Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis, Ry. Co. v. Green

186 N.E. 365, 126 Ohio St. 512, 126 Ohio St. (N.S.) 512, 87 A.L.R. 1268, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 392
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1933
Docket23769
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 186 N.E. 365 (Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis, Ry. Co. v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis, Ry. Co. v. Green, 186 N.E. 365, 126 Ohio St. 512, 126 Ohio St. (N.S.) 512, 87 A.L.R. 1268, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 392 (Ohio 1933).

Opinion

Jones, J.

This is a conflict case, certified to this court because the judgment of the appellate court in the instant case was in conflict upon a similar question decided by another Court of Appeals in Fay v. Buckeye Pipe Line Co., 30 Ohio App., 316, 164 N. E., 782.

While many cases have been cited by counsel, in the last analysis the legal question presented is simply this: Whether the release, admittedly signed by the plaintiff, can be varied or supplemented by the alleged oral agreement testified to as having been made contemporaneously with the written release. Counsel on both sides agree that if the oral evidence offered at the trial is such as to vary or contradict the terms of the release, under the well-established principles of our jurisprudence such evidence is inadmissible. However counsel for plaintiff contend that the instant action was brought upon the oral contract, and therefore parol testimony may be offered touching the actual consideration agreed to be paid by the defendant, because, they contend, the omitted consideration was not embodied in the written release but was “a distinct collateral agreement on a subject-matter” not mentioned in the release. The release signed by the plaintiff was not only a receipt of money in full satisfaction of his claim, but purports to set forth a contract of settlement between the parties of all claims then existing or which might thereafter arise by reason of personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff at the hands of the defendant. Stone v. Vance, 6 Ohio, 246. This was the earliest case in this state upon this subject, wherein this court, nearly a century ago, announced the following principle in its syllabus: “A paper purporting to be a receipt, but containing, in truth, a complete contract between the parties to it, can not be explained *519 by parol, as can be mere general receipts for property or money.” See, also, tbe cases of Bird, Admr., v. Hueston, 10 Ohio St., 418, 430, Jackson v. Ely, Exr., 57 Ohio St., 450, 49 N. E., 792, and Cassilly v. Cassilly, 57 Ohio St., 582, 49 N. E., 795; tbe opinions in tbe last two cases having been rendered by Judge Bradbury of this court; both cases denying the right to vary or contradict a written release by parol evidence.

How then stands tbe instant case? Plaintiff admits that be signed tbe release agreement. That agreement expressly stipulates that “for tbe sole consideration of $1,250.00 received to my full satisfaction,” be releases and discharges tbe railway company from all claims and demands against tbe railway company then existing or which might thereafter arise from tbe injuries received. It recites that tbe $1,250 was received “to my full satisfaction” and in “full settlement.” Upon the trial, oral evidence was offered and received to tbe effect that tbe sum of $1,250 was not tbe sole consideration and was not received in full satisfaction and in full settlement; but that other additional considerations were orally agreed to, viz., tbe securing for tbe plaintiff of an artificial limb and a job for life. This evidence was not only at variance with, but was a direct contradiction of, tbe particular terms of tbe written contract, which provided that the sum named in tbe release agreement was to be the sole consideration of tbe release and was to be received in full settlemént therefor. Upon this feature of tbe case bow can it be claimed that tbe parol evidence could be admitted to explain or contradict tbe express language of tbe release agreement? Stipulations such as are incorporated in this agreement are not found in tbe release agreements reported in tbe two following cases, cited and relied upon so confidently by counsel for tbe plaintiff, Pennsylvania Co. v. Dolan, 6 Ind. App., 109, 32 N. E., 802, 51 Am. St. Rep., 289, and Galvin v. Boston Elevated Ry. Co., 180 Mass., 587, 62 N. *520 E. , 961, and in this respect those cases may be distinguishable from the case at bar. In the well-considered case of Huntington v. Toledo, St. L. & W. Rd. Co., 175 F. , 532, the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, dealing with a release more limited than the one in the present case, disapproved those cases and held that they were not in accord with the weight of authority. They certainly are not consonant with the former decisions of this court in the Ohio cases above cited. Another case directly in point is Gunter v. Standard Oil Co., 60 F. (2d), 389, decided by a Federal Circuit Court of Appeals in Missouri. In that case the signed written release was in almost the exact language that was employed by the parties here; but the federal court held that evidence of an oral agreement to employ the plaintiff for life was inadmissible. In Goss v. Ellison, 136 Mass., 503, where a plaintiff had given his receipt for a certain sum “as full payment, as per claim,” the Massachusetts court held: “It is not open to the plaintiff to contradict the writing, by parol testimony that the sum paid was intended as part, and not as full payment.”

Had the release agreement been attacked by the plaintiff as being void upon the ground that his signature was forged, that he had executed no such agreement, or had been surreptitiously induced to sign his name thereto by some trick or device resulting in the substitution of another or different document, parol testimony to that effect would have been admissible for the reason that it would tend, not to vary or contradict a written contract, but to show that he had not executed any such contract. Perry v. M. O’Neil & Co., 78 Ohio St., 200, 85 N. E., 41; Cassilly v. Cassilly, supra, 594, where Bradbury, J., in speaking of this class of parol evidence, said: “The only effect this evidence could produce was to show that the written contract did not correctly express the agreement which the parties had made, that while it only imposed upon *521 her son an obligation to pay her five hundred dollars, his real obligation was to pay her what he had paid her sister, which was two thousand dollars. Its admission was a violation of the settled rule of evidence, which prohibits the variation or contradiction of a written contract by parol evidence.”

Counsel for plaintiff insist that they are not impeaching the release, or questioning anything therein contained; they argue that since they are suing upon the oral contract and not upon the written agreement, the former is separate and distinct from the latter, and, for that reason, this suit should be held to be one on a collateral agreement and upon a subject-matter not mentioned in the release. However, the subject-matter, that of procuring a lifetime job, was not a collateral agreement. It was the subject-matter considered in the negotiations, namely, that of arriving at a full and complete settlement of the plaintiff’s claim arising from the injuries he had sustained.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 N.E. 365, 126 Ohio St. 512, 126 Ohio St. (N.S.) 512, 87 A.L.R. 1268, 1933 Ohio LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleveland-cincinnati-chicago-st-louis-ry-co-v-green-ohio-1933.