224 F. 347 | 9th Cir. | 1915
This was an action at law, in which a verdict was returned in favo^of the plaintiff, upon which verdict judgment was entered against the defendant (plaintiff in error here) for certain damages and costs. The real point in the case is whether a certain oral agreement alleged by the plaintiff to have been made by him with, the defendant was open to consideration in view of the'written contract of the parties.
The complaint alleged in substance that in the month of December, 1908, the plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant at its sawmill as a millwright, and that in that month and year, while so engaged in-the performance of his duties, his left leg was injured, which injury he attributed to the negligence of the defendant and so notified it, and that by reason of the careless and unskillful manner in which the-company’s physician and surgeon treated the plaintiff the latter’s right hand had to be amputated, which was. done on the 6th day of February, 1909, in consequence of which the plaintiff claimed to have a cause of action against the defendant for damages; that subsequently the plaintiff and the defendant made and entered into an ágreement in writing in these words and figures:
“For the sole consideration of the sum of four hundred and ten 75/ioo dollars, this 25th day of September, 1909, received from C. A. Smith Lumber- & Manufacturing Company, I do hereby acknowledge full satisfaction and discharge of all claims, accrued or to accrue, in respect of all injuries or injurious results, direct or indirect, arising or to arise from an accident sustained by me on or about the 16th day of December, 1908, while in the employment of the above. '
“$410.75. [Signed] J. A. Parker. [Seal.]
“Witness: Arno Mereen, Marshfield, Or.
“Witness: David Nelson, Marshfield, Or.”
The complaint further alleges that the defendant then and there paid the plaintiff $200 in cash, and at the same time orally agreed with the plaintiff as a further consideration for such release to give him employment so long as he wanted it, at any work in the 'defendant’s said mill that the plaintiff could do — that is to say, to measure lumber in the yards, or to operate a trimmer, or to act as timekeeper, or to look after the stores — and would pay the plaintiff therefor the same wages as were paid to other men for the same services, which agreement was assented to by the plaintiff and defendant in all particulars, and was accepted by the plaintiff in satisfaction and discharge of his said cause of action; that thereupon, and pursuant to such agreement, the plaintiff entered the employ of the defendant, filling a num
A demurrer interposed by the defendant to the complaint, mainly upon the ground that the alleged release and settlement constituted a written contract, which could not be varied by parol evidence showing an additional consideration from that stated therein, was overruled by the trial court, resulting in an answer thereto on behalf of the defendant to the action, making various admissions and denials, and setting up, among other things, that the said alleged written agreement was the “only settlement or agreement ever made between the plaintiff and defendant subsequent to the 6th day of February, 1909, and was the only release or settlement agreement ever executed by the plaintiff and the defendant, and was intended and understood by all the parties thereto to be and was a full and complete settlement of all the claim of the plaintiff against the defendant by reason of any of the matters alleged in the complaint herein, and was intended to and did set forth the full consideration therefor,” and as a further and separate defense alleged that “by reason of said written agreement and receipt the plaintiff is estopped to set up any further promise, agreement, or consideration than the sum so set out and receipted therefor therein, and that the plaintiff is forbidden by the laws of the state of Oregon, and especially by section 713, L,. O. F., to vary the terms of said written agreement.”
The answer of the defendant admits, among other things, that its superintendent “voluntarily informed the plaintiff that, as long as conditions were satisfactory and his work properly performed, he, on behalf of the defendant, would he glad to employ the plaintiff at such work as he could properly perform, but denied that said settlement or agreement was entered into1 upon consideration of any terms to that effect, or that, as a part of or an inducement to said settlement, any promise or agreement to that effect was made or entered into by or on behalf of the defendant, or that there was any promise or agreement or consideration whatsoever for said settlement other than that set forth and included in said writing above set forth.” The answer also set up, among other things, that the plaintiff stopped work for the defendant of his own accord and without cause, and has since been and is employed in other occupations and earning $3 a day and more.
“Upon reading the complaint, my first impression was that the demurrer was well taken, and that the receipt or acquittance should be treated as containing all the terms of the settlement, and consequently parol evidence was not admissible to show an additional consideration from that stated therein. But I find the adjudged cases to be to the contrary. The holdings are that an acquittance not contractual in form is a mere receipt, and is conclusive only as to the amount of money paid; that parol evidence is, permissible to establish the parts of the contract, if any, not contained in the writing, unless the consideration as stated in the writing is contractual in its nature. It was so held in Pennsylvania Company v. Dolan [6 Ind. App. 109], 32 N. E. 802 [51 Am. St. Rep. 289], a case quite similar to the one at bar, and to the like effect in Allen v. Tacoma Mill Company [18 Wash. 216], 51 Pac. 372, and the recent case in the state Supreme Court of Holmboe v. Morgan [69 Or. 395, 138 Pac. 1084], Demurrer overruled.”
The case clearly turns upon the true nature of the instrument, which has been set out in full. If it was a receipt only for the amount of money specified in it, the judgment below was undoubtedly right, for it is undisputed that a mere receipt is not evidence of a contract, but of payment, and is not even conclusive of the amount of that, if any mistake was made between the parties in the matter of the adjustment of their account.
But we are unable to construe the instrument in this case as a mere receipt. The evidence shows, and the complaint itself alleges, that it was given in settlement of a disputed claim made by the plaintiff against the defendant for damages growing out of the loss of his hand as the alleged result of - an injury to his leg, which latter injury was alleged to have been received by the plaintiff while working for the defendant; that the respective parties settled that claim by agreement, and in writing the plaintiff declared that:
“For the sole consideration of the sum of four hundred and ten T5/100 dollars, this 25th day of September, 1909, received from C. A. Smith Lumber & Manufacturing Company, I do hereby acknowledge full satisfaction and discharge of all claims, accrued or to accrue, in respect of all injuries or injurious results, direct or indirect, arising or to arise from an accident sustained by me on or about the 16th day of December, 1908, while in the employment of the above.”
To hold that such an instrument, executed under such circumstances and for such a purpose, is not contractual in its nature, would be, in our opinion, a clear violation of its unambiguous language. Similar releases, few, if any, of which were stronger in terms, and some not so strong, were held contractual in their nature, and therefore no more to be disputed or controlled by parol evidence than any other instrument
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to the court below to sustain the demurrer to the complaint.