Opinion by
Plaintiff, Carrie Ralston, the wife of Robert Edmund Ralston, brought suit against the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co., alleging negligence, leading to her injury, while a passenger upon one of its cars; she recovered a verdict for $3,000, upon which judgment was entered, and defendant has appealed.
The assignments of error raise but one controlling-question, and that concerns the sufficiency of the evidence relied upon by plaintiff to set aside a written release of damages, which she executed, upon receipt of $20, seven days after the accident.
We have decided, in the case of Robert Edmund Ralston, which is likewise before us on appeal, that, so far as his claim is concerned, the evidence is insufficient to
To begin with, according to the testimony relied upon by Mrs. Ralston, the negotiations leading up to the release were carried on by Mr. Ralston, not by her. Next, at the time of the actual execution of the paper, plaintiff said she was ill in bed, as a result of the accident, and Avrote her signature, where designated by her husband, when the paper was so folded she could not see its contents ; finally, that she was informed the document was a simple receipt for money, and had no idea it was a release.
The material facts of plaintiff’s testimony are denied; but, accepting her story as true, defendant contends that, she having stood silent, the husband ought to be considered, under the circumstances, as her agent, and the wife held bound by his acts, as well as her own. We cannot adopt this theory — it would be too apt to prove destructive of the family relationship, which the law always sedulously guards: Paul v. Kunz,
Although plaintiff’s testimony is strongly suggestive of a tutored effort to bring the facts relied upon to overcome the release within certain of the authorities reviewed in our opinion on the companion appeal of Robert Edmund Ralston’s judgment, yet we are not convinced that, under the relevant rules of law, her case could properly have been withdrawn from the jury; but, for reasons we are now about to state, the judgment in Mrs. Ralston’s favor will not be affirmed.
The release in question was executed in the presence of a claim agent of defendant company, and another, entirely disinterested, witness — Mrs. Louise Beckman. At
The jury awarded the present plaintiff $3,000 and her husband $2,000 damages. The court below directed a new trial, “unless plaintiff, Carrie Ralston, within ten days files a stipulation that she will accept in full satisfaction of her claim the sum of $2,000, and plaintiff, Robert Edmund Ralston, within ten days, files a stipulation that he will accept in full satisfaction of his claim the sum of $1,000, to be paid (or security, to be approved by the court, to pay the same, to be given) within thirty days, after notice of the filing of said stipulation” ; to this is added the following provision: “If said stipulation is filed, and payment of said amount, with interest from the date of trial and costs, is not made or secured as aforesaid within said thirty days, then judgment to be entered on the verdict as rendered.”
Defendant declined to avail itself of remittiturs, reducing the verdicts in accordance with the above quoted
Fleming v. Dixon,
The course pursued by,the court below, in disposing of the motion for a new trial, has been sustained, both by us and the Superior Court, in other instances — less appropriate to such relief than the case just reviewed— (Wirsing v. Smith,
Orders going to the length of the final provision contained in the one at bar should be used only where the peculiar facts involved furnish a special warrant therefor, as illustrated by Fleming v. Dixon, supra; because the practice pursued has been sustained in other in
The right and duty of the trial court, under proper conditions, to cut down a verdict or direct a new trial, is now well established; but when that course is followed in a case like the one at bar, the order of reduction is equivalent to a certificate that the original verdict is “excessive in amount and clearly beyond what the evidence warrants”: Hollinger v. York Rys. Co.,
As precedents for the disposition we are about to make of this case, see Simons v. P. & R. Ry. Co.,
The record is remitted with permission to the court below to consider the after-discovered evidence, and with directions to enter such order or judgment as law and right require.
