Chaplin v. Gerald

71 A. 712, 104 Me. 187, 1908 Me. LEXIS 56
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 29, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 71 A. 712 (Chaplin v. Gerald) 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
Chaplin v. Gerald, 71 A. 712, 104 Me. 187, 1908 Me. LEXIS 56 (Me. 1908).

Opinion

King, J.

This cause is before the court on defendants’ motion to set aside a verdict against them of $6944.19 rendered in an action- of assumpsit for breach of an alleged oral contract to furnish the plaintiff employment at sixty-five dollars per month so long as he could work.

July 23rd, 1902, the plaintiff sustained the loss of his right foot in a collision between two cars on the defendants’ railway one of which he was operating as motorman. No action for damages was brought for his injuries, but on the 9th of February 1903, he met the defendants in Waterville at the office of Mr. Davis, where he received from them $1000, and the following contract or agreement was executed in duplicate :

"In consideration of the sum of one thousand dollars ($1000) to me in hand paid, the receipt whereof I herewith acknowledge, I, John Chaplin, of Topsham, Maine, for myself, my heirs and assigns [190]*190do hereby release Amos F. Gerald, E. J. Lawrence, A. B. Page, S. A. Nye, Henry M. Soule and Cyrus W. Davis, associates, and also the Portland & Brunswick Street Railway, from any claim by me of any name or nature in the past or at the present time, or that may arise in the future : by reason of the accident occurring on the line of the Portland & Brunswick Street Railway during the summer of 1902, at or near Mallet’s Gulley, so called, in Freeport, Maine, in which accident I sustained the loss of my right foot; and in consideration of the above payment Amos F. Gerald, for the associates, Cryus W. Davis, Treasurer, Portland & Brunswick Street Railway, and John Chaplin for myself, my heirs and assigns, agree together by our signatures herewith affixed that the above settlement shall be final and conclusive. Made in duplicate this ninth day of February A. D. 1903.
A. F. Gerald (Seal)
Portland & Brunswick Street Railway
by Cyrus W. Davis (Seal)
John Chaplin (Seal) ”

In his action the plaintiff alleges that at the time the above release was executed the defendants "promised him that if he would sign a certain acknowledgment of satisfaction, and accept the sum of one thousand dollars in .money, they, on their part, would pay him one thousand dollars and give him employment at sixty-five dollars per month as long as he could workthat afterwards he did "enter the employ of the defendants at their car barn and power house at Freeport, Maine, and continued in their employ in a faithful attempt to perform his duties for them until the second day of March 1904,” when he was wrongfully dismissed. The writ is dated September 9, 1905.

The defendants contended that no such oral agreement was made, that the plaintiff became so inefficient, remiss and negligent in his work that his discharge was justifiable, but that in fact he secured a position elsewhere and left their employ without being discharged.

[191]*191The testimony of the plaintiff in support of the alleged oral agreement is contained in his answer to the following question :

Q. Now, what other consideration other than that contained in the writing, was offered you at that time ?
A. Mr. Davis had a clerk read that paper to me and then passed it to me and asked me if I would sign it. I says, "I don’t hardly think I can. It don’t look to me as if there was anything after the bills were paid.” He says, "Look here, we are going to employ you ; we are going to make a further agreement from that paper and give you a chance to work in the Freeport car-barn and give you $65 a month, same as you were getting when you were hurt, and give you employment as long as you are able to do any work.” "Furthermore,” he says, "there will be no time, if we should sell out the Brunswick and Portland Railroad, there will be no time but some one of us men are doing business and we will see you have a job.” "If you are going to use me that way it is all right;” I says "I don’t think I should sign that paper for $1,000 unless I have a writing for my continuing labor.” They says, "You don’t mean to doubt our word, do you?” I says, "No sir; if you say you will honestly and justly give me $65 a month as long as I am able to work to earn my living, I will sign the paper.” Mr. Page says, "We will certainly do that, Jack, just as we say we will.”

No exception was taken to the admission of this testimony. The general rule that oral evidence will not be received to add to or vary the terms of a written contract applies, we think, to such a release as the one above quoted.

The only exception to the rule is found where from an inspection of the instrument it appears to be incomplete and not to embrace the entire contract. In such case resort may be had to oral testimony to supplement but not to vary or contradict the written instrument.

The instrument in the case at bar is not incomplete but comprehensive and appears to embrace an entire contract between the parties. It is not merely a receipt for money, which may be explained by parol; on the contrary, it is a formal release witnessing in plain and explicit terms an agreement’ discharging the defendants from all liability to the plaintiff for the injury he had received and which was [192]*192to "be final and conclusive.” The testimony of the plaintiff that the defendants agreed in addition to the $1000, expressed as the consideration for the release, to furnish him employment as long as he should be able to work is, we think, inconsistent with and tends to vary and contradict the written instrument.

Myron v. Union Railroad Co., 19 R. I. 125; White v. Richmond & D. R. Co., 110 N. C. 456 (15 S. E. R. 197); Horn v. Miller, 142 Pa. St. 557; The Cayuga, 95 Fed. R. 483; James v. Bligh, 11 Allen, 4; Goss v. Ellison, 136 Mass. 503.

The above authorities are cited not merely in support of the general rule but as showing its applicability to the case at bar.

However, in view of the fact that the question of the competency of this testimony is not presented by exceptions, and upon which counsel have not been heard, we pass to a consideration of the motion for a new trial upon the evidence as presented to the jury.

It is of the utmost importance, we think, in'passing judgment upon conflicting testimony in cases where an attempt is being made to establish an oral agreement as collateral to a written one not to forget the old and salutary rule that when parties reduce their contract to writing the law presumes that the writing contains the whole agreement.

In such cases the"scales of proof at the start are materially borne down against the plaintiff by that presumption. He should, therefore, be required to adduce clear, strong and convincing evidence to outweigh it, otherwise the stability of written contracts will be impaired and resulting confidence therein destroyed.

The oral agreement, as claimed to have been made at the meeting in Waterville, is most extraordinary. The defendants did not admit liability on account of the accident to the plaintiff. The $1000 paid over to the plaintiff by the defendants was made up of the amount of the plaintiff’s lost time between the time of the accident and February 9, 1903, at full wages, his expenses for medical attendance, nursing, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
71 A. 712, 104 Me. 187, 1908 Me. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaplin-v-gerald-me-1908.