56 Ind. App. 77 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1913
Appellee recovered a judgment in the lower court for personal injuries sustained by coming in contact with a post which was one of the supports of a coal bin maintained by appellant near a private switch upon which he was engaged in switching freight cars while in the employ of the belt railroad. The complaint was in one paragraph. Defendant answered by a general denial and also filed a second paragraph of answer to which a demurrer for want of facts was sustained. This ruling presents the first question for our consideration.
The second paragraph of answer proceeds upon the theory that appellant and the belt railroad were liable, if at all, as joint tortfeasors, and that after appellee received his injury he made a claim against the belt railroad for damages growing out of the same injury, and that it compromised the claim and paid to him the sum of $2,000 in cash which he received and still retains. The answer avers that, for the purpose of evidencing and accomplishing such transaction, the plaintiff and the railroad company entered into an agreement which is set out in the answer and is as follows:
“Whereas on March 2, 1909, Abner D. Crull, the undersigned, now 63 years of age, was in the employ of the Indianapolis Union Railway Company as a brakeman, and at about noon on said day was working in the line of his duty on track No. 9, known as the north track, at the coal bin of Parry Manufacturing Company’s plant in the city of Indianapolis, Indiana, and while standing on the step of a coal ear that was being*80 switched, was caught between a post in the coal bin near said track, and the coal ear on which he was standing and was seriously injured, sustaining a fracture of the left collar bone, bruises about the left hip, injury to the nervous system, especially to the left sciatic nerve and was otherwise injured in his person, which injuries he claims are permanent; and whereas the undersigned, said Crull, claims that said injuries were caused by the negligence of said Indianapolis Union Railway Company and of other persons and corporations and without his fault, and has demanded compensation for said injuries in a sum greater than hereafter mentioned as paid, and said Indianapolis Union Railway Company denies that it or any of its servants are guilty of any negligence whatever in the premises, but nevertheless, it being the desire of said Abner D. Crull, and said Indianapolis Union Railway Company to avoid litigation between them and the expenses thereof on account of said dispute and forever set at rest the differences so existing between them, but in such way that such settlement shall not impair or affect the claim of said Crull against any person or corporation other than said railway company for negligently causing or helping to cause the said injury, now therefore, in consideration of the premises and of the sum of two thousand ($2,000) dollars to him in hand paid by the said Indianapolis Railway Company, the receipt of which he hereby acknowledges, the undersigned the said Abner D. Crull, hereby covenants and agrees for himself, his executor or executors, administrator or administrators, respectively to and with the said Indianapolis Union Railway Company that neither he, they, nor any of them will ever sue or bring any action to be brought against said Indianapolis Union Railway Company, on account of injuries and damage to him occasioned by or growing out of the accident above described. In witness whereof,” etc.
In the case of Booth v. Kinsey (1852), 49 Va. 560, the distinction between a release of a claim or cause of action and a personal discharge of a debtor is aptly stated. The court at page 568 of the opinion says: “According to Pothier there are two kinds of release, one called a ‘real release’, the other a ‘personal discharge’. A real release is where the creditor declares that he considers the debt as acquitted, it is equivalent to a payment, and renders the thing no longer due: ‘ consequently it liberates all the debtors of it as there can be no debtors without something due.’ A personal release merely discharges the debtor from his obligation, and extinguishes the debt indirectly where the debtor to whom it is granted was the sole principal, because there can be no
Some of the questions presented by the motion for a new trial have been disposed of in the preceding discussion and need not be further noticed. Under the evidence, the question of contributory negligence of defendant was one of fact for the jury. We can not say that the evidence does not sustain the verdict.
In view of the fact that the verdict is only $1,000, it is not improbable that the jury made the proper deduction of the $2,000 payment. In any event, in view of the issues, the appellant is in no position to complain that the jury was not definitely instructed upon this question. Judgment affirmed.
Note. — Reported in 101 N. E. 756. As to joint and several liability of tortfeasors, see 16 Am. St. 250. As to release of one joint tortfeasor on liability of the other, see 58 L. R. A. 293. On the effect of a judgment against one joint tortfeasor on liability of the other, see 58 L. R. A. 410. As to the effect of the release of a joint tortfeasor, 1 Ann. Cas. 63; 11 Ann. Cas. 397; Ann. Cas. 1913 B 270. See, also, under (1) 38 Cyc. 490; (2) 38 Cyc. 491; (3) 34 Cyc. 1087, 1090; (4) 34 Cyc. 1090; (5) 23 Cyc. 778, 779; (6) 2 Cyc. 1016; (7) 26 Cyc. 1177, 1179.