Court Opinion

ID: 6236462
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-17 20:33:40.385773+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:58:03.922060
License: Public Domain

Sir. Justice Sterrett
delivered the opinion of the court, May 3d 1880.
The negotiations which resulted in obtaining from the plaintiff in error the mortgage in suit were conducted, on behalf of the insurance company, by Philip E. Coleman, its secretary. Although the mortgage was given in his name, and by him assigned to the company, it was not taken for himself, but for the benefit of the company which he represented in the transaction. It follows, therefore, that the company, in seeking to enforce a contract obtained through the agency of its executive officer for its own benefit, is bound by his acts affecting the validity of the contract.
It cannot be doubted that a mortgage executed in consideration of an agreement to compound a felony is void, and will not be enforced. Such was the nature of the defence sought to be interposed in this case; and the only question is whether the offers of testimony excluded by the court tended to prove that Albert Swope, the son of the plaintiff in error, fraudulently embezzled money of his employer, the insurance company, and thus committed the felony, punishable by sect. 107 of the Crimes’ Act, Purd. Dig. 345, pl. 152, and that the mortgage was executed and delivered in consideration of an agreement that he should not be prosecuted for the felony. If the testimony tended to prove these facts, it should have been received and submitted to the jury with instructions to find for the defendant if the facts were satisfactorily established.
The proposition covered by the first assignment was to prove in substance that the son had been accused of stealing from the company, and a demand that the father should execute the mortgage to secure the sum stolen, coupled with the threat that if it was not done, Albert would be arrested and sent to the penitentiary ; that the plaintiff in error, having at first declined to accede to the demand, was again urged by Coleman, who exhibited a paper containing a statement of the sums alleged to have been embezzled, and said: “ This is now §1300 that Albert has stolen, and I want to see if you are going to fix it up.” To which the father replied : “ I am unable ; I have no money and cannot raise any.” Whereupon Coleman said: “ Mortgage your property, and I’ll have it taken by the company, and if you do not we will have Albert arrested for his stealing and put him in the penitentiary.” The offer covered by the second assignment was to prove that Coleman said, on another occasion, “ that this stealing of Albert’s had to be made up to the company, and if ho (defendant below) did not come down immediately and give the mortgage spoken of, the company would at once arrest Albert and put him in the penitentiary.” *254This is the substance of the offers overruled by the court. While the substantial proposition embodied in them was to prove that defendant’s son was accused of embezzlement, and that criminal prosecution therefor was threatened unless restitution was made or the money alleged to have been embezzled secured to the company, there was no offer to prove that the felony had actually been committed, or that there was an agreement not to prosecute if the security demanded was given. The guilt of the party accused and an agreement not to prosecute are essential ingredients in the compounding of a felony. Though the proof of guilt need not be of that conclusive character that would be necessary to convict, there should be at least such preponderance of evidence as will justify the jury in finding that a felony was committed. If all the allegations of fact embodied in the offers had been proved, they were not sufficient to justify the jury in finding that Albert was guilty of the crime laid to his charge. There was no offer to prove an admission of guilt on his part, or any fact from which the jury could reasonably infer guilt. At best it would be merely a matter of conjecture. If this were permitted, mortgages and other real estate securities would rest on a very frail foundation. Nor was there any offer to prove an agreement not to prosecute. The offers were to prove threats of prosecution if the security was not given, and it is claimed that the jury might have inferred from this that if the mortgage was given the agreement was that no prosecution would ensue. But this would be unwarranted. In National Bank of Oxford v. Kirk, 9 Norris 49, the defendant offered testimony tending to show that he was induced to give the note in consequence of the threatened prosecution of his son for forgery, coupled with the representation of one of the officers of the bank, that if the note was given it would probably be paid by the son, and “ no one would then know anything about ” the forgery. This tended to show' an agreement on the part of the bank not to prosecute, and the question was accordingly submitted to the jury. In the present case the testimony was insufficient to sustain the defence that was relied on, and there was therefore no error in overruling the offers.
Judgment affirmed.