132 Minn. 181 | Minn. | 1916
Action for personal injuries in which plaintiff had a verdict and defendant appealed from an order denying a new trial.
Plaintiff was a passenger upon one of defendant’s accommodation trains running between Wells and Mankato. The train was wrecked and plaintiff was injured. The accident occurred on July 5, 1913, and plaintiff was removed to a hospital at Mankato, where he was given treatment by the defendant’s local physician. On July 7, two days after the injury and when plaintiff was still at the hospital, a claim agent representing defendant called upon him and effected a settlement, paying to plaintiff in full for his injuries $150. Plaintiff signed and delivered the usual formal release. It was represented to him at the time of the settlement by the company physician, and also by the claim agent, that his injuries were not serious and that he would fully recover within three or four weeks. Within a few days thereafter plaintiff left the hospital and returned to his home at Mapleton, some 25 miles from Mankato. It appears that he was unable to walk unassisted and defendant’s physician supplied him with a pair of crutches. He thereafter occasionally returned to Mankato for further treatment, but, not recovering as rapidly as represented by the physician, he applied, on August 4, to other physicians for relief. A thorough examination was made, an X-ray photograph taken of his back and hips, and the new physicians discovered what they termed an impacted fracture of the neck of the femur of the left leg; an injury to the sacro-iliac joint; a curvature of the spine, and a shortening of one of the legs. Thereupon he brought an action against the company to recover for his injuries, claiming that the settlement and release wer&
The assignments of-error challenge the ruling of the court in refusing to submit to the jury certain special questions in the language and form requested by defendant, and certain of its instructions and refusals to instruct the jury. We dispose of these in their order.
The physician of the company testified that soon after plaintiff was taken to the hospital he made a careful examination of his body with a view of determining the nature and character of his injuries, as a result of which he found no broken bones, and that the only injury suffered by plaintiff was in the form of bruises, from which he would soon recover. At the time of the accident plaintiff was seated in the accommodation coach of the train; this was derailed, and for some distance passed over the crossties, and violently bumped up and down until it came to a stop. Whatever injuries plaintiff received came from this violent bumping as the car passed over the ties. A fellow passenger received a dislocated ankle. The theory of plaintiff’s case was that this violence resulted in an impacted fracture of the femur, and dislocation of the sacro-iliac joint. The company’s physician did not discover either injury, if either existed, by his examination. He advised the claim agent that plaintiff had no serious injury, and plaintiff testified that he stated to him at the time he introduced the claim agent: “He told me I was just bruised a little, and that I would be well in ten days or two weeks * * *, and capable of going to work; that I did not have any broken bones, and that I had better go ahead and settle.” The physician denied having advised plaintiff to' go ahead and settle with the claim agent, though he admitted that he stated
Defendant’s contention is that, to entitle plaintiff to rescind the release, it was incumbent upon him to show that he was induced to execute it by the intentional deception of the physician and claim agent, and that the court erred in not so charging the jury. We do not sustain the point. It may be conceded that an essential element of the old common-law action of deceit is intentional fraud and deception, and that as a general rule no recovery can be had in such an action where intentional deception does not appear. And there are many authorities holding to a strict application of the rule, and as requiring an affirmative showing of an intent to defraud and deceive in all cases where relief is sought on the ground of fraudulent representations. As thus strictly applied much injustice has resulted, and the courts have engrafted upon the rule modifications and qualifications, and the present trend of judicial opinion does not require in all cases a showing of an evil intent. The injury suffered by the defrauded party may be just as great, whether the fraud was intentional or unintentional. So in actions the result of which places the parties in statu quo, restoring to each what he parted with, equity will grant relief where the representations which induced and brought about the contract were in fact false, though made in good faith; the additional requirement being that the representations must appear to have been material, not .mere opinion, and of a character to justify reliance thereon by the defrauded party. In such cases the courts grant relief either upon the ground of fraud in law, sometimes spoken of as constructive fraud, or mutual mistake. It is not material whether it be termed fraud in law or mistake; the result is the same in either case. The rule now often applied is tersely summed up by the Iowa supreme court in the statement that a "party cannot falsely assert a fact to be true and induce another to rely upon such statement to his prejudice, and thereafter hide behind a claim that he did not know it was false at the time he asserted it.”
Order affirmed.