1. There can be but one satisfaction of the same damage or injury.
Griffin Hosiery Mills v. United Hosiery Mills,
2. “ 'The relation of principal and agent arises wherever one person, expressly or by implication, authorizes another to act for him, or subsequently ratifies the acts of another in his behalf’.
Code
§ 4-101. 'The mere act of setting up by plea a stranger’s act as a satisfaction is of itself a ratification.’ ”
Jordan v. Belvin,
3. “Where an insurance company, which has insured a person against liability for damages to person or property caused by
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the. insured’s negligence, has the right to effect a settlement of a claim for damages against the insured without any authority or direction from the insured, the insurance company is not an agent of the insured to effect such settlement, but has the right to effect such settlement as an independent contractor.”
Foremost Dairies v. Campbell Coal Co.,
4. It follows from the foregoing statements of law that where following an automobile collision in which both the plaintiff and the defendant suffer damage, the insurance company carrying the plaintiff’s liability insurance pays the defendant some amount in satisfaction of his claim against the plaintiff and receives a release of all claims in return therefor, this constitutes a settlement of the entire injury and damage which, while not binding upon the plaintiff in the first instance because not authorized by him, places the plaintiff in a position of being able to elect whether to ratify or repudiate the settlement. When, in response to the plaintiff’s action for damages against the defendant, the defendant by cross-action sought damages from the plaintiff growing out of the same transaction, and the plaintiff thereafter, upon proof of the existence of the release, successfully relied upon the same as the basis of its motion to dismiss the defendant’s cross-action, the plaintiff could not thereafter adopt the inconsistent position of herself disavowing the release after procuring a judgment in her favor based thereon. Such action constituted a ratification by her of the settlement of all claims arising out of that transaction. Nothing in Kennedy v. Creswell,
Judgment affirmed.
