165 Mo. App. 49 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
This is a suit for money had and received. At the conclusion of the evidence for plaintiff, the court instructed a verdict for defendant, on the theory that it conclusively appeared plaintiff had accepted full satisfaction from a joint tortfeasor for the tort out of which the cause of action accrued. Prom this judgment plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.
Plaintiff is an incorporated company, and owns large tracts of timber land in southeast Missouri on
But it- is argued the court very properly directed a verdict for defendant because it conclusively appears plaintiff accepted full satisfaction of the cause of action asserted from Sam Riley, one of the joint tortfeasors. If such were the fact, the argument would, no doubt, inhere with much force, but the record does not reveal it to be true. The satisfaction of a cause of action arising from tort by one of the joint tortfeasors or a release of such cause of action executed to one of the tortfeasors inures in favor of the other and may-be invoked by him as a complete bar to a recovery thereafter. No one can doubt this propo
Bnt it is said, if plaintiff prevails in the suit, it ought not to he entitled to recover from defendant and receive compensation as well to the extent of $1500 from Sam Riley. To the proposition thus stated we fully agree, for the law forbids more than one full compensation. But the rule is established in such cases to the effect that a partial satisfaction by one joint tortfeasor is admissible in evidence in mitigation. of damages sought to be recovered against another. To the extent of the settlement which plaintiff made with Sam Riley, defendant is entitled to mitigate the recovery against him. [See Judd v. Walker, 158 Mo. App. 156, 138 S. W. 655; Knapp v. Roche, 94 N. Y. 329.]
The judgment 'should be reversed and the cause remanded. It is so ordered.