Colby v. Walker

171 A. 774, 86 N.H. 568, 104 A.L.R. 840, 1934 N.H. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedApril 3, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 171 A. 774 (Colby v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colby v. Walker, 171 A. 774, 86 N.H. 568, 104 A.L.R. 840, 1934 N.H. LEXIS 97 (N.H. 1934).

Opinion

Peaslee, C. J.

It is the established law here that the vital issue in these cases is whether the plaintiff has already received something as full satisfaction of his damages. If he has, he cannot maintain *570 another suit for the same item. If he has not, he is merely obliged, to give credit for what he has received. Masterson v. Railway, 88 N. H. 190.

Various forms used to discharge or protect one claimed to be liable because of concurrent fault have been considered. If the document recites that it is a settlement in full for the damages, and contains nO' suggestion of any reservations, it bars the subsequent claim against another defendant for the same injuries. Carpenter v. Company, 78 N. H. 118.

If there is a reservation of rights against third parties, or if the document takes the form of a covenant not to sue, the result is otherwise. Masterson v. Railway, supra.

The wrongs alleged to have been done by Wilson and Walker were concurrent, and resulted in indivisible damage. The plaintiffs gave to Wilson certain releases under seal. One issue here is the effect of these releases upon Walker’s liability. It is the defendant’s position that the releases contain nothing to qualify the usual effect of such a discharge, and that by virtue thereof his liability has ceased.

The issue thus presented involves the effect of a general release under seal, given to one whose negligence was a part of the cause for an indivisible injury. Is it an absolute release of others, or may its effect be defeated or established by parol evidence? The topic has been given some consideration in several late cases.

In the first of these (Carpenter v. Company, 78 N. H. 118), a question was raised as to whether the claim which the release purported to deal with was for concurrent negligence. That being settled affirmatively, the issue of the general effect of such a release upon the liability of the concurrent wrongdoer was considered. The conflict in the authorities elsewhere is noted, and the proposition that a technical release under seal is a discharge of all, even when it purports to reserve rights against those not parties to it, is stated but not adopted. The underlying principle that the plaintiff can have but one compensation is declared; and upon examination of the release there given it was concluded that it clearly showed that the sum paid in accordance with the terms thereof was given and received as full compensation for the entire damage. It was accordingly held that the release was a bar to a subsequent suit against one whose negligence concurred in causing the damage. The case seems to assume that the third party could stand upon the release as a contract, and that as between him and the plaintiff the release was as conclusive as a written contract between them.

*571 The next case (Wheat v. Carter, 79 N. H. 150) overstates the decision in the Carpenter case. It was there said: “It is settled in this state that the release of one joint tort-feasor is a bar to a suit against the others; and that is also true as to the effect of a release when the releasor’s loss is caused by the concurrent misconduct of the releasee and others. Carpenter v. Company, 78 N. H. 118.” The Carpenter case expressly reserves opinion upon this question; but assuming the statement just quoted to be the established law, the Wheat case goes on to consider another aspect of the situation. The negligence there was not concurrent but successive, and the damages were separable. The release was of the first wrongdoer. It was held that the release was not in all respects conclusive in favor of the second, and that the plaintiff might show by parol that the release was in fact given upon payment for no more than the damage done by the first, — that no claim was made upon him for damage done by the second. It was stated in terms that this could be done “even though it may contradict the terms of the release.” Ib., 152.

But it is also held in that case that if this item of damage was included in the claim made against the first wrongdoer, the release given to him was an effective bar in favor of the second.

The net result of the case is a holding that in the second suit a plaintiff may show by parol that the items of damage which he there claims were not included in those released to another, even though he thereby contradicts the terms of the release. But, failing such proof, the release is conclusive that he has been fully compensated. He is not permitted to contradict this feature of the writing. He may show what items a general release covers, but he cannot show by parol how those items were dealt with.

In Masterson v. Railway, 83 N. H. 190, the damage done was not separable and the negligence was concurrent. The general rules deducible from the earlier cases were stated. The idea that only one compensation can be had is said to be the foundation for the efficiency of releases in favor of third parties. A simple release is to be construed as given in exchange for full compensation. The plaintiff may show that this is not so (if he can); but he cannot deny the meaning of a release as that meaning has been declared by the court. If however the release itself contains something indicative of a different purpose, the implication of full compensation is negatived, and the plaintiff may proceed against others.

This is in harmony with the often repeated doctrine that it is not the fact of release of one but of compensation made that bars the *572 later suit. It is not the mere act of releasing, but the implication therefrom of full recompense which is vital. Hence anything in the writing which negatives such recompense saves the plaintiffs’ rights against third parties.

Stacy v. Company, 83 N. H. 281, involves another feature of the severance of claims. The release relied upon was given to an employer, and might have been for liability to pay compensation to an injured workman, regardless of fault, rather than for tort liability. Following the theory announced in the Wheat case, it was held that, since compensation is the basis of discharge, it must be made to appear that the damage settled for when the release was given was the same for which recovery was later sought. Upon this issue of the relation of the release to the claim in litigation, parol evidence was again held to be admissible.

It was also concluded, as in the earlier cases, that once the identity of the damage in the two cases was established, the parol evidence rule applied, and the construction of a release as evidencing full satisfaction barred the second suit.

None of these cases involve an instance of joint tortfeasor liability. None of them go beyond instances of liability for concurrent wrongs. Whether a release of one joint tortfeasor should work a discharge of the others, regardless of the issue of full compensation, is a question not involved in those decisions or in the present litigation.

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Bluebook (online)
171 A. 774, 86 N.H. 568, 104 A.L.R. 840, 1934 N.H. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colby-v-walker-nh-1934.