239 N.W. 223 | Minn. | 1931
Defendant is a physician and surgeon who treated plaintiff for injuries sustained by her in a sidewalk accident in Minneapolis, April 5, 1928. He is charged with malpractice for which plaintiff asks damage. In addition to the general issue, defendant by answer pleaded a general release by plaintiff of the city of Minneapolis and certain other alleged joint tortfeasors whom plaintiff had first sued for the damages resulting from the accident. By reply plaintiff admitted the settlement and dismissal of that action and her general release of the defendants therein. Her allegations attempting to restrict the operation of her settlement and release to the defendants in the first action and to exclude the present defendant were stricken as mere conclusions of law and frivolous. Judgment for defendant was ordered because it was considered that plaintiff's general release of those originally responsible for her injury operated as matter of law to release defendant also from liability for any aggravation of plaintiff's condition caused by his negligent treatment of her, if such there was.
1. For plaintiff it is conceded, necessarily, that an injured party who has accepted satisfaction, "from whatever source it may come," cannot recover again for the same injury. Hartigan v. Dickson,
The law is rather definitely settled to the contrary. Goss v. Goss,
"The general rule given by the trial court was correct; for, where one person is injured by the wrong or negligence of another, and he himself is not negligent in the selection of a medical attendant, the wrongdoer is liable for all the proximate results of his own act, although the consequences of the injury would have been less serious than they proved to be if the attendant had exercised proper professional skill and care." The "general rule" so stated was reaffirmed and followed in Fields v. Mankato E. T. Co.
2. The rule thus so well established prevents our adoption of the argument for plaintiff that in such a case as this "the release is not conclusive when stated in general terms, but subject to reply and explanation," and open to proof that the aggravation of the damage caused by the malpractice of the attending physician, if any, was not intended to be included, and so the release is not a bar to an action against him. The release, under the applicable law, plainly discharged whatever right of action plaintiff, as releasor, had on *488
account of all damage for which the releasees were liable. That, as we have seen, included any aggravation of the injury caused by the negligence or malpractice of the attending physician. That ends the matter, and there is now no remaining cause of action against the latter. Moreover, plaintiff could not by parol evidence so limit the effect of her release as to retain a cause of action against defendant. Martin v. Setter,
Plaintiff's general release operated not only in personam on the releasees and their liability, but also in rem on the releasor's cause of action. The decisive thing now is not whether plaintiff actually released this defendant, or intended to do so, or got full compensation, but rather and only whether she has discharged her whole cause of action. That she did so is plain. The destruction of it is the primary result from which follows necessarily the secondary one of releasing all the wrongdoers, whether their wrongs were concurrent or successive. The entire cause of action being gone, no one can remain liable. It has been so ruled in Edmondson v. Hancock,
The only case cited to the contrary is Wheat v. Carter,
We appreciate the difficulties of the situation and that injustice may sometimes result from the present rule. But nevertheless we do not feel at liberty to hold that it is otherwise than as we have stated it. While individuals are not always charged with knowledge of the law, they cannot escape the necessary legal effect of their acts. If the instrument be in fact a release, it discharges all parties liable for the injury. If in such a case as this it is desired to come to an accommodation with the original wrongdoer, saving to the injured person a cause of action, if any, against the attending physician or surgeon, it may be done by the use of a covenant not to sue. Musolf v. Duluth E. E. Co.
Pederson v. Eppard,
Judgment affirmed. *490