Flynn v. Manson

126 P. 181, 19 Cal. App. 400, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 17
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 10, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 1022.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 126 P. 181 (Flynn v. Manson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flynn v. Manson, 126 P. 181, 19 Cal. App. 400, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 17 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment.

According to the allegations of the complaint, the plaintiff was injured by the wrongful act of the defendants. In consideration of the sum of $250 the plaintiff released one of the defendants, reserving the right to proceed against the remaining defendants. A judgment of dismissal was entered in favor of the defendant thus released. When the cause came up for trial the court granted a motion to dismiss the action as to the remaining defendants, holding that the release of one of a number of joint tort-feasors was a discharge of all, notwithstanding the stipulation in the instrument of release to the contrary.

The facts of the case, and the decisions in this state applicable thereto, are set forth in an opinion prepared and filed by the learned judge of the trial court. As our consideration of the case leads us to the same conclusions as set forth very clearly in that opinion, we cannot do better than quote it in its entirety:

“This is an action ex delicto brought by plaintiff against the defendant Marsden Hanson, Michael Casey and A. Van *402 der Naillen and other former members of the Board of Public Works, to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff in consequence of the neglect of the defendants to maintain a sufficient sidewalk, in consequence of which the plaintiff was injured, and to recover damages for which injury this action was brought. Issue was joined therein, and on the twenty-seventh day of September, 1909, the defendant Harsden Hanson, in consideration of the payment of the sum of $250, secured from the plaintiff a release discharging him, said Harsden Hanson, from any further liability in the premises. Thereafter in accordance with the terms of said release, a dismissal of the action was duly made and filed by plaintiff’s attorney, and a judgment dismissing said Hanson and his cosureties was thereupon duly entered.

“The instrument of release recited that in consideration of the above amount the plaintiff forever released said Hanson ‘from all claims and causes of action’ set forth in the complaint herein. It, however, contained a provision to the effect that, in executing said release, it was not the intention of plaintiff that it should operate as a release of the liability of Hanson’s codefendants, or either of them, but, on the contrary, ‘it is the plaintiff’s intention that the cause of action . . . against said defendants Casey and Van der Naillen . . . shall exist and continue with the same force and effect as if this release had never been made. ’ The release in question was set up by supplemental plea on behalf of the defendants Casey and Van der Naillen, and a motion was thereupon made by the last-named defendants for a dismissal of the action as to them, upon the ground that the release of either codefendant was a release of all the defendants herein.

“It has long been a well-settled rule of law that in an action against several wrongdoers charged with the commission of a joint tort, the release of one is the release of all; but whether the far-reaching effects of such release can be modified or overcome by any reservation in the release similar to the one mentioned herein is a question upon which the authorities are undoubtedly conflicting, and the point has never been directly decided in this state.

“In Urton v. Price, 57 Cal. 272, an action against two tortfeasors, the plaintiff executed a release to one of them ‘from all demands arising from personal injuries to me for which *403 I brought suit, ’ and the court found that the release evidenced an intention to constitute a satisfaction for the injuries complained of.

“In the Tompkins case, 66 Cal. 166, [4 Pac. 1165], which was an action against two railroad companies to recover damages for injuries sustained by a passenger upon the car of one of said companies, it appeared that the plaintiff executed a release of one of the defendants, and the court held that thereby both of the defendants were released. In the course of its opinion the court says: Every party contributing to the injuries was liable to the full extent of the damages by her [the plaintiff] sustained. Her injuries gave her but a single cause of action; . . . damages resulting from the same wrongful transaction are ordinarily inseparable; she could not recover part from one and part from the other defendant. ’

“Quoting with approval the following language of the court in an opinion in Urton v. Price: ‘The bar accrues in favor of some of the wrongdoers by reason of what has been received from . . . one or more of the others; the bar arises from the fact that the injured party has actually received satisfaction, or what in law is deemed the equivalent. ’

“In the Chetwood case, 113 Cal. 414, [45 Pac. 704], an action in its nature ex delicto was commenced against a number of defendants, three of whom constituted the executive committee of the corporation defendant. Subsequently the plaintiff released two of the defendants last named upon the payment by them to him of the sum of $27,500, and thereafter caused formal judgment of dismissal of the action as to them to be entered. Judgment had been rendered against three defendants last named for a sum of money in excess of $190,000, and it was held that the release of two of the defendants operated to release the third. ‘While plaintiff may sue one or all of the joint tort-feasors, he can have but one satisfaction. Once paid for the injury he has suffered by any one of the joint tort-feasors his right to proceed further is at an end. Where several joint tort-feasors have been sued in a single action, a retraxit of the cause of action in favor of one of them operates to release them all. By his withdrawal plaintiff announced that he has received satisfaction for the injury complained of. . . . It matters not, either, whether the payment made was in a large or in a small *404 amount; if it be accepted in satisfaction of the cause of action against one it is in law a satisfaction of the claim against' them all. In the case at bar it is disclosed that, after the court had awarded a single judgment for a lump sum against the three defendants jointly, the plaintiff accepted from two of them a sum of money for and on account of the injury and loss sustained, and a judgment of dismissal was accordingly entered. This judgment, entered under the stipulation of the parties, was equivalent to a retraxit. ... It undoubtedly is liable for all the damages which the plaintiff has sustained, without regard to their different degrees of culpability, and a release of one discharges all.’

“It is claimed by plaintiff that these authorities are inapplicable, because in none of those cases did the release contain the saving clause of the one herein. It is to be observed, however, that the release made to Hanson discharged him ‘from all claims and causes of action set forth in the complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
126 P. 181, 19 Cal. App. 400, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flynn-v-manson-calctapp-1912.