204 N.Y. 58 | NY | 1912
Lead Opinion
This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries, and it presents two questions upon which there has thus far been some difference of judicial opinion. The first question is whether the plaintiff should be precluded from maintaining this action because he compromised or settled another suit which he brought against the Erie Eailroad Company on account of the same accident. The second question is whether the trial court made erroneous rulings in admitting evidence designed to establish the plaintiff’s earning capacity prior to the casualty in which he was injured. All the other questions which have arisen in the case are .either conclusively disposed of by the unanimous affirmance, at the Appellate Division, of the judgment entered upon the verdict, or by rulings which, although reviewable in this court, present no errors which in our opinion would justify the reversal of the judgment. A brief statement of the facts will disclose the pertinence of the two questions which survive for our consideration.
On the 30th day of May, 1907, the plaintiff was injured on the tracks of the defendant at Suspension Bridge by a car belonging to the Erie Eailroad Company, which was part of an Erie train that was being moved on what was known as the Erie transfer track. There were seven of these tracks, and all were the property of the defendant. By an arrangement between the two corporations, the Erie Eailroad Company used the seventh or most southerly track for the transfer of cars. To the north of all these tracks was the station of the defendant, and several hundred feet south of the tracks and running parallel therewith there was a street known as North avenue. From this street, over a rough piece of land belonging to the defendant, there were two well-defined paths which
On the day of the accident the plaintiff, who was then a resident of Niagara Falls, had been in Buffalo and returned to Niagara Falls on one of the defendant’s trains which arrived at some time between ten and eleven o’clock in the evening. He alighted at the Suspension Bridge station, not on the northerly side of the train looking toward the station, hut on the southerly side which led to the stretch of seven tracks. These he proceeded to cross toward the easterly one of the two paths above described. This was blocked by an Erie train, the rear car of which was about opposite the path. The plaintiff started to walk around this car, and it was while attempting to do this that the car was suddenly shunted against him and caused' the injuries of which he complains.
After the accident the plaintiff brought an action against the Erie Eailroad Company, which was later settled by the payment to the plaintiff of the sum of $7,000. Then this action was brought upon a complaint in the usual form, and in the answer thereto the defendant alleged that “ the plaintiff for a good and valuable consideration equaling or exceeding in value and amount all the damage and injury suffered or alleged to have been suffered by the plaintiff as set forth in the complaint, to him in hand paid by the Erie Eailroad Company, released and forever discharged both said Erie Eailroad Company
At the trial the plaintiff testified, on the direct examination, that he had settled the action against the Erie Eailroad Company and had received from it at the time of the settlement the sum of $7,000. He was shown a paper which he admitted having signed and identified it as “ the paper of settlement.” On the cross-examination of the plaintiff he reiterated what he had testified to concerning the settlement with the Erie Eailroad Company, and also admitted that in the action against that company he had sworn to a complaint in which he had alleged “that said occurrence and injury,” referring to the same occurrence and injury involved in this action, “were due solely to the carelessness and negligence of the defendant,” the Erie Eailroad Company. At the close of the plaintiff’s case there was a motion for a nonsuit, and at the conclusion of all the evidence a motion for a direction of a verdict against the plaintiff on the ground, inter alia, that according to the plaintiff’s own evidence he had settled his case against one of the two parties who were charged as joint wrongdoers, and that this settlement was conclusive upon him in the case at bar. These motions were denied, and the exceptions to these rulings present the question: Did the plaintiff’s compromise of his cause of action against the Erie Eailroad Company operate to discharge the defendant, its joint tort feasor ?
It is elementary law that one who has been injured by the joint wrong of several parties may recover his damages against either or all; but although there may be several suits and recoveries, there can be but one satisfaction. (Livingston v. Bishop, 1 Johns. 290; Thomas v. Rumsey, 6 Johns. 26; Barrett v. Third Ave. R. R. Co., 45 N. Y. 628, 635.) The reason of the rule is that while there may be many perpetrators of a wrongful act, each of
Thus far we have proceeded upon the printed record which indicates no effort on the part of the plaintiff to offer in evidence the document which he had identified as being “the paper of settlement.” To this we are now permitted to make an addendum which, we think, conclusively disposes of this question. In the course of the oral argument the plaintiff’s counsel, when pressed with the suggestion from the bench that his client should be bound by the admission that he had settled with the Erie Eailroad Company, replied that he had in court the original stenographer’s minutes of the trial, which showed that the so-called “paper of settlement” had been offered in evidence by him arid that it was objected to by counsel for the defendant, whereupon it had been withdrawn. Counsel for the defendant who argued this appeal consented that these minutes might be taken by the court as part of the record. These minutes fully sustain the statement of plaintiff’s counsel. Thus we have a case in which the plaintiff’s offer to prove by documentary evidence the exact terms of the settlement with the Erie Eailroad Company was met by the objection of the defendant, which is now in court contending that because there was no definite proof of the terms of the arrangement with the Erie Eailroad Company, the plaintiff’s unexplained use of the word “settled” raises against him the legal presumption that he released and discharged the defendant. We have tried to make it clear that even without this addition to the record there would be no warrant for the presumption that the plaintiff’s use of the word “ settled” imported a strict release discharging both the Erie Eailroad Company and the defendant. Much less should we indulge in such a presumption in the face of
It is further urged that the plaintiff’s admission as to the allegation of his complaint in the action against the Erie Bailroad Company to the effect that the accident which caused the plaintiff’s injuries was due solely to the negligence of the Erie Bailroad Company should now preclude a recovery against the defendant. That evidence was, of course, competent as an admission, but it was nothing more, and was not conclusive. It was an admission, moreover, which was open to the explanation that it had no reference to this defendant’s connection with the accident, for it was merely the usual allegation in a complaint charging a defendant with negligence and asserting the plaintiff’s freedom from contributory negligence. The defendant asked for no instructions to the jury relative to this feature of the trial, and we do not find any exception which presents the question.
The other question which we are called upon to consider is whether the trial court erred in receiving, over defendant’s objections, evidence tending to show the plaintiff’s earning capacity prior to the accident. Upon this branch of the case the record is peculiar. On his direct examination the plaintiff testified that he was hi the business of selling men’s furnishings in a store conducted by himself without the aid of clerks. He was asked what his services were worth in that business and he answered, “between $150 and $200 a month.” He stated in detail
It is conceded that in the case at bar the plaintiff’s own evidence is not so clear as it might have been had his counsel hewn more closely' to the line which separates earnings from profits. His own testimony upon this subject is far from satisfactory. It is so equivocal that it is difficult, if not impossible, to decide whether the loss to which he testified falls under one head or the other. And it may be added that the cross-examination did not dissipate this uncertainty. There aré two answers, however, to the criticism which may be made upon this part of the evidence: 1. It was supplemented by the testimony of a competent witness, who stated very clearly what the plaintiff’s earnings as earnings were worth. 2. Among the last words in the judge’s charge to the jury we find this instruction: “And if you come to the question of damages, you are not to take into consideration the profits of his retail store business.” Although this last question is not free from doubt, we are of the opinion that the defendant was not prejudiced by the rulings. The remarks of counsel during the taking of evidence on this subject, and the closing admonition of the trial judge, must have made it unmistakably clear to the jury that the value of plaintiff’s earnings might be included in any verdict which they should find in his favor, but that profits of his business must be excluded.
The judgment should, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). I dissent from the decision about to be made. It was unnecessary in this case to show that a release or any written instrument had
The real ground on which the case is to be affirmed, however, seems to be because it appears in the stenographer’s minutes, though not in the printed record, that the “paper” of settlement when offered in evidence by the plaintiff was objected to by counsel for the defendant and thereupon withdrawn. The instrument is not produced before us, and we are entirely ignorant of its contents, yet we are to speculate that the contents of the instrument would have been unfavorable to the defend
I also think the evidence offered to prove the value of the plaintiff’s services was incompetent and in violation of the rule we have laid down in the cases cited by my brother Werner. What the plaintiff should have been permitted to prove and only what he should have been allowed to prove was the fair and reasonable salary of a man employed to do his work. This was the rule declared in Masterton v. Village of Mount Vernon (58 N. Y. 391.) It is reiterated in Weir v. Union Ry. Co. (188 id. 416) and Gombert v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (195 id. 273), to wit: “ The compensation usually paid to persons doing such business for others.” Taking the view of the case most favorable to the respondent, what he was allowed to do was to fix most arbitrarily what part of his income he thought due to his services. Such a rule would open the door to evidence- which in the cases referred to has been condemned. A banker in the receipt of a very large income from his business might think, and not wholly without reason, that, after allowing interest on his capital at a very liberal rate, the remainder of his income was due to his exceptional ability. This is a very differ
Vann, Willard Bartlett and Chase, JJ., concur with Werner, J.; Gray and Haight, JJ., concur with Cullen, Ch. J.
Judgment affirmed.