3 Ind. 473 | Ind. | 1852
This was an action for an assault and battery brought by Cassandra Harvey against William and Maston Harvey. There are several pleas, the third of which is to the following effect:
The defendants say actio non, because they say that, after the committing of said trespass, and before the commencement of this suit, to-wit, on, &c., at, &c., the plaintiff made her writing obligatory, with Davis Meek and Thomas J. Richards, which writing is as follows:
Know all men by these presents, that we, Cassandra J. Harvey, Davis Meek, and Thomas J. Richards, of, &c., are held and firmly bound to William Harvey, of, &c., in the sum of, &c.
The condition of the above obligation is such, that if said obligors (naming them) fulfill the specifications herein described, that is, during the minorship (minority) of the children of the said William and Cassandra Harvey (naming them) — specification first, said Cassandra binds herself not to run said children away or seclude them from him; that said William Harvey is to have access and communication with said children during their stay with her, said Cassandra; and she further binds herself to stop all proceedings in law now and hereafter against William and Maston Harvey; and she doth further bind herself to let him, said William, have said children when he calls for them — then this obligation to be void, else to remain in full force, &c.
By which writing, she, the plaintiff, did remise, release, and forever discharge all rights and causes of action which she then had against said defendants by reason of said several trespasses in said declaration mentioned; which trespasses, the defendants aver, were of and concerning the children of the plaintiff. Wherefore, &c.
There was a demurrer to this plea, assigning for cause that the bond shown was no release of the trespass.
Judgment, on the demurrer, for the defendants.
Whether said third plea is valid or not is the only question in the cause.
It is contended that the bond recited in this plea, contains a covenant never to sue for the trespass. The bond was evidently written by an illiterate person, and we have to look more to the spirit than the letter to get at its meaning. The bond shows that there had been a dispute between the plaintiff and ’William Harvey about their children, and the plea avers that the trespass sued for was concerning the plaintiff’s children. When, therefore, the plaintiff, by said bond, binds herself to stop all proceedings in law, now and hereafter, against William and Mas-ton Harvey, and further binds herself to let said William have said children when he calls for them, she may be considered to mean that she would never sue said William and Masion for said trespass, which, the plea avers, was concerning her children. The language is by no means clear; but taking the whole bond together, with said averment in the plea, and applying to the bond' the maxim verba chartarum fortius accipiuntur proferentem, we think the plaintiff’s meaning is as we have stated it.
Considering the covenant in question, therefore, as a covenant never to sue, it amounts to a release and is a bar to the suit. Reed v. Shaw et al., 1 Blackf. 245.
The judgment is affirmed with costs.