71 Neb. 180 | Neb. | 1904
In tbis action the plaintiff in the court bel on', who is also plaintiff in error in this court, filed a petition in the district court for Douglas county, Nebraska, alleging that, while in the employ of the defendant railway company as a. switchman in its yards at Omaha, he received serious personal injuries caused by the negligence and carelessness of'defendant. It is not necessary to review the petition further than to say that, on its face, it stated a good cause of action. Defendant answered this petition, denying all the allegations of negligence, and pleaded, by way of accord and satisfaction, the payment of $200 to the plaintiff in settlement and full satisfaction of all injuries received on account of the accident, and the execution of a release in writing signed by the plaintiff and delivered to defendant at the time of the settlement. It is not necessary to set out at length the release, hut sufficient to say that, on its face, it shows a perfect accord and satisfaction of the injuries sued for. Plaintiff, by way of reply to the plea of accord and satisfaction contained in defendant’s answer, alleged, in substance, that he signed the release alleged in defendant’s answer, and that lie had received $200 at the time stated, but, that his signature to the re
The sustaining of the motion for judgment on the pleadings concedes the truth of every fact well pleaded in plaintiff’s reply. The question then arises, do the facts pleaded sufficiently excuse plaintiff’s neglect to read, or have read to him, the release which he signed before accepting the $200?
The general rule is that, where ordinary prudence would have prevented the deception, an action for the fraud perpetrated by such deception will not lie. Now, construing liberally the allegations of the reply which charge fraud in procuring the signature to the release, they are that plaintiff desired permanent employment with defendant; that he was led to believe from a conversation with de-fondant’s claim agent that, on signing the release tendered him, he would get $200 for his lost time, and permanent employment in defendant’s service. The reply does not allege that plaintiff could not read and write, and in fact the record clearly shows that he could, for his name is signed twice in his own handwriting to the release. It is not alleged that, by reason of failing eyesight, or by reason of any disability, he asked the defendant’s agent to read
The rule permitting release from signatures obtained by fraud has been as liberally construed in this jurisdiction as it has by any other courts of last resort in these United States, and we will notice briefly some of our own decisions on this question:
In Cole Brothers & Hart v. Williams, 12 Neb. 440, the defendant'had signed a contract for certain lightning rods, which were alleged to have been represented as of a stipulated price. Defendant could read and write, but had not his glasses with him, and requested plaintiff’s agent to read the terms of the contract. This the agent did, and misstated the price to be charged for the lightning rods. Other witnesses were present and testified to the transaction. Under these conditions, defendant was released from the contract because of the fraud perpetrated in procuring his signature.
In Ward v. Spelts & Klosterman, 39 Neb. 809, the defendant could neither read nor write, and alleged that his signature to a memorandum in writing was procured by fraudulent representation as to what the paper contained. This he was permitted to show..
In Woodbridge Brothers v. De Witt, 51 Neb. 98, the signature of the agent of defendant was procured to a bill of conditional sale, which was to operate as a chattel mortgage on a musical instrument purchased, and which provided for the payment of 10 per cent, interest per annum on deferred payments; this after the contract for the purchase had been fully made, and when plaintiff’s agent was
In the very recent case of New Omaha Thompson-Houston, Electric Light Co. v. Rombold, 68 Neb. 54, the plaintiff was permitted to be relieved from his signature to a release similar in substance to that pleaded in the suit at bar, by a clear preponderance of the evidence that the receipt had been misread to him when his signature was obtained. While the judgment first rendered in this casi* was reversed on a rehearing on January 6, 1904. this portion of the opinion was not reversed, and is still of judicial weight in the determination of this question. But in this case, the agent of defendant purported to read the written instrument to the plaintiff, and procured his signature by deception in misreading the contents of the paper signed.
As before stated, we think our court has gone to the extreme length in the cases commented upon, in relieving from contracts and settlements signed without reading, or having the same read, before affixing the signature; and, still, all these cases depend on facts, both alleged and proved, that tend to show imposition and deceit resorted to for the purpose of procuring the signature.
Now, in the case at bar, we do not think the facts alleged in the reply, dr amended reply tendered, stated facts which showed such artifice and fraud to have been practiced upon the plaintiff as would excuse him from either reading the release Avliich he signed, or asking to have it read to him, before signing it.
It appears from the record that the injury to plaintiff was received on November 9, 1894; that the settlement Avas made and the $200 paid to plaintiff on the first day of
In Wallace v. Chicago, St. P., M. & O. R. Co., 67 Ia. 547, it is held that a party who, having the capacity and opportunity to read a release of claims for damages for personal injuries signed by himself, and not being prevented by fraud practiced on him from so reading it, failed to do so, and relied upon what the other party said about it, is estopped by his own negligence from claiming that the release is not legal and binding upon him according to its terms. Of like effect is the holding in Mateer v. Missouri P. R. Co., 105 Mo. 320; Lumley v. Wabash R. Co., 71 Fed. 21.
It is therefore recommended that the judgment of the district court be affirmed.
By the Oourt: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, it is ordered that the judgment of the district court be
AFFIRMED.