Thе question as to whether or not the release set up by appellant was a valid contract, and therefore binding on the appellee, was a question for the jury under the evidence, and this question was submitted under proper instructions. At least, no objection is raised here to the instructions, and wе therefore treat them as correct. Appellant only insists here that there was no evidenсe to support the finding that the release was not a binding contract. There was evidence tеnding to show that the appellee at the time he signed the release did not have sufficient mentаl capacity, on account of his physical injuries and sufferings and the effect produced by these and the whisky he had taken, to understand and appreciate the contents of the paрer which he signed. The circumstances under which appellee signed the purported release would justify a finding by the jury that an unfair advantage was taken of appellee, and that the procuring of his signature under the circumstances was a fraud which would vitiate the contract.
The rule is to scrutinizе releases of this kind with great care. What was said by Chief Justice Dunbar in Penderson v. Seattle Consolidated St. Ry. Co.,
The plaintiff himself, in giving an account of his condition and surroundings, said:
“I was sitting bn the third seat from the back in the colored coach when it happened. It happened like a clap of thunder, all at once. Everybody was gone. It covered every body up, and cut my legs. They were dead. I could not move. I fainted, and did not know anything for quite a while; thought once I was dead, and passed into another world. I could see nо one, but sat there, with my mind going and coming, suffering with pain in my legs. The skin was peeled off, like one scalded with hot water. I did not know whére I was until 3 o’clock in the morning; sta3>-ed in the coach where I had been removed. Whisky was given to us three times before I signed the paper. The whisky flew to my head, and I did not have a goоd mind, and did not have for four days. I suffered great pain. My legs were cut and bleeding then, and other people were in the car suffering, moaning, howling; some with broken legs, broken arms, broken thighs, and some killed. The whole thing was a regular moaning. The car doors were locked while they were in there paying off. Nоbody in there except the wounded.”
There was other evidence tending to corroborate appellee as to the conditions prevailing when the release was obtained.
In Chicago, R. I. & P. Co. v. Lewis,
Money paid to a party as a consideration for a release dоes not have to be tendered or refunded, to enable such party to bring and maintain his suit, where it is shown thаt at the time the money was paid him and the release was executed he was incapable of making a contract, and that by fraud and circumvention or imposition he was induced to sign a paper of whose contents and character he was ignorant. C., R. I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Lewis, 109 Ill supra.
This is not like the cases of Harkey v. Ins. Co.,
Affirm.
