99 S.W.2d 82 | Mo. | 1936
Lead Opinion
Action under the Federal Employers' Liability Act. On the former appeal [Poe v. Illinois Central Railroad Co.,
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, *1028 plaintiff was paid $850 and executed a release to defendant, which defendant pleaded in bar to plaintiff's action. Plaintiff's reply charged said release had been obtained through fraud practiced upon plaintiff by defendant's claim agent Mr. Purkhiser. If the release is valid, plaintiff's cause of action must fail. Defendant contends the evidence adduced did not make a submissible case of actionable fraud on the part of defendant in the procurement of the release in that (1) the misrepresentations attributed by plaintiff to defendant's agent, standing alone, are insufficient in law to constitute a fraud upon plaintiff and (2) plaintiff's testimony that he could not read, upon which he relies to justify his failure to inform himself of the contents of the writing, stands so thoroughly impeached in the record as to be of no probative value and constitutes no substantial evidence of the fact.
[1] As a preliminary 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.,
[2] 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 *1030 it reached East St. Louis; and Purkhiser said "Poe, we will get off at the Division office." They did this and plaintiff went in and talked to Mr. Bishop. Mr. Bishop left the room and then "Purkhiser came in all swelled up and he said: `Poe, what are you going to do?' and I said, `What do you mean, Mr. Purkhiser?' and he said, `I have got orders to settle this case or blow it up?' I asked him, `What do you mean, Mr. Purkhiser?' and he said, `I have got orders to settle this or cut you out of hospital service and throw you out of service.' I didn't exactly know then that when he said `settle the case,' he meant a final settlement; I thought that was what he meant. I said, `Mr. Purkhiser, I ain't able to settle with my leg, it is not well and I am still walking with a cane, I don't know when it will be well,' and he said, `I don't mean settlement on your leg for good, I mean your wages up to date under the compensation, and when your leg gets well, we will settle on your leg.' I didn't know what he meant by `wagesunder the compensation.' I did not ask any explanation and Ididn't tell him I didn't know what he meant. . . . It was on the 31st of January, 1930. . . . When he said, `Pay your wages under the compensation,' I didn't ask him any questions as to whatcompensation meant." Purkhiser and plaintiff made an appointment to meet the next morning in a lawyer's office and separated.
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, Ill. 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 *1031 it. He read about two or three words or something like that. . . . I don't know just what he read. He didn't read much of anything. He just picked up the paper and started to read it and he may not have read none of it . . . I don't know how many words he read. I couldn't recollect a single word." Upon plaintiff's request, one of the witnesses to plaintiff's execution of the release accompanied plaintiff to a bank for the purpose of identifying plaintiff that he might obtain some cash.
The release recites that the plaintiff had fully informed himself of its contents. However, plaintiff testified: "When Isigned the release nobody read it to me at all. I did not askanybody to read it to me. I did not ask anybody to explain it tome, 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 sheet 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 *1032 justifying the submission of the issue of fraud to the jury plaintiff relies on the Rau, Ensler, State ex rel. Brown, State ex rel. Union Pac. Railroad Co., and Laird cases, infra. Of the cases relied on by defendant, we shall mention only those deemed the more apropos.
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 of 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 sick to read.
In Dyrssen v. Union El. L. P. Co.,
In State ex rel. Brown v. Trimble,
In Higgins v. American Car Co.,
Ensler v. Missouri Pac. Railroad Co.,
In State ex rel. Union Pac. Railroad Co. v. Bland,
In Brennecke v. Ganahl Lbr. Co.,
Hannah v. Butts,
This court en banc in Conklin v. Missouri Pac. Railroad Co.,
In State ex rel. Missouri Pac. Railroad Co. v. Trimble,
In Alford v. Wabash Ry. Co.,
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 *1037 not and had not been for some time, if ever, suffering from any physical or mental handicap which caused him to be incapable of managing his affairs. There is nothing in this record that would apprise defendant at the time plaintiff executed the release that plaintiff was unable to read. Plaintiff did not inform defendant's agents he could not read. Unadvised of plaintiff's inability to read defendant had the right to indulge in the presumption plaintiff could read. Further, from plaintiff's signed written applications for employment, daily time records, acknowledgments of notices given employees, some reciting the signer had carefully read certain rules of defendant, and the four page statement of how plaintiff received his injuries, stating he had read the same, the only legitimate inference was defendant had knowledge at the time of the execution of the release plaintiff could read. To permit plaintiff to set aside the written release on the fact basis he could not read when he concealed his inability to read and gave apparent assurances he could read would have a tendency to smack of a fraud on defendant. Originally, a proceeding to set aside a release on the ground of fraud was in equity, and while the statute [Sec. 782, R.S. 1929, Mo. Stat. Ann., p. 1036] blended the equity and legal jurisdiction of the courts on such issue, the rules of law governing the rescission of contracts were not affected.
[3] 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 legal 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.,
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 affairs. 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,
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.
Addendum
The foregoing opinion by BOHLING, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.