Barrett v. Lewiston, Brunswick & Bath Street Railway Co.

72 A. 308, 104 Me. 479, 1908 Me. LEXIS 96
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 4, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 72 A. 308 (Barrett v. Lewiston, Brunswick & Bath Street Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barrett v. Lewiston, Brunswick & Bath Street Railway Co., 72 A. 308, 104 Me. 479, 1908 Me. LEXIS 96 (Me. 1908).

Opinion

Whitehouse, J.

On the eleventh day of October, 1906, the plaintiff, a farmer living in the town of Topsham, was a passenger on the defendant’s street railway car and by reason of a derailment of the rear wheels at a curve in the road north of the short bridge across the river, the body of the car came in collision with the iron truss of the bridge, and the right leg of the plaintiff, who was standing on the running board, was caught between the car and the bridge and both bones of the leg fractured near the ankle.

The plaintiff was immediately taken in a team to the office of Dr. Palmer in Brunswick, where the fractures were temporarily adjusted and the leg dressed by Dr. Palmer with the assistance of Dr Elliot. Subsequently on the same day, he was removed to the Sisters of Charity Hospital at Lewiston, where he remained until sometime in February, 1907. By reason of the injury to the muscles and blood vessels of the leg, it was the judgment of Dr. Russell in charge of the hospital from the time he saw the plaintiff on the twelfth day of [482]*482October, 1906, that amputation would be necessary, but the plaintiff would not consent to it until November 21, when the leg was amputated between the knee and the ankle, and the plaintiff says he remembers "how mad” he was with the doctor for amputating it then. But the improvement hoped for and expected was not realized and on the 29th day of January following, a second amputation was made above the knee. Thereupon satisfactory progress towards recovery was observable and the plaintiff was able to leave the hospital and go to his home in about three weeks from that time.

The liability of the defendant company for the damages resulting to the plaintiff from this injury was not contested and on the 27th day of October, 1906, twenty-five days before the first amputation, a settlement of the plaintiff’s claim was effected by means of a personal interview between the plaintiff and Mr. Farr, the manager of the Railway Company, and a release under seal was executed by the plaintiff and delivered to the defendant in consideration of the payment to him of $500 in cash and the assumption by the company of all hospital expenses and surgeons bills. ,

The execution of this release on the part of the plaintiff and the payment by the defendant of the full consideration above specified, were not controverted by the plaintiff but the settlement was repudiated by him and its validity denied on the ground that as a result of the injury he was in such a feeble condition of body and mind at the time of the- alleged settlement that he "had neither the memory or the power.of connected thought, nor the will to make a legal contract.”

At the trial of this action brought by the plaintiff to enforce his claim for damages, the jury returned a special finding that at the time the plaintiff signed the written release he did not have "sufficient mental capacity to understand that he had a claim against the railway company for compensation for the injury to his leg, and that by accepting the $500 and signing the release he was discharging the company from that claim.” A general verdict was accordingly returned in favor of the plaintiff with damages assessed at [483]*483$1012.50. The case comes to the Law Court on a motion to set aside this verdict as against the evidence relating to the validity of the settlement.

With respect to the plaintiff’s knowledge of his condition at the time of the execution of the release, Dr. Russell states that he had advised amputation from the beginning; that it was evident for three or four weeks that the plaintiff must lose his leg and that he so informed him before the settlement was made.

In regard to the circumstances leading to the negotiations for a settlement and the conditions under which the settlement was made, it appears from the testimony of Mr. Farr and Dr. Palmer that the plaintiff had expressed a desire to make a settlement with the company without the intervention of a lawyer and a willingness to negotiate with any representative of the company for that purpose and Dr. Russell testifies as follows in relation to that interview:

"Mr. Barrett was moved in the private room and Mr. Farr was in with him a certain length of time, I don’t know how long; but after a time Mr. Farr sent for me and asked me if I wouldn’t come in and witness Mr. Barrett’s signature, as he had settled with him, and I did so. I asked Mr. Barrett if he was satisfied with the trade that he had made. I knew nothing of what he had got at that time, and he'says, "I am.” "Well, now,” I says, "do you know if you lose your leg, or whatever comes up, that you wont get any more out of this if you sign this paper?” and he says, "I do, Mr. Farr has used me all right, and I am satisfied.” I then asked him if he had read the paper he was going to sign. He said he hadn’t, and I took the paper and read it to him, and asked him if he was satisfied to sign that paper, knowing that he would get nothing more. He said he was. He signed it and I witnessed it.”

Dr. Russell further testifies that he saw the plaintiff every day from October 12 until October 31; that on the morning of October 27 when the settlement was made, the plaintiff’s temperature and pulse were normal and that he saw nothing in his appearance to indicate that he did not perfectly understand the contract or release which he read to him. He states that subsequently there were times when he had sepsis or blood poisoning caused by the absorp[484]*484tion of pus, and in order to relieve his suffering at such times it was necessary to give him morphia which "made him wandering a good deal,” but that it was proved by the hospital chart kept in his case that this condition did not exist until November 1, and that on the morning of October 27 his mind was clear.

Dr. Palmer continued to visit the plaintiff after he took him to the hospital and saw him there four times before the settlement of October 27, and seven times after that time. He states that there was nothing in' the plaintiff’s physical condition or in the injuries from which he was suffering on October 27, which would indicate any impairment or weakening of his mental processes. He further testifies to a conversation with the plaintiff in relation to the settlement as follows:

"I came up from Brunswick to see him, and I hadn’t talked with him but a few moments when he said, "Doctor, I have settled with the Road,” and seemed pleased about it, and I asked him, or set , out to ask him, what he got, and there were patients all around in the ward and I thought perhaps he wouldn’t want to talk before them, and I set down some figures on a piece of paper and asked him if he got that, and he said "No.” I judged from the way he talked that after I set down the figures he thought I was disappointed, and he said, "Doctor, you don’t know how bad I wanted this money.” He said, "I had some notes coming due at the bank, and,” he says, "I wanted the money.” I says, "Are you satisfied?” He says, "Perfectly satisfied.” I remember very clearly the making of this remark : He says, "I have got the money and I am going to keep the leg.”

Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 A. 308, 104 Me. 479, 1908 Me. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrett-v-lewiston-brunswick-bath-street-railway-co-me-1908.