Inаsmuch as the motion to strike the third further answer and defense from the answer is based on its supposed irrelevancy, the plaintiff’s appeal presents this question for decision: Where a collision between the motor vehicles of the plaintiff and the defendant results in personal injuries to third persons riding in the motor vehicle of the defendant, and the plaintiff and the defendant, acting in concert out of court, compromise and settle extrajudicial claims made against them by the injured third persons, do the compromise settlements bar a subsequent action in negligence by the plaintiff against the defendant for damage done to the plaintiff’s motor vehicle in the same collision ?
Although actions arising out of motor vehicle collisions are almost as numerous as the “autumnаl leaves that strow the brooks in Yallambrosa,” a diligent and protracted search has not unearthed a decision answering this precise question. For this reason, we turn to the authorities summarized below for the solution of this problem.
1. The law favors the settlement of controversies out of court.
Patrick v. Bryan,
2. Moreover, in North Carоlina and the majority of other American jurisdictions, the law decrees that a compromise settlement made by a party with a third person cannot be shown in evidence in a subsequent lawsuit between the party and another person arising out of the same transaction.
Snyder v. Oil Co.,
3. An allegation of fact is irrelevant and оught to be stricken from a pleading on motion if the fact pleaded is not legally receivable in evidence on.the trial.
Pemberton v. Greensboro,
4. A motion to strike an allegation from a pleading for irrelevanсy admits, for the purpose of the motion,.the truth of all facts well pleaded in .the allegation, and any inferences fairly deducible from them. But it does not admit the conclusions of the pleader.
Kurtzon v. Kurtzon,
5. Compromise agreements are governed by the legal principles applicable to contracts generally. As a consequence, a compromise agreement is cоnclusive between the parties as to the matters compromised. Snyder v. Oil Co., supra; Sutton v. Robeson, 31 N.C. 380; 11 Am. Jur., Compromise and Settlement, section 25. But it does not extend to matters not included within its terms. 15 C.J.S., Compromise and Settlement, sectiоn 27.
The task of applying these principles to the plaintiff’s appeal must now be performed.
The third further answer and defense affords no factual foundation whatever for any contentiоn that the plaintiff and the defendant actually compromised the controversy involved in this action. When that portion *557 of tbe answer is stripped of the conclusions of the pleader, it discloses that the plaintiff and the defendant merely purchased from Saks and Yogelson such peace as Saks and Yogelson could sell.
This being true, the allegations relating to the extrajudicial sеttlements of the plaintiff and the defendant with Saks and Yogelson have no proper place in the answer in this case, unless logic is willing to accept the plaintiff’s participation in the settlements as an implied admission on its part of at least partial legal responsibility for the damage to its property, and unless the law is willing to accept the defendant’s participatiоn in the settlements as a sufficient reason for abrogating the salutary principle of public policy which favors and encourages the settlement of controversies out of court.
Logic would ignore the facts of life if it accepted the plaintiff’s participation in the extrajudicial settlements with Saks and Yogelson as an implied admission of legal culpability on its part. It cоsts time, trouble, and money to defend claims, whether well founded or not, and prudent persons constantly purchase their peace against unfounded claims to avoid these outlays.
Georgia Ry.
&
Electric Co. v. Wallace & Co.,
The relevant authorities make it crystal clear that the sound principle of public policy which favors settlemеnt of controversies out of court would have precluded the defendant from invoking the settlements with Saks and Yogelson as a defense to the cause of action stated in the complaint if the settlements had been made by the plaintiff alone. We have cudgeled our brains and searched the authorities to ascertain whether there is any valid reason why the defendant’s partiсipation in the settlements with the third persons should set at naught this sound principle of public policy in the case at bar. We have discovered no such reason. Indeed, it seems to us that the ever increasing number of motor vehicle collisions with their resultant multiple injuries rather demands that the *558 courts enforce without relaxation in cases like this the salutary rule that the law favors the extrajudiсial settlement of controversies.
It is a far cry from the question arising on the plaintiff’s appeal to the matters under review in the portions of the opinions in
Coach Co. v. Stone,
The compromise of the plаintiff and the defendant with Saks and Yogelson did not include the controversy involved in the claim for dam- ’ ages made by the plaintiff against the defendant in this case; whereas, the extrajudicial compromise between the Kenan Oil Company and Mary P. Dixon adjusted the exact controversy involved in the claim for contribution made by the Kenan Oil Company against Mary P. Dixon in the Snyder case, and the judicial compromise between the Queen City Coach Company and Mabel Spivey, Administratrix of Paul Spivey, settled the identical controversy involved in the claim for contribution made by the Queen City Coach Company against Mabel Spivey, Admin-istratrix of Paul Spivey, in the Herring case. Moreover, the settlements under consideration in the instant action were made by contract out of court, and did not involve any judicial adjudication in respect to the claim of the plaintiff against the defendant; whereas, the settlements under scrutiny in the Snyder and Stone cases were made by consent judgments in court, and involved judicial adjudications establishing the invalidity of the claim of the Queen City Coach Company against Mabel Spivey, Administratrix of Paul Spivey, and the claim of the Lumberton Coach Company against H. W. Stone.
What has been said compels the conclusion that the third further answer and defense should have been stricken from the answer for irrelevancy. It is obvious, we think, that its retention in the answer is likely .to .cause harm or injustice to the plaintiff.
Hinson v. Britt,
This brings us to the appeal of the defendant. When he struck the fourth further answer and defense from the answer, the presiding judge purported to act under the statute now codified as G.S. 1-126, which specifies that “Shаm and irrelevant answers and defenses may be stricken out on motion, upon such terms as the court may in its discretion impose.”
The fourth further answer and defense alleges, in substance, that the ■plaintiff insurеd its trailer and cargo against loss by collision with a specified insurance company; that the insurance company paid the plain'tiff in full for the loss suffered by it in the collision mentioned in the cоmplaint; and that in consequence the insurance company is the sole ■ owner of the cause of action, which the plaintiff is attempting to assert against the defendant.
*559
These allegаtions are certainly relevant, for they undoubtedly state a defense to the cause of action alleged in the complaint.
Burgess v. Trevathan,
The presiding judge found as a fact upon a mere conсlusory affidavit submitted by the plaintiff “that the allegations contained in the fourth further answer and defense are untrue,” and struck the fourth further answer and defense from the answer on the ground that it constituted a sham defense within the purview of the statute. The presiding judge erred to the defendant’s prejudice in thus rejecting the fourth further answer and defense. This is necessarily so because the record does not indicate in any way that this defense is a mere pretense set up by the defendant in bad faith and without color of fact.
Boone v. Hardie,
This cause is remanded to the Superior Court of Harnett County for further proceedings agreeable to this opinion.
On plaintiff’s appeal, error and remanded.
On defendant’s appeal, error and remanded.
