35 A.D. 334 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
The plaintiff was injured in a collision between a ear of the railroad company and a cart of the ice company. For that injury he brought an action against both companies. While the action was pending the attorneys for the plaintiff and the defendant, the ice company, entered into the following stipulation :
“ It is hereby stipulated and agreed by and between the attorney for the plaintiff and the attorneys for the defendant Consolidated Ice Company, that if the plaintiff recovers a judgment herein against both the Brooklyn Heights Railroad Company and the Consolidated Ice Company, he will not enforce the same against the Consolidated Ice Company, but solely against the Brooklyn Heights Railroad Company, and will deliver a satisfaction piece to the Consolidated Ice Company upon the collection of the amount of the judgment from the other defendant, and will upon demand at any time sign a consent for the cancellation of the lien of any such judgment as to any real property of the Consolidated Ice Company, and in consideration thereof the attorneys for the defendant, the Consolidated Ice Company, stipulate and agree that if the complaint is dismissed as to the said ice company, or. if a verdict is rendered in its favor, that they in either of said events will not enforce the judgment which they may obtain thereon for costs against the plaintiff herein.”
A release of one of several joint tort feasors will discharge all, but to effect this result the instrument must be a technical release under seal. (Irvine v. Millbank, 56 N. Y. 635; Morgan v. Smith, 70 id. 537.) The appellant contends that the plaintiff could not do-indirectly what he could not do directly. The reverse of this proposition is true. The plaintiff may practically discharge one of several joint tort feasors without losing his claim against the others, if he does it in the right way. (Miller v. Fenton, 11 Paige, 18 Pond v. Williams, 1 Gray, 630.) The rule that a release under seal conclusively establishes satisfaction of the claim is entirely technical, and technicality has been employed to avoid the effect of the rule; hence, we have covenants not to sue, etc., which do not operate as releases except in favor of the party to whom they are given.
Though the plaintiff might recover and collect his full damages from either party, he can have hut one satisfaction, and a satisfaction by one tort feasor discharges the rest. The plaintiff’s claim in this case being unliquidated, any sum received in settlement would operate as a satisfaction. This is the ground on which the decision in Mitchell v. Allen (25 Hun, 543) proceeded. But there has been no satisfaction in this case. The plaintiff received no consideration for his agreement except the agreement of the defendant ice company, in case of success on its part, not to collect costs from the plaintiff. This was in no sense a payment in satisfaction of the plaintiff’s claim. In fact the stipulation in this case is not an absolute agreement to refrain from prosecuting the ice company. If the verdict had been in favor of the railroad company and against the ice company, under the stipulation the plaintiff would have had the right' to collect the full amount of the judgment from the latter company. In Barrett v. The Third Avenue R. R. Co. (45 N. Y. 628) the plaintiff discontinued the action as against one of the defendants and received the costs as a condition for discontinuing.
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
All concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.