154 N.Y.S. 199 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1915
The plaintiff was stepping from a surface car at Forty-fourth street and Seventh avenue in the city of New York, when he was knocked down and injured. by an automobile operated by defendant’s servant, to recover damages for which injury this action is brought. The defendant relies upon a general release signed by the plaintiff whereby in consideration of sixty dollars the cause of action in suit was released and forever discharged. One James A. Grey, an attorney who was formerly retained by the plaintiff to prosecute the action, testified that he employed one of his clerks to investigate the facts and advised the plaintiff to settle the action. Thereafter he received an offer from the defendant to settle íoe sixty dollars which, upon his advice, the plaintiff accepted, and executed the lease relied upon by the defendant; that the attorney then delivered the release and received a check for sixty dollars from the defendant to his own order which he deposited. He further testified that he met the plaintiff about ten days later and told him to call for his thirty dollars which was the amount due to him from the settlement, and the plaintiff refused to accept that sum and told him that he saw in the paper he signed six hundred dollars and would not take anything less. The plaintiff never received the thirty dollars.
The plaintiff took the stand in rebuttal. He admitted that he employed Grey as his attorney in the matter and that" Grey’s clerk told him that he had no witnesses and would have to settle the case, and gave
The plaintiff relies upon the cases of Bedell v. Bedell, 37 Hun, 419, and Sistare v. Heckscher, 18 N. Y. Supp. 475, and an alleged rule of law that “ interests gained by fraud cannot be held even by an innocent party.” In each of the above cases, however, the fraud was perpetrated by a person acting in the interest of the other party to the transaction. In such a case, even though there was no prior .agency and the party for whose benefit the fraud was committed had no knowledge of the fraud, he could not accept the benefits -of the transaction without ratifying the acts of the person who procured them, and becoming thereby chargeable with the fraud of his agent. The case of Page v. Krekey, 137 N. Y. 307, relied upon by the learned court below, is not an authority upon the question here involved. It in fact distinguishes Bedell v. Bedell, supra, and holds that the maker of
The judgment appealed from must be reversed, with costs, and the complaint dismissed, with costs.
Guy and Bijur, JJ., concur.
Judgment- reversed, with costs.