162 Mass. 435 | Mass. | 1894
The plaintiff, while a passenger on the defendant’s road, was injured through the defendant’s negligence, on July 8, 1892. On the next day she signed an instrument in writing, under seal, by the terms of which she agreed with the defendant company to accept the sum of $1,000 “ as full settlement and satisfaction of all claims and demands of every kind, nature, and description which I have or may be entitled to have against the said company by reason of loss or damage to property and for personal injuries ” in consequence of the accident, “ provided the same is paid me within thirty days from the date hereof.”
On August 5, 1892, the defendant tendered the plaintiff the sum of $1,000, .which was received by her attorney, who signed the following receipt: “Received of O. G. Getzen Danner, one thousand dollars tendered Mrs. Drohan, August 5, 1892.”
Before making this ruling, the judge had excluded two letters offered in evidence by the plaintiff. One of these is dated July 18, 1892, and is addressed by the counsel for the defendant to the counsel for the plaintiff,
If we assume, in favor of the plaintiff, that these letters were admissible, we do not see that they help her contentions, but, on the contrary, we are of opinion that they aid the case of the
As, however, the ruling of the court proceeded upon the ground that the action could not be maintained without first tendering back the money received, we proceed to consider this point.
The general rule is well settled, that, if a person enters into a contract, and afterwards seeks to avoid the effect of the contract on any ground that will entitle him to rescind it, he must first restore what he has received. Coolidge v. Brigham, 1 Met. 547. Estabrook v. Swett, 116 Mass. 303. Brown v. Hartford Ins. Co. 117 Mass. 479. Burton v. Stewart, 3 Wend. 236. Bain v. Wilson, 1 J. J. Marsh. 202.
In Mullen v. Old Colony Railroad, 127 Mass. 86, which was an action for personal injuries, the defence was a settlement of the case for $450, by an instrument in writing signed by the plaintiff by his mark. The plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that he was blind and illiterate, and that he was induced to affix his mark to the paper by fraudulent representations that
In the case at bar there is nothing to show that the plaintiff was fraudulently induced to believe that the money which she agreed to receive, and which she did receive, was payment for a part of her cause of action. The case, therefore, falls within, the general rule, and the ruling was right.
Judgment on the verdict%
This letter, signed by O. G. Getzen Danner and addressed to Mr. W. A. Gile, was as follows: “ I beg to advise you that Mrs. Drohan .signed an agreement to settle with this company for the sum of one thousand dollars. I do not know whether or not we shall decide to settle for this amount, until we learn more fully the extent of her injuries. I do know, however, that at the time she signed this agreement, the amount being-fixed at her own suggestion, that she was perfectly capable of entering into a contract. In fact, one of the witnesses to her agreement is her son, the Rev. Father N. J. Drohan.”