19 N.E.2d 785 | NY | 1939
This action is brought to recover damages for personal injuries resulting from defendant's negligence which injuries are alleged to have been received by plaintiff on January 9, 1935, while riding as a passenger in defendant's motor vehicle. *69
A single cause of action is set up in the complaint to recover for all injuries resulting from the accident, immediate, temporary and permanent. The answer contains denials of every allegation of the complaint. As a separate defense and bar to the cause of action set up in the complaint, the answer contained allegations to the effect that, on March 15, 1935, plaintiff executed and delivered to defendant, for a valuable consideration, a general release in writing and under seal whereby plaintiff released and forever discharged the defendant from the cause of action set up in the complaint and all manner of actions, cause or causes of action, suits, debts, dues, sums of money and damages which the plaintiff ever had against defendant to the date of the instrument. The reply did not put in issue the execution, delivery and general nature of the release, and plaintiff thereby admitted its execution and delivery for a good and valuable consideration and that it discharged the cause of action set up in the complaint. In the reply to the new matter set up in the answer, plaintiff's only allegation was "that the release therein claimed was procured by fraud and misrepresentation in that the plaintiff was misled and deceived by the defendant's agent, servant or employee into believing that the injuries resulting to him from this accident were slight, minor and inconsequential, when in reality said injuries and their resultant effects were and are of a grave, serious and permanent nature."
On December 26, 1936, upon motion of defendant and without objection by plaintiff an order was made at Special Term directing that "the issues raised by the separate defense of general release * * * be tried separately and prior to any trial of the other issues in this case." In regular order this issue was brought on for trial before a jury. Upon the opening of counsel for the plaintiff and upon replies to inquiries by the court in which he admitted that the money paid by defendant in compromise had been retained and that there had been no tender or payment back and upon his refusal to accept the opportunity presented by the court then and there to make such payment *70 or tender and proceed with the trial, the court granted defendant's motion to dismiss the reply. Thereupon and without further proceedings judgment was entered on the pleadings dismissing the complaint. The motion to dismiss the reply was correctly granted since, in the state of the pleadings and the admission of plaintiff in open court upon the trial that he had not paid back or tendered back the amount received and that he refused to do so, plaintiff could not litigate the issue as to the voidability of the contract.
Counsel for appellant first insists that the motion to dismiss should not have been granted upon the opening but the court should have proceeded to take the proofs of the parties. If the record should be construed to indicate that the motion was granted upon the opening of plaintiff, the rule is that it must be assumed "that every material fact in issue is to be resolved * * * in favor of the plaintiff" (Hoffman House v. Foote,
The question then arises whether, in view of the pleadings and state of the record at the trial, the plaintiff could maintain the action without rescission or an attempt to rescind the compromise contract of settlement. He has sued at law without rescission or attempt at rescission. The claim of the plaintiff does not lie in the fact that there was fraud in the execution of the instrument itself, that he was induced to sign an instrument different than he understood it to be, — that no agreement of compromise in fact existed. In such a case the fraud would lie in the factum, the instrument would be void (Boxberger v. N.Y.,N.H. H.R.R. Co.,
Plaintiff finally rests on the claim that reversal should be had because the judgment dismissing the complaint was premature. As a matter of technical procedure, his contention is correct, but as a matter of substance it cannot be sustained. The reply, as we have seen, was correctly stricken out. That left the complaint and answer in the case with the defense of the general release admitted both as to its scope and validity. By it, recovery in the action was absolutely barred. Had a suitable motion been made upon the complaint and answer, the complaint must necessarily have been dismissed. While we do not mean to approve the practice indulged in, had the correct practice been followed the same result would have been reached. Furthermore, the practice involved a mere irregularity which could have been corrected by motion. Should we send this case back to require the court to do a useless act? We think not.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
CRANE, Ch. J., LEHMAN, O'BRIEN, HUBBS, LOUGHRAN and FINCH, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed. *74