71 S.E. 310 | N.C. | 1911
This action was brought to recover damages for an injury received by plaintiff, who was employed by the Southern Railway Company as a switchman, while moving a car of coal along a side track laid on defendant's premises for its accommodation. The particular allegation is that the plaintiff was required to mount the car while in motion in order to perform his duties, and that in (298) doing so he was caught between the side of the moving car and a pile of tan bark which had been placed so near the track as to endanger the employees of the railway company when moving cars on the siding. Plaintiff did not know the bark was there at the time he was hurt. He alleges that he was injured by the negligence of the defendant, though the facts stated in the complaint are also sufficient to show a case of negligence against the railway company as well, or, in other words, that the injury resulted from the joint negligence of the two companies.
It appears that at February Term, 1909, which was the return term, judgment by default and inquiry was entered, but after an order had been made extending the time to file answers due at that term for thirty days after the final adjournment of the court. The judgment was handed to the judge and signed by him without any notice to defendant or its counsel of the same, and the latter relied upon the order of the court extending the time for filing answers, and therefore made no inquiry as to the order, as they were ignorant that one had been made. Defendant's counsel, as soon as they were notified of the judgment, moved to set it aside upon the ground that the court had no power to make it without notice to defendant; and, secondly, because of excusable neglect. The judge set aside the judgment, and, we think, very properly. It should not have been applied for or entered without notice. It was competent for the court to have excepted this or any other case from the general order, but, having made a general order, counsel could not be expected to anticipate that it would be violated in this way, or that judgment would be entered without notice to them. The rendition of the judgment was not even announced in open court, but the *244
judgment was merely delivered to the judge and signed by him. Calling out the defendant, when his counsel did not hear the call, is not sufficient to withdraw the protection of the law from him. Such a thing was not looked for. One of defendant's counsel was in court, but did not know of the judgment and was not called upon to take notice of it under the circumstances. If there was any neglect (299) at all, and we think there was not, it was certainly excusable. Branch v. Walker,
At the trial the defendant relied on a release given by the plaintiff to the Southern Railway Company. The execution and validity of the release were admitted, and thereupon the court, on motion of the defendant, dismissed the action, and plaintiff appealed.
There was no error in the judgment. With reference to the plaintiff, the defendant and the railway company were joint tort feasors, and, besides, the evidence shows that they jointly participated in the wrong and were codelinquents. Even if the tort of the railway company was one growing out of contract for the plaintiff's services, the rule that the release of one tort feasor will discharge the other will nevertheless apply. Whether the plaintiff had sued in tort, or had waived the tort and sued on the contract, if he could do so, can make no difference. He has received what he regarded as full compensation for his injury, and the law will not give him more than he said was enough, 300) whatever may be the technical form of the action he might have *245
brought against the railway company. Hale on Torts, 195, 196; Eastmanv. Grant,
We have had occasion to consider this rule, as to the effect of a release, at the present term. Howard v. Plumbing Co.,
Cooley, J., on Torts, relying on many English and American authorities, thus states the rule: "It is to be observed in respect to the point above considered, where the bar accrues in favor of some of the wrong-doers by reason of what has been received from or done in respect to one or more others, that the bar arises, not from any particular form that the proceeding assumes, but from the fact that the injured party has actually received satisfaction, or what in law is deemed the equivalent. Therefore, if he accepts the satisfaction voluntarily made by one, that is a bar to all. And so a release of one releases (301) all, although the release expressly stipulates that the other defendants shall not be released. And this rule is held to apply, even though the one released was not in fact liable. It does not lie in the mouth of such plaintiff to say that he had no cause of action against one who paid him for his injuries, for the law presumes that the one who paid committed the trespass and occasioned the whole injury." 1 Cooley on Torts (3 Ed.), 234 et seq. While separate suits may be brought against the wrongdoers, the plaintiff having the right of election as to whether he will sue them separately or jointly, the liabilities *246
being joint and several, and while there may be recovery against each there can be but one satisfaction. It is immaterial whether the satisfaction is obtained by judgment and final process in execution of it, or by amicable adjustment without any litigation of the claim for damages. The essential thing is satisfaction. Hale on Torts, 195. The wronged party may elect whom he will sue or de melioribus damnis, but the full payment of one judgment satisfies the cause of action, for it is the same cause against all the tort feasors, so far as he is concerned. Hale on Torts, 192; Babcock v. Pioneer Iron Works, 43 Fed., 336. Coke (sec. 376) thus states the principle, as laid down by Littleton, in his quaint language: "Also if two men doe trespass to another, who releases to one of them by his deeds all actions personalls, and notwithstanding sueth an action of trespasse against the other, the defendant may well shew that the trespass was done by him, and by another, his fellow, and that the plaintife by his deed (which he sheweth forth) released to his fellow all actions personalls, and demand the judgment (in his favor) and yet such deed belongeth to his fellow, and not to him. But because hee may have advantage by the deed, if he will shew the deed to the court, he may well plead this." Coke, in commenting on this passage, says: "If two men doe trespass to another, etc. Here by this section it is to be understood that when divers doe a trespass, the same is joynt or severall at the will of him to whom the wrong is done, yet if he release to one of them, all are discharged, because his own deed shall be taken most strongly against himself, but otherwise it is in case of appeals of death, etc. As if two men bee joyntly (302) and severally bounden in an obligation, if the obligee release to one of them, both are discharged; and seeing the trespassers are parties and privies in wrong, the one shall not plead a release to the other without shewing of it forth, albeit the deeds appertaine to the other." Referring to Cocke's statement, it is said in Babcock v.Pioneer Iron Works, supra: "This seems to be good law to this day. 2 Greenl. Ev., sec. 30; Eastman v. Grant,
The case was ably and learnedly argued, with well-prepared briefs, but upon a review of it, in the light of the facts it discloses and the law, as we understand it, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover and the judge was right in so directing.
Affirmed.
Cited: Gaylord v. Berry,