185 Iowa 346 | Iowa | 1919
I. The plaintiff was in the employment of defendant, in the evening of March 17, 1915, as one of the helpers in a switching crew. At about 10:30 o’clock, he attempted to get on a car, for the purpose of switching the same and placing it in a train which was being made up. The car was of a style known as the “Gondola” or Hart Convertible. The sides of the car are fastened with hinges at or near the top, with clasps at the bottom. When the clasps are broken or unfastened at the bottom, the sides swing outward: that is, when lifted by hand, or swung by a movement of the car. The car, at the time, was moving in a southeasterly direction, and, while carrying a lantern in his right hand, plaintiff put his foot on the sill-step in the right-hand side and at or near the front, and took hold of the side handrail with his left hand, and attempted to mount the car. As he did so, one of the seven doors constituting the side of the car swung out, caught him, and broke his hold; and, in his words, “My foot struck the ground, and I hung with this hand, and it jerked.”
The petition alleged that, in falling, he sprained and lacerated the ligaments of his side, and ruptured a blood vessel or vessels in his lungs; that these injuries were caused by the negligence of the defendant, in permitting the caito be handled with the sides unfastened, knowing that, in
The answer admitted the employment, and that plaintiff was injured; but put the other allegations in issue, and pleaded that, on or about June 15, 19Í5, the parties hereto compromised the claims sued on, and that, in consideration of $450 paid him, plaintiff released all claims for damages; and prayed to go hence with its costs.
In reply, plaintiff pleaded that the alleged settlement had been obtained by fraud, and also that it was obtained in consequence of a mistake.
At the close of the evidence, defendant moved the court to direct a verdict in its favor, for that: (1) The evidence failed tó show that the condition of the car, as alleged, had existed for such length of time as that defendant was charged with notice, and in the exercise of ordinary care must have repaired same prior to the injury; (2) the evidence was insufficient to show that the compromise was void by reason of fraud; (3) the mistake, if any, was insufficient to set the compromise contract aside, or to render it invalid; and (4) the evidence failed to show any mistake in plaintiff’s condition as it in fact was. This motion was sustained, and the only issue presented in this case relates to the sufficiency of the evidence to raise an issue for the jury as to whether the settlement was based on fraud or mutual mistake.
In order to' establish the alleged fraud and mistake, the plaintiff has testified to the injuries, as alleged, and to his treatment, first by Dr. Wasen, and afterwards by Dr. Saunders, of Ft. Dodge, and to having spit blood after the injury continually, except for three weeks, and related that
“‘Did Kinzey send over after you?’ and I said, ‘Yes, sir.’ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘You are all right to go to work now.’ He said, ‘You are all healed up and everything. When did you spit any blood?’ I said, ‘I have not spit any blood for about thrée weeks, I think.’ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘you are all right then; but,’ he said, ‘if you ain’t in any hurry, it would be alj right to rest a few days longer.’ ‘Well,’ I said, ‘what would you call a few days, Doctor?’ ‘What would you say about the first of July?’ he said. ‘That is all right.’ And he put his hand on my shoulder, and he said, ‘You are just as good as ever, Jimmie.’ ”
The witness swore that he believed Dr. Saunders, and relied upon the statement made to him, and went to Oelwein that night, where he met the superintendent the next day, and:
“I told him I was all right, and he said, ‘Yes, I heard you were.’ I told him Dr. Saunders said I was all right, and he said he heard I was. We went into the office and out to the yard office, and he figured out my time. He showed me what time I had lost, and wrote out a check for it, and I signed a receipt; and that was all there was
In signing the receipt, he relied upon what Dr. Saunders told him, and had no other knowledge of his physical condition. Later, he explained that, when he told the superintendent that Dr. Saunders said he was all right, the superintendent replied:
“Well, I have gotten a report from Dr. Saunders, too, and he said you was all right, and you can — we will settle up now, and you can go to work.”
He was receiving 37 cents an hour, and the amount was arrived at by computing at that rate. He undertook to work, but was compelled to quit on account of his injury, — having started again to spit blood, and passing blood through the bowels, and continued in that condition up to the time of the trial. The testimony of the plaintiff’s wife corroborated his account of the interview with Dr. Saunders.
In Haigh v. White Way Laundry Co., 164 Iowa 143, a statement by the defendant’s agent that the tendons of plaintiff’s hand were injured, and that her injuries were trifling, was held to be merely a statement of fact.
In Huston & T. C. R. Co. v. Brown, (Tex.) 69 S. W. 651, a release was obtained, based upon representations made by a physician representing the railway company, that the “bones of his arm had knitted and united together, and that the arm was welland the court held that these were statements of fact. In response to the contention that they were mere expressions of opinion, the court said:
“The effect of his statement was that the appellee was a sound man, and that the bones of his arms had knitted together, and that it would be all right. It is true that this statement may have been predicated upon his opinion as a medical expert; but the opinion is based upon the facts of which he possessed knowledge. The fact that the statement made by Stewart was not intentionally false does not affect the right of the appellee to have the release set aside, if he was misled by the statement, and executed the release believing the statement was true. In such a case, innocent misrepresentation may as well be the basis of relief as where such statements are intentionally false.”
In Great Northern R. Co. v. Fowler, 69 C. C. A. 106, the company’s surgeon made an examination of the complainant, and found that his injuries consisted of a wound
See, also, Lumley v. Wabash R. Co., 22 C. C. A. 60; Nelson v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., 111 Minn. 198 (20 Am. & Eng. Ann. Cas. 748).
In Tatman v. Philadelphia, B. & W. R. Co., 10 Del. Ch. 105 (85 Atl. 716), the test is said to be:
“Is the evidence in this case clear and convincing that the complainant was induced to compromise her claim and to execute her release by a mistake of past or present fact material to her contract?”
The distinction between a mistake in opinion or prophecy as to the future and one of past or present fact is pointed by Judge Sanborn in Chicago & N. W. R. Co. v. Wilcox, 54 C. C. A. 147, in saying:
“* * It is not every mistake that will lay the foundation for the rescission of an agreement. That foundation can be laid only by a mistake of a past or present fact material to the agreement. Such an effect cannot be produced by a mistake in prophecy or in opinion, or by a mistake in belief, relative to an uncertain future event. A mistake as to the future unknowable effect of existing facts, a mistake as to the future uncertain duration of a known condition, or a mistake as to the future effect of a personal injury, cannot have this effect, because these future happenings are not facts, and, in the nature of things, are not capable of exact knowledge; and everyone who contracts in reliance upon opinions or beliefs concerning them knows that these opinions and beliefs are conjectural, and makes his agreement in view of the well-known fact that they may
II. The issue as to whether the release was the result of mutual mistake, was triable at law. Reddington v. Blue, 168 Iowa 34; Seymour v. Chicago & N. W. R. Co., supra.
The vice is in the release, in that the parties, through
The plaintiff testified that, on June 16, 1915, the day the release was executed, he told the superintendent of the company 'that he was all right, and Dr. Saunders had so stated to him; and that the superintendent responded that the doctor had so reported to him; and that they then “went into the superintendent’s office and out to the yard office, and he figured out my time. He showed me what time I had lost, and wrote out a check for it, and I signed a receipt; and that was all there was to it. We figured it out by the hours I was getting 37 cents per hour, and the amount was arrived at by figuring it at 37 cents an hour.” He was to resume work July 1st, following, but was not allowed to do so. This was all the evidence bearing on the issue as to what the $450 for which the release receipted was paid, and the fair inference to be drawn therefrom was that the payment was for loss of time. This being so, there was no occasion for tendering the return of the same, as a condition precedent, to the maintenance of the action for personal injuries suffered by complainant. Though the release is general, covering injuries of every kind and nature, and extending until doomsday, inquiry concerning the nature of the consideration and for what computed was permissible, and, as we think, was not precluded by the terms of the release, based as it was on a mutual mistake. Having reached the conclusion that on this ground it might be rescinded, the investigation related solely to what must