205 Mass. 77 | Mass. | 1910
There was evidence from which the jury could find that a verbal agreement was made between the plaintiff and the defendant acting through one Bennett for a settlement of the cause of action which the plaintiff claimed to have against the defendant for his personal injuries; and that l>y the terms of this agreement the defendant was to pay to the plaintiff the sum of $100, and pay his bill for medical attendance and his weekly wages until he should have recovered from his injuries. According to the evidence put in for the plaintiff, Bennett then wrote out what purported to be a statement or memorandum of this agreement, and asked the plaintiff, who could not read English, to sign it, which the plaintiff either did or began to do. But the plaintiff’s son, who was present, observed that this paper did not contain the agreement for the future payment of wages, and told the plaintiff not to sign it. Thereupon this paper was torn up and burned by Bennett, and he (Bennett) wrote another paper which did contain that stipulation and which the plaintiff signed and gave to Bennett and received from Bennett a check for the $100 which was to be paid down. Bennett’s testimony contradicted this, but it was for the jury to say what they would believe.
The defendant produced a paper purporting to be signed by the plaintiff under the name of Peter Pratt, and to be witnessed by the plaintiff’s son and by Bennett, by which the plaintiff acknowledged the receipt from the defendant of his “ wages in full, medical attendance, and $100 settlement in full for all claims on account of an accident to person or property.” Bennett testified that the plaintiff signed this, that the plaintiff’s son and Bennett signed it as witnesses, and that this was the only paper which was signed and delivered to him at the time of the settlement.
Manifestly upon this evidence the jury might find that the agreement between the parties had not been reduced to writing. We cannot ourselves weigh the probabilities and undertake to say what their finding ought to have been. Marvel v. Cobb, 204 Mass. 117. Electric Welding Co. v. Prince, 200 Mass. 386, 392. Hayes v. Moulton, 194 Mass. 157, 163. They might accept the testimony of the plaintiff and his son, and find that he had not executed the paper produced by the defendant; they might find on the testimony of Bennett, that he. executed no other paper, and so conclude that there was no written agreement. Or they might find that the paper produced by the defendant was the one which the plaintiff testified that he first signed or began to sign, that Bennett had not destroyed this, but had substituted for it some other paper and destroyed that instead; and that either the plaintiff had signed no other paper, or that Bennett had not accepted the paper which the plaintiff did sign, but had suppressed or destroyed it. But in this event there would be no written agreement between the parties; the first paper had not become an agreement and was not binding upon the plaintiff because he had not delivered it as an agreement; and the second, if there was one, had not taken effect as an agreement because the defendant or Bennett in its behalf had not accepted it.
We are of opinion accordingly that the judge did not err in allowing the jury to consider the evidence of the conversation between Bennett and the plaintiff. That conversation itself, the jury could find, constituted the agreement between the parties, as no question seems to have been raised as to Bennett’s author
The defendant has not argued its other exception. Indeed, the judge instructed the jury that if the consultations and oral negótiations of the parties resulted in a written agreement which in-eluded the whole agreement and was the agreement between the parties, the action could not be maintained. The jury must have found that there was no such written agreement, and that made most of the other questions immaterial.
Exceptions overruled.