HAROLD POE v. ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD COMPANY, a Corporation
99 S. W. (2d) 82
Division Two
November 17, 1936
All concur.
BOHLING, C.—Action under the
Before reaching the merits of plaintiff‘s cause of action, we are confronted with defendant‘s plea in bar.
Plaintiff was injured on December 18, 1928. On February 1, 1930,
As a рreliminary controversy to a reconsideration of said issue, as well as others, on this appeal, plaintiff takes the position that since the pleadings present no new issues and the evidence on retrial is substantially the same, the rulings of this court on the former appeal are the law of the case. [State of Kansas ex rel. v. United States F. & G. Co., 328 Mo. 295, 299, 40 S. W. (2d) 1050, 1052(1); Coleman v. Northwestern Mut. L. Ins. Co. (Mo.), 233 S. W. 187, 188(1); Scott v. Parkview R. & I. Co., 255 Mo. 76, 102(1), 164 S. W. 532, 540(1).] Plaintiff‘s statement as far as it goes is correct, but, quoting Davidson v. St. Louis-S. F. Ry. Co., 301 Mo. 79, 85, 256 S. W. 169, 170: “It should be further stated, however, that even if there is no substantial difference in pleadings and proof upon the retrial, yet if this court upon second appeal finds that it was in error upon the first hearing, it not only has the power and right to correct such error, but it would be the duty of the court so to do, in the interest of justice. This is true whether we erred in the principles of law declared, or erred in the determination of what were the real facts of the case.” Mangold v. Bacon, 237 Mo. 496, 512(a), 525, 141 S. W. 650, 653 (4, 5), 658, was a banc case having under consideration a banc opinion upon former appeal. It contains a review of the authorities; states the general rule, grounded on convenience, experience and reason, that legal conclusions announced on a first appeal become and remain law of thе case, is subject to exceptions as well recognized as the rule itself, and sums up the matter thus (237 Mo. l. c. 517): “Whether from grace or right when cogent and convincing reasons appear, such as lack of harmony with other decisions and where no injustice or hardship would flow from a change, or where by inadvertence principles of law have been incorrectly declared the first time, or mistake of fact has been made, or injustice to the rights of parties would be done by adhering to the first opinion, then the exceptions to the rule have play and it is our duty to re-examine and
An accurate detailed statement of plaintiff‘s testimony covering the transactions culminating in the execution of the release is somewhat difficult due to some variations therein. Plaintiff testified he first met Purkhiser in Chicago pursuant to arrangements made over long distance telephone. After stating the first time he talked with anybody about the possibility of a settlement was with Purkhiser in Chicago, plaintiff stated he thought Purkhiser did not say anything at that time about settling his claim. Plaintiff admitted he may have testified at the first trial (he did not remember it if he did) that Purkhiser had offered $200 to $300 to settle the case; that he understood settling the case meant he would never have any more claim; and that he was not ready to settle. Plaintiff next met Purkhiser at Fulton, Kentucky; “and he asked me was I ready to settle the case, and I told him, ‘No.’ . . . I didn‘t understand that he was talking about making a final settlement of my case; he asked me if I was ready to settle my case, and I told him ‘no, my leg wasn‘t well.’ I insisted that I wanted to wait until my leg got well before I made a settlement, that was my idea. I didn‘t know what the word ‘settle’ meant.” Sometime thereafter (“three or four days or a week” or “some weeks or months“) plaintiff, having secured from Purkhiser a pass to East St. Louis to visit around and see Mr. Bishop, his former foreman, was met on the train by Purkhiser just before
They met the following morning, and Purkhiser informed plaintiff his wages amounted to $850. “He just offered me $850, and I told him I would take it. He had some printed blanks.” Defendant‘s Exhibit 13 is a release executed by plaintiff to defendant covering the cause of action in litigation. Defendant‘s Exhibit 14 is a draft for $850, payable to and endorsed by plaintiff. Each is on a printed form with the blanks appropriately filled in. They are dated February 1, 1930. Across the face of the release is printed “READ THIS RELEASE.” Across the face of the draft appears: “In Full Settlement of Claim for injuries sustained E. St. Louis, III. 12-18-28;” “In Full Settlement of Claim for” being in print. Plaintiff testified he could not read the simplest words, such as “cat,” “it,” or “at,” and was unable to recognize the letters “I. C.,” although he testified, in one place, he had been in the fourth grade and, in another, in the third grade at school and had worked in the Illinois Central yards for months. While unable to read exhibits 13 and 14, he identified his signatures thereon and the papers as the papers involved in the transaction between him and Purkhiser. He further testified: “Before Mr. Purkhiser gave me the draft for $850 and before I signed my name to defendant‘s Exhibit 13, Purkhiser called in two men from another room to witness my signature. He started to read it to me before he went in the room after them and he says, ‘O, well, it don‘t mean anything, but it is a receipt for your wages up to date and you will have to sign it before you go back to work.’ He just started to read
The release recites that the plaintiff had fully informed himself of its contents. However, plaintiff testified: “When I signed the release nobody read it to me at all. I did not ask anybody to read it to me. I did not ask anybody to explain it to me, and nobody did explain it to me.” He admitted testifying at the first trial, referring to the execution of the release: “Q. What conversation occurred between you and Mr. Purkhiser there? A. Well, we didn‘t talk anything about it; he just got me to fill out some papers. Q. About what? A. He told me to—pushed it around there and told me to sign it, and that was my receipt, and I had to sign before I could go to work. Q. Is that all he said? A. Yes, sir.”
Testimony on behalf of defendant was that plaintiff admittedly understood the effect of the release at the time he signed it.
We shall not detail the testimony concerning plaintiff‘s inability or ability to read. Plaintiff testified he had forgotten every letter of the alphabet; that he “sorta” drawed his name, sometimes spelling it with one “r” and at others with two. He identified his signature on a number of exhibits. Said signatures read: “Harold Poe,” “Harry Poe,” “Harrel Poe” and “Harrel Po,” and said exhibits embraced acknowledgments of receipt of notices given employees by defendant containing the statement that the party signing the same had “carefully read” certain rules of defendant therein referred to, and a four page statement, given in Chicago some time prior to the execution of the release, of how he received his injury, plaintiff‘s name being signed to each sheet and that the last sheеt concluding: “I have read the above and foregoing statement and it is true and correct. Harold Poe.” Plaintiff testified, regarding the statement: “I didn‘t know for sure what I was signing. I did it because he [Mr. Sawin, district claim agent] asked me to;” that he didn‘t know what it was, didn‘t ask what it was, and thought he was not told what it was; and “I don‘t think I told them that I couldn‘t read.” Defendant adduced evidence from a schoolmate and a former teacher of plaintiff to the effect plaintiff recited in reading, writing and other subjects while at school; that plaintiff had been promoted from the fourth to the fifth grade; and that there was nothing offered which a child could study without being able to read.
To sustain his contention that there was substantial evidence
A real estate transaction was involved in Laird v. Keithley (Mo.), 201 S. W. 1138. The fraud embraced, among other things, misrepresentations as to the cost price of the land, its productivity, and the price at which it was being offered on the market, as well as active concealment of certain disadvantages connected with the farm; matters peculiarly within the knowledge оf defendant. The plaintiff was then living in another state, was not a trader, didn‘t know Missouri land and informed defendant he would be entirely dependent on what defendant told him. The case is clearly dissimilar to the instant case.
In Rau v. Robertson (Mo.), 260 S. W. 751, defendant‘s representation to plaintiff that a release was a mere receipt for four weeks’ wages was held actionable notwithstanding plaintiff‘s failure to read or have read the release. Among the more salient facts of the case were defendant‘s arrangements for plaintiff‘s care, repeated visits, manifested sympathy and solicitude, assurances of friendship and against financial loss and unremitting attentions to plaintiff subsequent to the accident thereby ingratiating himself with plaintiff, plaintiff‘s physical condition—weak, sick and nervous and impatience to leave the hospital to go home, defendants folding of the release so as to disclose merely the place for signature, his misrepresentations, and plaintiff‘s expressed confidence in defendant being a man of his word immediately prior to signing the release. Plaintiff also testified the room was too dark to permit of reading the release (a fact, if so, as readily apparent to defendant as to plaintiff), and that she was too siсk to read.
In Dyrssen v. Union El. L. & P. Co., 317 Mo. 221, 227, 295 S. W. 116, 118, plaintiff contended he was induced to sign the release by virtue of his foreman‘s misreading it so as to convey the meaning it was a receipt for sick benefits. Plaintiff was a young man of good education and business experience, fully able to read and understand the meaning of the release, was laboring under no physical or mental handicap, knew his foreman was neither the secretary nor treasurer of the sick benefit association, and no confidential relation existed. In holding plaintiff failed to make a submissible case, the court said: “Numerous authorities in this State sustain the view that something more is required to render the question one of fact for the jury than the mere signing of a paper without reading it by one who is amply able to read and understand, even though he relies on the other‘s statement concerning the contents or character of the instrument signed.” (Italics ours.)
In Higgins v. American Car Co., 324 Mo. 189, 194, 22 S. W. (2d) 1043, 1044, plaintiff was instructed to go to the insurance office and “they will settle your wages with you.” Plaintiff testified he could not see to read or sign his name without glasses, that defendant‘s agent said: “‘Here is my check for signing this paper,’ and plaintiff asked him what it was and he replied: ‘It ain‘t nothing; only just a receipt, merely a receipt to show I paid your wages from the time you were injured.’ Plaintiff did not read the release nor have his wife read it, she being present. The check issued in payment stated on its face and its back it was a release. It was retained by plaintiff three or four days. The court said nothing was said to prevent plaintiff or his wife from reading the release or the check, and, although other factors entered, concludes: “He [plaintiff] was guilty of such negligence thrоughout those transactions that he cannot be heard now to say that he was deceived and induced by fraud to execute the release and endorse the check.” (Italics ours.)
Ensler v. Missouri Pac. Railroad Co., 324 Mo. 530, 538, 23 S. W. (2d) 1034, 1037(4) states: “The fact that a false representation was made in respect to the paper is not necessarily sufficient to excuse plaintiff for affixing his signature thereto in ignorance of its contents, unless under all the circumstances, in view of his duty to give reasonable attention to the protection of his own interests, the false representation was reasonably calculated to, and did, induсe him not to make the investigation which he would have otherwise made” (Italics ours.) Plaintiff testified defendant‘s agent posed as his friend, and they were negotiating on the basis of payment of plaintiff‘s wages until he was able to return to work and plaintiff‘s re-employment; that defendant would take care of plaintiff; that plaintiff told the agent he was “pretty near crazy with pain;” that his eyes were so he couldn‘t read, he could not figure and would have to leave the figuring to the agent; that the agent represented the release to be a receipt for wages being paid plaintiff under the oral understanding;
In State ex rel. Union Pac. Railroad Co. v. Bland, 324 Mo. 601, 23 S. W. (2d) 1029, Yiokas had employed Ulman as his attorney and thereafter settled with relator. Ulman sued relator for his fee and relator set up fraud in procuring the attorney‘s contract. Ulman accompanied by Mitchell and Bahas, two Greeks, went to a hospital to see Yiokas, also a Greek, and secured the contract, the Greeks conversing in their native tongue while Ulman stood by. Yiokas was told to sign the paper and when he got out of the hospital he could give it to the company and settle and, if he got anything, he might give them something if he wanted to. Yiokas was not informed he was signing a contract, could not read English and did not ask that the paper be read or explained to him. Yiokas knew Bahas well, being fellow townsmen in Greece. The court considered Mitchell and Bahas agents of Ulman, although posing as friends of Yiokas, and, under the circumstances, the misrepresentatiоns actionable. As we read the case the court considered Ulman, by calculation and artifice, had obtained the confidence of Yiokas through his agents Mitchell and Bahas.
In Brennecke v. Ganahl Lbr. Co., 329 Mo. 341, 44 S. W. (2d) 627, plaintiff‘s testimony was that he met one Nolan from an insurance company during the lunch hour at defendant‘s office and was told defendant had its employees insured for their wages; that Nolan figured plaintiff‘s loss of wages at $56.25; that plaintiff informed the agent he did not have much schooling and didn‘t know anything about papers; that plaintiff could not read without his glasses and asked to be permitted to get his glasses and was told hе need not get them, that all he had to do was sign the papers and that the paper was “just a receipt, that‘s all.” Plaintiff signed the release and was given a release-draft. Plaintiff‘s glasses were in a nearby locker, and his stepson was working at the plant. Plaintiff retained the draft, which had the release on the reverse side thereof, for four days before cashing it, having it at his home where members of his family, who could read, were available. Quoting from State ex rel. Missouri Pac. Railroad Co. v. Trimble, 332 Mo. 962, 964, 59 S. W. (2d) 622, 623: “In the Brennecke case the release was challenged on the ground that the claim agent represented to the employee that he was merely signing a receipt for his wages. We held that under the facts of that case the employee should have read the release before signing it. We further held that he had an opportunity to learn
Hannah v. Butts, 330 Mo. 876, 883, 51 S. W. (2d) 4, 7, involved a full release which was alleged, among other things, to have been executed upon representations it was a receipt for a part payment of what was due plaintiff on account of his injuries and not a full settlement of plaintiff‘s claim. The court said: “The making of the rеpresentations alleged, nothing further appearing, was not fraudulent. Merely telling one that a formal release which you desire him to execute is just a receipt is not calculated to deceive him. The presumption is that he can, and will, read the instrument for himself.”
This court en banc in Conklin v. Missouri Pac. Railroad Co., 331 Mo. 734, 738, 55 S. W. (2d) 306, 308, held a representation by a claim agent to plaintiff that the doctor had told the claim agent plaintiff would be well and out of the hospital in three or four months, upon which plaintiff relied and settled, did not constitute actionable fraud although the doctor had not so informed the claim agent, where plaintiff and his wife, who was present, did not but could have ascertained from the doctor, who daily visited plaintiff, if the claim agent‘s statement was true, and no fraudulent devices were practiced upon plaintiff to cause him to refrain from such inquiry. That case states, in dealing with releases, “‘this court has in recent years gone a long way in its efforts to protect “the foolishly credulous, as against the machinations of the designedly wicked,” as consonant with the administration of pure justice‘“—citing the Rau and State ex rel. Union Pac. Railroad Co. cases, supra, to which we add State ex rel. Brown, supra. The opinion, restating certain рrinciples, while omitting an exception thereto, mentioned in the Ensler case, supra, continues: “But we have never lost sight of the principle that the courts will not protect those who, with full opportunity to do so, will not protect themselves. Where the means of knowledge are at hand and are equally available to both parties, and the subject matter is alike open to their investigation, if one of them does not avail himself of those means and opportunities he will not be heard to say that he was deceived by the other party‘s misrepresentations.” We mention that RAGLAND, J., was the author of the Conklin case and also wrote the Rau, State ex rel. Brown, Ensler and Hannah cases, supra; that State ex rel. Brown cites only the Rau and State ex rel. Union Pac. Railroad Co. cases, supra, on the issue, which two cases are cited in connection with the above first quoted comment in the Conklin case.
In State ex rel. Missouri Pac. Railroad Co. v. Trimble, 332 Mo. 962, 59 S. W. (2d) 622, defendant‘s doctor told plaintiff, upon inquiry, “Why sure you are all right, make your settlement and go back to work,” and defendant‘s claim agent thereafter told plaintiff he had talked to the doctor and the doctor told him he was all right. This
In Alford v. Wabash Ry. Co., 73 S. W. (2d) 277, 280(4), the Kansas City Court of Appeals, in upholding a release which plaintiff was told “was a statement for my time,” “a receipt or something for my time” and which releasor did not read on account of not having his glasses, said: “The law is well settled that one who is dealing at arm‘s length with another cannot rely upon what the latter may say to him regarding the contents of a proposed agreement but he must read the agreement for himself if he has the ability to do so and if he does not have such ability he must have it read to him by someone else, if available, upon whom he has the right to rely“—citing the Hannah and Brennecke cases, supra. An application for certiorari on the ground the ruling of the Court of Appeals was in conflict with the State ex rel. Mo. Pac. Railroad Co.; State ex rel. Union Pac. Railroad Co.; State ex rel. Brown; Rau and Ensler cases, supra, submitted by the litigants on suggestions going only to the merits of the application, was denied by this court en banc on October 13, 1934. [State ex rel. Alford v. Shain, No. 33804 on the docket.]
An analysis of the cases reveals that they turn on the nature of the transaction involved, the representations made by the representor, the relation existing between the parties—whether one of trust, or confidence, or friendship, or close acquaintance, or that of strangers dealing at arm‘s length—or the trick or artifice, if any, employed.
Plaintiff never met Purkhiser before the Chicago meeting. He testified Purkhiser was not his lawyer, doctor, preacher or anything of that sort, and he never attended to any business for plaintiff. No confidential relation, or relation of trust, or even friendship or close acquaintanceship existed. Throughout plaintiff was dealing with strangers at arm‘s length. He did not know what “wages under the compensation” meant, did not ask what it meant or request any explanation, and did not inform defendant‘s agent of his ignorance. The following morning he executed the release when Purkhiser “pushed it around there and told me to sign it” upon the statement that it didn‘t amount to anything, but was a receipt for his wages up to date. (The record discloses no legal obligation on defendant to pay plaintiff wages, and we are unable to ascertain the consideration supporting the contract testified to by plaintiff.) No one read the release to him, he did not ask anybody to read or explain it, and no one explained it to him. Notwithstanding plaintiff testified he was not able to read, a reading of his testimony, if we omit reference to the execution of the release, demonstrates he possessed at least if not more than ordinary business shrewdness. He was sui juris, was
Parties may contract without a writing. When the contract is reduced to writing, the writing expresses the final agreement, is presumed to merge all prior negotiations, becomes the highest evidence of the agreement, and possesses greater stability than a contract merely in parol. On the reliance of the stability of the writing, the parties alter their legаl status. Fraud sounds in tort. The legal duty of the respective parties to a contract, depending of course on the circumstances attending the execution of the writing, to ascertain that the contents of the writing expresses their agreement is reciprocal. In the instant case Purkhiser‘s principal paid out its money under the written release in consideration for plaintiff‘s covenant of release. True, as stated on the first appeal, the law does not read the ignorant and unwary out of the pale of its protecting and remedial influence; but the practical administration of justice has rendered it expedient to set up certain standards, and the law, which every one is conclusively presumed to know although the courts themselves often experience considerable difficulty and labor in finally determining what the law of a given case is, recognizes established principles of conduct governing men in their commercial transactions. Absent fraud, accident or mistake, as stated by Judge GOODE in Anderson v. Meyer Bros. Drug Co., 149 Mo. App. 554, 573, 130 S. W. 829, 835: “It is trite law that a person is expected to learn what an instrument contains before he signs it, either by reading or having it read, or by having its contents stated by someone on whom he has a right to rely,
While the law affords every one reasonable protection against fraud, it does not go to the romantic length of establishing the relation of parent and child or guardian and ward between courts and adults capable of managing their affairs, in full possession of their faculties and unrestrained in action, and indemnify them when dealing at arm‘s length against the consequences of their own indolence, listless inattention or unwarranted credulity in the transaction of business аffairs. Under the authority of the Dryssen, Higgins, Brennecke, Hannah and Alford cases (to the effect, as between parties dealing at arm‘s length, a representation that a release is merely a receipt is not, standing alone, actionable fraud) and the Conklin case (to the effect that the courts will not protect those, who with full opportunity to do so, will not protect themselves), supra, defendant‘s demurrer should have been sustained. The most casual glance at the printed portions of the release or release-draft by one able to read would have disclosed the contract was one of release and settlement; and the case appears to be within the observation in Judd v. Walker, 215 Mo. 312, 337, 114 S. W. 979, 980: “If one voluntarily shuts his eyes when to open them is to see, such a one is guilty of an act of folly (in dealing at arm‘s length with another) to his own injury; and the affairs of men could not go on if courts were being called upon to rip up transactions of that sort.”
The foregoing obviates the necessity of discussing the other issues raised, including any legal duty resting upon one unable to read to give attention to the business he is about and transacting.
The judgment is reversed. Cooley, C., dubitante; Westhues, C., concurs.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by BOHLING, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
THE STATE v. JOHN F. WILLIAMSON, Appellant.—99 S. W. (2d) 76.
Division Two, November 17, 1936.
