Lead Opinion
Opinion by
Plaintiff, Robert Edmund Ralston, claimed damages, alleged to have been suffered by bim through injuries to his wife, due to the negligence of defendant company; he recovered a verdict for $2,000, upon which judgment was entered in his favor; defendant has appealed and asks judgment n. o. v.
A formal release, bearing the admitted signatures of both plaintiff and his wife, was proved; but he contended it was procured by fraud. The issue as to the alleged fraud was submitted to the jury and found against defendant; the question for determination concerns the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict.
We shall state the case according to plaintiff’s version ; but, at the same time, we note that, so far as the procurement of the release is concerned, most of the facts asserted by him are flatly denied by defendant.
Mrs. Ralston was injured, while a passenger upon one of defendant’s trolley cars; the following morning, her husband informed the transit company of the accident; a few hours later, one of the defendant’s claim agents called at the Ralston residence, and, in the presence of plaintiff, took a written'' statement from his wife, in which a claim was made against defendant “for the sum of $25,” to cover damages suffered by reason of the accident; when upon the stand, plaintiff more than once denied any such claim had been made, asserting he was “positive about that,” also saying he was “positive” the subject of a settlement was not even discussed at the time in question, or until the third visit of defendant’s agent. He likewise emphatically denied that his wife had signed any statement whatever concerning the accident; but, when shown the waiting to which we refer, containing his own signature as a witness, he retracted his former testimony, with the excuse that the matter
To set aside the release, plaintiff presented merely the testimony of himself and wife; and that given by the latter differs in several material respects from plaintiff’s own version — both as to the preliminary negotiations leading up to final settlement and what actually occurred at the execution of the release. It is not necessary to state in detail these differences, for the fact that they exist is the material circumstance to which we wish to call attention.
It appears plaintiff knew that the man, who procured the release, was a representative of defendant сompany, and that he cabled for the very purpose of negotiating a settlement. Subsequent testimony shows several other visits by defendant’s agent, culminating in the payment seven days after the accident of $20 — an amount midway between $15, originally offered by defendant, and $25, first claimed by plaintiff.
The release was executed by both Ralston and his wife, in the presence of defendant’s agent, and another, entirely disinterested, subscribing witness. The latter was not produced at trial, it being testified on plaintiff’s behalf that she was dead; although it appears, by an affidavit since filed, that such testimony is either false or mistaken, for the witness is still alive. This matter is discussed at length in our opinion disposing of the aрpeal in the case of Carrie Ralston, and need not be further referred to here.
Ralston and his wife both testified they executed the release without reading it, and in ignorance of its contents. So far as plaintiff is concerned, his only excuse for not reading or otherwise informing himself as to
The testimony which we have already recited — together with allegations that the paper was folded in such a way plaintiff could not observe its contents, that the agent told him it was a “receipt” for money paid to date, and he would return later and make other payments, to culminate in a final settlement — constitutes the evidence relied upon to set aside a somewhat lengthy, formally drawn, sealed release of damages, admittedly signed by a thoroughly literate and mentally capable man of affairs, after negotiations with one whom he knew to be an adjuster of claims representing the defendant company.
Each of the following cases, in one respect or another, is relevant to the one in hand; and, when considered together, as a line of authorities, the principles here applicable will appear therefrom.
Pa. R. R. Co. v. Shay,
Seeley v. Citizen’s Traction Co.,
Bruns v. Union Traction Co.,
Kane v. Chester Traction Co.,
In DeDouglas v. Union Traction Co.,
Ogden v. Phila. & West Chester Traction Co.,
Laird v. Union Traction Co.,
Hicks v. Harbison-Walker Co.,
Spritzer v. Pa. R. R. Co.,
Baranski v. Wilmsen,
While all said in the case last cited is not adopted, it is important for the definition we are about to give, and its application by Judge Bice. “When the terms clear, precise and indubitable, are used, in defining the requisite proof of a particular fact to be made out by oral testimony, it is meant that it shall be found that the witnesses are credible, that they distinctly remember the facts to which they testify, that they narrate the details exactly, and that their statements are true.” After this definition (which is approved by us in Lindemann v. Pittsburgh Rys. Co.,
The line of cases just reviewed furnishes ample authority for holding, as we do, that, under the evidence at bar, plaintiff’s claim should have been withdrawn from the jury by binding instructions for defendant.
Where a writing is executed by reason of misrepresentations as to its contents, the instrument is not the deed of the party who signed it (Green v. North Buffalo Township, 56 Pa. 110, 114); but, in order to set aside a solemn written instrument on this principle, the facts alleged for that purpose must be “definitely and distinctly established”: Burt v. Burt,
Here, the transcript of plaintiff’s evidence shows that he either deliberately falsified certain material facts or (in the words of Judge Rice in the case last cited) that he cast serious doubts upon “the distinctness of his recollection and the exactness of his statements.” Under these circumstances, the evidence was not of the standard required to justify its submission to the jury as sufficient warrant for setting aside a solemn written instrument. As said by Mr. Justice Green, in Wojciechowski v. Spreckels’ S. R. Co.,
To say the least, the testimony relied upon by plaintiff, to sustain his allegation of fraudulent procurement of the release, plainly shows either a confusion in Ms mind as to the real facts leading to the execution of the instrument or, if not that, then it discloses the case of a man, mentally capable and with business experience, dealing with another, whose character — as the representative of one against whom he had a claim — was fully known to him, and with whom for several days he had been in negotiation for settlement, signing a release (which he had an opportunity to read, had he seen fit
The following cases, relied upon by plaintiff, where releases have been set aside, are all distinguishable from the one at bar; but, as will be observed, even some of these fully recognize the principles which we have applied in determining that defendant is entitled to judgment in its favor.
Ettinger v. Jones,
Gibson v. W. N. Y. & Pa. R. R. Co.,
Julius v. P., A. & M. Traction Co.,
Clayton v. Consolidated Traction Co.,
In McCaw v. Union Traction Co.,
Gordon v. Great A. & P. Tea Co.,
Lindemann v. Pittsburgh Rys. Co.,
In Hogarth v. Grundy,
Vanormer v. Osborn Machine Co.,
We have reviewed the cases cited to us by counsel on both sides, and believe they comprehend all recent rulings on the subject in hand; we shall now refer to the latest relevant authority. In Palkovitz v. American Sheet & Tin Plate Co.,
Of course, every slight departure or variation in testimony, depended upon to set aside a written instrument on the ground of fraud, will not condemn the proofs as insufficient; but, in the present instance, as already pointed out, the evidence clearly fails to measure up to the required legal standard, which, as hereinbefore shown, is that in such cases the proofs must be clear, precise and indubitable. The first mentioned requirements mean that the witnesses must be credible, distinctly remember the facts to which they testify and narrate the details exactly (Lindemann v. Pittsburgh Eys. Co., supra); and, to the extent we are at present concerned with the last requirement — that the statement of the witnesses must be indubitable, or true (that is, so far as we are concerned with its application to the preliminary consideration of the evidence by the court, to judge of its sufficiency to go to the jury) — it simply meаns that, disregarding counter-attacks on plaintiff’s proofs, they must have the appearance of truth, at least to the extent of being free from manifest inconsistencies, or marks of inherent unreliability. Unfortunately for plaintiff, this cannot be said of the testimony upon which he depends, and the court below erred in law when it refused so to hold.
The assignments of error are sustained, the judgment in favor of plaintiff, Robert Edmund Ralston, is reversed, and, so far as his claim is concerned, judgment is here entered for defendant.
Concurrence Opinion
Concurring Opinion by
If I correctly apprehend the opinion of the majority, its analysis of our prior cases results in the establishment of the following principles as applicable herеin and hereafter: Where a plaintiff asks a jury to disregard a release executed by him, and the essential facts in
While expressions can be found in our prior decisions, which, if dissevered from their context or because of undue emphasis being placed thereupon, would seem to point to an opposite conclusion from that reached in the careful analytical opinion of the majority, yеt taken as a whole those prior opinions compel the conclusion stated above; and as they were reached in cases in all essential respects similar to the present, stare decisis requires me
When a man is injured in an accident, particulаrly if it be by a carrier, there is not infrequently a race to his bedside, the contestants being the ubiquitous and intrusive claim adjuster of the defendant and the equally ubiquitous and intrusive runner of the ambulance chaser. In many such cases the injured party is led to believe he is or will be without means to pay expensive doctors’ bills or prosecute still more expensive litigation ; and neither he nor the members of his immediate family then know the extent of the injury, or are in a mental condition to enable them accurately to weigh the suggestions made or to appreciate the selfishness of the intruder, and hence are easily misled into signing papers which are their undoing. Releases thus obtainеd are generally for grossly inadequate sums, and agreements to have the ambulance chaser prosecute a suit to recover damages for the injury, are usually so drawn as to irrevocably give him inordinate contingent fees, and to leave the parties who sign them liable to other litigation if they settle with the defendant. The claim adjuster minimizes the injury, and out of a boundless ignorance does not hesitate to assert positively that under no circumstances can damages be recovered, and the runner out of a like ignorance with equal positiveness asserts that a recovery is certain if his ambulance chaser is employed; each specifies cases wherein his judgment has been proved sound, and at times neither hesitates to so state his case as to convey the impression that no small measure of his success grows out of his influence with the courts. By flattery, persuasion and well expressed though
