78 Vt. 279 | Vt. | 1906
This is a complaint for bastardy. The defendant pleaded the general issue and the plaintiff’s release of the cause of action. The case was heard below upon an agreed statement of facts, which is in substance, that the plaintiff, on March 16, 1904, brought a complaint before a justice of the peace, through one Grossman, who acted as her attorney; that on the same day she brought another suit of the same kind, upon a similar but distinct cause of action, against the defendant, which suit is pending in county court; that this suit was entered July 8, 1904.
The release, signed, sealed, and sworn to by the plaintiff and witnessed, reads:
It was agreed that the plaintiff never gave her attorney authority to settle either of said cases, unless this release was authority, and that he obtained her signature by false “representations and fraud; that he pretended to read the contents of the paper to her before she signed it, and represented that it was drawn for the-purpose of bringing another suit against the defendant.
It was agreed that the plaintiff, who was nineteen years of age, had no knowledge of legal matters, and that she relied entirely upon the representations of Grossman in executing the paper.
The defendant, on March 26, '1904, paid Grossman fifty ■dollars for the paper, which sum the latter retained, -the plaintiff receiving no part of it; and she did not learn until April 22, 1904, that a release had been given to- the defendant and that he had paid money to Grossman for it. Immediately upon learning these facts she notified the defendant’s attorney, through another attorney whom she had employed, that the release had been obtained from her by fraud, that she had given Grossman no authority to settle the cases, and that she repudiated the pretended settlement.
The defendant and his attorneys had no- knowledge that the plaintiff had been deceived by Grossman, and,he paid the sum of fifty dollars in good faith in settlement of the two suits.
The case is in principle like Passumpsic Bank v. Goss and Page, 31 Vt. 315; where Page-signed a note with Goss, as his surety, payable to the Bank, under an agreement with Goss that the latter should not use the note unless he obtained another surety upon it; but in violation of the agreement Goss procured the note to be discounted. It was held that this agreement constituted no defence, the bank officers having no knowledge of it. In both cases the instruments were apparently perfected when they were presented, and there was nothing upon them to indicate that they were not ready for delivery.
Judgment reversed,, and judgment for defendant. t