Guldager v. Rockwell

14 Colo. 459
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 14 Colo. 459 (Guldager v. Rockwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guldager v. Rockwell, 14 Colo. 459 (Colo. 1890).

Opinion

Richmond, O.

In this action plaintiff in error seeks to recover from defendant in error damages for negli[460]*460gence, resulting in the death of her husband while in the employ of the defendant in error. The complaint, as amended, contains the usual and necessary averments, to which the defendant in error answers, setting up three defenses: First. A general denial. Second. Contributory negligence. Third. Accord and satisfaction. The second and third defenses are specifically denied in the reply of plaintiff in error.

The cause was tried to a jury, and after all the evidence had been submitted on the part of both plaintiff and defendant the court instructed the jury that they should find for the defendant.

The main, and indeed the only, contention of plaintiff in error necessary for us to consider is whether the court erred in instructing the jury to return a verdict in favor of defendant. .

It appears that plaintiff in error’s husband received the injury which resulted in death, and for which she seeks to recover damages, on the 8th day of January, 1883, and that this action was not instituted until the 1st day of June, 1886. In the trial of this cause, and in support of the defense of accord and satisfaction, the defendant introduced the following instrument of writing: “ This is to certify that Mrs. Andrew Guldager and L. C. Bock-well have this 26th day of April, inst., had a full and final settlement, in which said Bockwell takes the mules and horses at $350 cash, and surrenders to Mrs. Guldager two notes of Andrew Guldager, one for $300, dated March 28, 1881, due on or before one year after date, and another note due March 28, 1882, for $30, due on demand, which notes and interest amounted, on the 28th of March, 1883, to $363, and Bockwell has also paid her two hundred and eighty-seven dollars and thirty-four one-hundredths ($281.34) cash, which is in full demands of every name and nature whatsoever from one party to the other. April 26, 1883. L. O. Bockwell. Mary Guldager.”

[461]*461Mrs. Guldager, in rebuttal, testifies: “I made no claim of Bockwell on account of the death of my husband. Did not mention it, because I did not want to. Did not consult anybody in regard to it until I returned to Denver. I knew all the time that I had a claim against him, and when I made this settlement, and signed the receipt, I expected to bring this suit. I did not say anything to Bockwell about it.”

The action of the court was based upon the fact that plaintiff in error admitted that when she signed the receipt she had full knowledge of the demand sued upon, and at the time of the execution of the written instrument for settlement she said nothing about it, and intended to bring this action. The plaintiff in error insists that it was the duty of the court to submit the cause of action to the jury, and contends that, where there is any evidence m support of a fact in issue, it must be submitted to the jury.

We cannot agree with this position. It is the peculiar province of the court to determine all questions of law arising before it, and the undoubted right of the jury to find all matters of fact when evidence legally sufficient for that purpose is submitted for their consideration, and the legal sufficiency is a question of law, of which the court is the exclusive judge. It is true authorities can be cited in support of the doctrine that where there is any evidence, however slight, tending to support a material issue, the case must go to the jury, since they are the exclusive judges of the weight of the evidence. This doctrine, however, is denied in all the courts of England, as well as in the American federal courts and in many of the courts of the American states. In 2 Thomp. Trials, §2249, the author says: “The old rule is likewise exploded in several of the states whose courts are now in the constant habit of ordering nonsuits against the consent of the plaintiff, of giving peremptory instructions to the jury to find for one party or the other, or of sustain[462]*462ing demurrers to the evidence in cases where there is confessedly some evidence supporting a material issue, x x * Where the facts are undisputed or admitted, the only questions for decision are questions of law. In such a case it only remains for the judge to apply the law to the facts, and to decide whether they constitute a cause of action or defense. But where the facts are disputed and the evidence in respect to them is conflicting, such is not the case.” Id. § 2262.

“The day has gone by when courts will refuse to enter a judgment of nonsuit upon motion of defendant, when the plaintiff has failed to introduce sufficient evidence in a case, tried by a jury, to support a verdict for the plaintiff, and in a case tried to the court to warrant a finding and judgment in favor of the plaintiff.” Tripp v. Fiske, 4 Colo. 25; Behrens v. Railway Co. 5 Colo. 400; Schwenke v. Railroad Co. 12 Colo. 341. g It is proper for the court to grant a nonsuit, or direct a verdict for the defendant, where the issues involved in an action are negligence on part of the defendant, and contributory negligence on part of the plaintiff, when the evidence, considered in its most favorable light in behalf of the plaintiff, does not tend to show the defendant guilty of the negligence alleged against him, or when the evidence, thus considered, shows the plaintiff guilty of negligence which contributed to the alleged injury, and without which it would not have happened. Lord v. Refining Co. 12 Colo. 390.

In this case the plaintiff in error admitted that she knew she had a right of action against defendant in error; that she intended at some subsequent period to bring suit against him. Nevertheless, in the face of this knowledge, she made a settlement with the defendant in error, and signed the paper above recited, in which she admits the receipt of $287.34 cash in full of demands of every name and nature whatsoever due from the defendant to her. The terms of the contract of settlement, [463]*463taken by themselves, are susceptible of no other construction than that every claim which she and the defendant were cognizant of at the time of the settlement was fully and completely passed upon and settled on the 26th day of April, 1883, from which date, until the institution of this action, she never mentioned the fact that she had a claim against the defendant in error; never gave him any opportunity of settling such claim; and, indeed, so far as the record discloses, never, directly or indirectly, intimated that she had this right of action, or that she had intended to commence this suit.

Treating this paper as a receipt, there can be no doubt that the plaintiff in error was ah liberty to introduce evidence to show that she had signed it through mistake, or that it was obtained by fraud of misrepresentations on the part of the defendant in error. Although a written receipt may be contradicted, yet all the authorities acknowledge that it is evidence of the highest and most satisfactory character, and to do away with its force the testimony should be convincing, and not left to mere impressions, and the burden of proof rests on the party attempting the explanation. This the plaintiff wholly failed to do. The term “ all demands ” is recognized in the books as being one of the most comprehensive that can be used. It may, it is true, be limited by other parts of the contract in which it is used.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Colo. 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guldager-v-rockwell-colo-1890.