retain the results of his wrongful act.
*309The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to the district court of Cascade county for further proceedings.

Reversed and remanded.

Mb. Chief Justice Callaway and Associate Justices Cooper, Holloway and Galen concur.