Garcia v. California Truck Co.

192 P. 708, 183 Cal. 767, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 469
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1920
DocketL. A. No. 5158.
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 192 P. 708 (Garcia v. California Truck Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garcia v. California Truck Co., 192 P. 708, 183 Cal. 767, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 469 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, C. J.

This action was initiated April 19, 1915, by plaintiff to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff when, while upon a public street in Los Angeles on April 20, 1914, he was struck and run over by a horse belonging to defendant, which through defendant’s alleged negligence was permitted to run away at large upon such street. In its answer, in addition to denying the allegations of the, complaint as to negligence and damage, defendant set up an absolute release of “any and all causes of action, costs, charges, claims or demand of whatever name or nature, in any way arising or growing out of” the accident; executed by plaintiff in writing on July 20, 1914, in consideration of the sum of $350 then paid to him by defendant. It was stated therein that it was intended to cover not only all injuries or sickness occasioned by said accident of which plaintiff was then cognizant, but any sickness or injury which might thereafter develop, that the instrument had been read to him and translated from English into Spanish, his native language, and that he knew the contents thereof, and accepted the same “in compromise of my claim against said California Truck Company.” [1] The genuineness and due execution of this instrument, a copy thereof being annexed to the answer, was admitted by the failure of the plaintiff to serve and file an affidavit denying the same, as provided in section 448 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Under our system of pleading it was, however, open to plaintiff on the trial, without further pleading, to introduce evidence to sustain any legitimate defense, except want of genuineness or due execution, to the new matter relative to the release set up in the answer. (Baird v. Pacific Electric Ry. Co., 39 Cal. App. 512, [179 Pac. 449].) He did introduce evidence in support of a theory that the release was obtained by fraud. The trial court, finding against the release and in favor of plaintiff with regard to *769 the allegations of injury from negligence of defendant, and that he had suffered damage in the sum of $1,510, also found that he had received from.defendant $710 ($350 paid him upon the execution of the release and $360 theretofore-paid him, partly in cash and partly for his care and maintenance while disabled), which it deducted from the amount of damage found, giving judgment for the balance, eight hundred dollars.

This is an appeal by defendant from the judgment.

The only questions upon this appeal are in relation to the contract of release, which, of course, unless avoided in some legitimate way,-constitutes an insuperable bar to recovery in this action for damages for injuries caused by the negligence of defendant. At no time prior to the commencement of the action did plaintiff attempt to rescind this contract of release, and his complaint in this action for damage for the original tort was altogether silent regarding it. At no time has he restored or offered to restore to defendant any part of the consideration paid by defendant therefor, or attempted to show any reason why he should not be compelled to do this as a condition precedent to rescission. The claim of defendant is that plaintiff cannot maintain this action for damages in the absence of a rescission of the contract of release, • and that the facts just stated are fatal to any claim of rescission. If there was a valid contract of release, it would seem, notwithstanding that it was voidable because the consent of the plaintiff thereto was obtained by a fraudulent representation, that rescission was essential to its extinguishment, and that there could be no rescission without restoration of the consideration. Our statute is explicit on the subject of rescission. Section 1691 of the Civil Code provides that rescission of a contract, when not effected by consent, can be accomplished only by the use, on the part of the party rescinding, of reasonable diligence to comply with certain specified rules, one of which is that “he must rescind promptly, upon discovering the facts which entitle him to rescind” if free from duress, etc., and aware of his rights; and the other of which is stated as follows: “He must restore to the other party everything of value which he has received from him under the contract; or must offer to restore the same,” etc. [2] We are aware of no good reason why this express statutory provision is not as fully applicable to a *770 contract of release of claim for damages for personal injuries as to any other contract. Notwithstanding expressions in some of the many decisions on this question which might be taken as intimating a contrary view, an examination of the eases shows that this is generally accepted as true, especially in the presence of such a statutory provision as we have in this state. We are speaking, of course, of contracts of release that are not absolutely void from the beginning for illegality, or total want of competency to contract on the part of the party purporting to release, or any other cause warranting a conclusion that the purported contract was never an executed contract, but a mere “scrap of paper” without binding force, that could be entirely disregarded without any rescission. There are decisions in this state which include in the class of cases where rescission is not essential a case where by fraud or deceit the party has been induced to execute a release of his cause of action upon the understanding and belief that the written instrument was a release of something other than the cause of action sued on, and that it was not a release of such cause, of action. Such was the situation in Meyer v. Haas, 126 Cal. 560, [58 Pac. 1042], where the plaintiff was so induced to execute for $25 a release' of all claims on account of his injuries, being made by fraud to believe and believing that he was discharging only such claim as he might have for loss of time. It was held that in such a ease “the contract . . . will be held to be what the maker of it intended it should be, and not what it was made to appear,by the deception practiced,” and that consequently there was no release of the cause of action involved in the action, which as the complaint was framed did not include any claim for loss of time, with the result that no rescission or restoration of the money received was essential. The plaintiff there, it was said, was “not attempting to avoid a contract which he has made, but is showing that he did not make the contract which he apparently made. In such a case the written instrument in so far as it purports to release causes of action not understood by the party executing it to be included is held to be void ab initio, and so to come within the class of cases where the doctrine of rescission and restoration has no application. But the doctrine of Meyer v. Haas, supra, has no application where the party releasing *771 thoroughly understood that the release he was executing was what it purports to be, a release of the very cause of action he seeks to enforce by action, notwithstanding a misconception on his part induced by fraud as to some other statements in the writing.

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Bluebook (online)
192 P. 708, 183 Cal. 767, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garcia-v-california-truck-co-cal-1920.