216 Wis. 443 | Wis. | 1934
The appellants contend that the court erred: (1) In overruling their demurrer ore tenus to the complaint, and (2) in denying their motion to strike certain allegations of the complaint; that the evidence was insufficient to support the findings of the jury, (3) as to fraud in procurement of the release, and (4) upon the issue of negligence, (5) that the damages assessed by the jury are excessive; that the court erred (6) in instructing the jury; and that this court should direct dismissal of the complaint or order a new trial.
(1) (2) The appellants devote five pages of their brief to support their contentions that the complaint does not state a
(3) The appellants argue that the parents of the child, as intelligent persons able to read and to comprehend the language of the release, having had ample opportunity to read the release and consider its terms, and no artifice having been resorted to to obtain their signatures, may not be heard to say that they did not understand its contents and understood that it was a mere receipt for money. We consider this position well taken. But this does not cover the whole issue of fraud in inducing its execution. The questions submitted upon this issue did not go to the proposition of misunderstanding of the terms of the release or misrepresentation of its nature or contents. The inducing representations covered by the questions were that the insurer’s agent represented that, (a) the instrument and payment thereunder were “for a mere gratuity, a customary gesture of good will in a non-
We are of opinion that these representations taken as a whole, if established by the evidence and false, and justifiably relied on by the parents, are sufficient to avoid the release. Some of them, if standing alone, doubtless would not support avoidance because immaterial. As, for instance, that the driver of the car would be sent to prison, and that he was already in bad with the police department and it would be bad for him. But others were fraudulent in character. The statement that it was customary as a gesture of good will to give gratuities in non-liability cases itself would be immaterial and of itself would not form a basis for avoidance of the release, but for the fact that it carries the imputation that this was a non-liability case, and that is a different matter, as are the statements that an action would be useless, and that there would be no liability unless the driver of the car was guilty of criminal negligence. The agent who made the statements is an attorney at law, and he had made an investigation of the facts which the parents might rightly assume was full and fair, and which they might rightly rely upon. That liability did not exist upon the facts and that suit would be useless might be matter of opinion if honestly made by a person not a lawyer assuming to advise the party adverse to the party he was representing. The statement that there could be no liability at all unless the driver was found guilty of gross or criminal negligence could not have been honestly made, as it was necessarily known to be false by the agent as a practicing attorney. Statements that would be matters of opinion if honestly made become statements of fact if the one
"... even though misrepresentations are in part in relation to matters of law, if they are made by one who has superior means of information and professes a knowledge of the law, and thereby obtains an unconscionable advantage of another, who is ignorant and has not been in a situation to become informed, the injured party is entitled to relief, just as well as if the misrepresentation had been concerning a matter of fact.” Allison v. Wm. Doerflinger Co. 208 Wis. 206, 242 N. W. 558.
We are of opinion that the circumstances here involved bring the case'within the rules of the cases above cited, and that the representations found, if the evidence supports the findings, form sufficient basis for rescission of the release.
Counsel argue that the language of the questions submitted is confusing and was incomprehensible to the jury. It is seldom, in a fraud case involving numerous alleged misrepresentations, that the basic questions can be so framed as to avoid criticism of their form. We will pass the matter by saying that some of the criticisms here made are hypercritical, and that the questions are intelligible to this court and presumably were intelligible to the jury. They seem to cover statements which it is claimed the insurer’s agent made.
It is contended that the findings above referred to, and those as to reliance by the parents upon the representations found and justification for the reliance, are not supported by
It may further be said upon this point that viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff there are indications of unfairness in procuring the release that, may well have influenced the jury. The parents were “on county relief” and without funds with which to bury their child. They naturally would not want their child buried in a pauper’s grave or denied a decent burial, which they well may have thought would result if the body was prepared and buried at public expense. The jury might properly infer that the insurer’s agent operated on this theory, and that he called at the parents’ residence early in the morning after the accident and told the father that “no matter what the evidence showed” the insurer “would forward or give” the parents the money to pay the funeral expenses, “not because they had to, but as a gesture of good will” and “good business policy;” that he then said he had talked with some of the witnesses and expressed grave doubt whether liability existed; that the driver of the car, a boy of eighteen years, would suffer
'(4) The contention of appellants that the findings of negligence are insufficiently supported seems to rest principally upon the view that the statement of Mrs. Williams first made as above stated should be taken as the facts of the case. This statement was upon the trial declared by her to be false, and to have been influenced by the persuasions of the insurer’s agent that induced her to attempt to shield the driver of the car from prosecution. She testified that besides saying to her much of what he said to the father of the child as above related, the agent made other statements to her to influence her statement of what happened. The child’s family was one that Mrs. Williams as a relief worker had regularly visited, and she was especially interested in the parents’ situation. She testified that she said to the agent: “There will be something done” for them, and he replied: “Oh yes, yes, the child died. The insurance company always makes adequate settlements for the death of a child. Nothing could be done to bring it back. The pressing matter now was the situation of the boy. My testimony would decide it. If the car was going at a pretty good rate of speed it would go hard with the boy, and that as I was the only witness I would have to make up my mind what I should say. The family would be taken care of and I should think about the boy.” Mrs. Williams claimed that as the family were to be taken care of, she fashioned her statement of the accident to shield the boy from prosecution. A statement she gave to the insurer’s agent was taken down by his stenographer. Another welfare worker who was present at the interview between Mrs, Williams and
(S) The jury assessed the parents’ damages at $3,700. Sec. 331.04 (2) provides that in addition to the damages for their “pecuniary injury” resulting from the child’s death the jury may award “a sutn not exceeding two thousand fiye
(6) Appellants complain that the court should have given instructions requested by them to the effect that the jury should consider whether the parents were mentally capable of understanding the release; and that if the parents did not read the release the jury should consider whether their failure to read it was due to their own negligence; and that if the parents did not read it, in considering whether their failure to do so was due to the representations of the insurer’s agent, the jury should consider only the representations relating to the instrument itself or its effect. Had the question of the parents’ understanding of the release been submitted to the jury these instructions or their equivalent should have been given. But no such question was put to the jury, presumably because the court considered the failure of the parents to
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.