Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Harriett

15 S.W. 556, 80 Tex. 73, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 959
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1891
DocketNo. 2859.
StatusPublished
Cited by108 cases

This text of 15 S.W. 556 (Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Harriett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Harriett, 15 S.W. 556, 80 Tex. 73, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 959 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

GAINES, Associate Justice.

This was an action by the appellee to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have resulted to him from the negligence of the managing officers of the appellant corporation. The injuries were received in the same collision as that which gave rise to the case of this same appellant versus Compton, which was before this court at its'last term at this place, and which is reported in 75 Texas, 667. An outline of the facts which led to the collision is given in the opinion in that case. The appellee was the fireman on the passenger train which collided with the water train, and in the accident suffered the injuries for .which he sues.

The defendant pleaded, among other things, that after his injuries the plaintiff had entered into an agreement with it to compromise and settle his claim against it in consideration of the sum of $2500, and that in consideration of its promise to pay him that sum he released it from all claim for damages resulting from his injuries; and that in pursuance of its agreement appellant had tendered to plaintiff that sum and had ever since been ready and willing to pay it.

Upon the issue presented by this plea the general claim agent of appellant, among other things, testified as follows: “The plaintiff had- *79 called on the witness several times. The whole matter was thoroughly talked over and canvassed between us, and finally on the third day of August, 1888, in my office, he agreed to accept $2500 in full satisfaction and settlement of all such claims. I told him I would then make the necessary voucher in his favor for that amount and approve it and have it passed through the records of the auditor’s office, when it would be ready for payment by the treasurer. The plaintiff expressed himself as satisfied with the arrangement and stated that he did not need the money at once but when he did he would call for it. I had the voucher rnadp and approved the same day in the plaintiff’s presence for $2500.”

The testimony of the witness, further shows that the plaintiff was duly notified that such voucher was ready for payment; that after learning that plaintiff had failed to call at the treasurer’s office to receive the same the witness, on the'29th of October, tendered plaintiff the sum of $2500 in legal tender notes.

One Barnes, who had formerly been in the employment of appellant as master mechanic, testified also among other things that the plaintiff after he had partially recovered from his injuries came to him to get employment from the company, and that during the conversation which took place he asked the plaintiff “if everything had been settled satisfactorily with the company,” and he replied, “Yes; I think everything is settled satisfactorily.”

Such being the evidence for the defendant upon the issue under consideration, the court charged the jury as follows: “In addition to requested instructions given you in this case you are further instructed that in order to make out a defense of accord and satisfaction it must be shown that the agreement to accept something in satisfaction of the liability incurred has been fully executed, and that the thing to be taken has been accepted and received. There being no proof in this case showing satisfaction, by defendant paying and the plaintiff receiving anything, whereby defendant was relieved of liability, if any liability was incurred, you will not give attention to that feature of the case.”

And the court refused to give the following instruction asked by the defendant: “If you believe from the evidence that on or about the 30th day of August, 1888, the plaintiff agreed with the defendant upon a compromise of his claim for damages sued on in this cause for the sum of $2500, and that an agent of the defendant, then and there authorized to do so, then and there promised to. pay the plaintiff said sum of $2500, or promised and agreed that defendant through its treasurer would pay plaintiff said sum of money, and that he was authorized by defendant to make such promise, and that the plaintiff then and there accepted said promise and agreement in satisfaction and discharge of his original cause of action on account of his injuries, and that he then agreed and expected to look to and demand of defendant said sum of $2500 under *80 said promise and agreement, and not to demand of defendant damages on account of Ms original cause of action as it rested before such promise and agreement was made, then you will find a verdict for defendant.”

We think the court erred in giving the former and in refusing the latter instruction. The law bearing upon this issue is very clearly stated in Chitty on Contracts: “Upon the whole the true distinction would seem to be between the cases in which the plaintiff has agreed to accept the promise of the defendant in satisfaction and those in which he has agreed to accept the performance of such promise in satisfaction; the rule being that in the latter case there shall be no satisfaction without performance, while in the former, if the promise be not performed, the plaintiff’s only remedy is.by action for the breach thereof, and he has no right to recur to the original demand.” 2 Chitty on Con., 11 Am. ed., 1124.

Counsel for appellee do not controvert the proposition. We take the quotation from their own brief. But they insist that there was no evidence tending to show that the defendant agreed to accept the promise in settlement of his claim. If the defendant’s agent who testified as to this matter had stopped at the words “he agreed to accept $2500 in full satisfaction and settlement of all such claims,” the proposition would be correct. But his subsequent testimony to the effect that when the witness told the plaintiff that he would have a voucher made out in his favor for the amount the plaintiff “expressed himself as satisfied with the arrangement and stated that he did not need the money at once but when he did he would call for it,” tends to prove that the plaintiff accepted and relied upon the promise in settlement of his demand. The testimony of the master mechanic tends to the same conclusion. It is not for us to say what the finding of the jury should have been upon this issue if the question had been properly submitted to them. It is sufficient for us to say that there was evidence before the jury tending to support the affirmative of the issue tendered by the defendant by its plea of accord and satisfaction.

Since the judgment must be reversed for the errors above pointed out, we deem it a useless consumption of time to consider all the assignments of error presented by the brief. The facts of the case bearing upon the question of the original liability of the defendant are few and not at all complicated, and with the exception of the testimony as to the custom of railways and as to the agreement for a settlement there is hardly a conflict in the evidence; yet we have a brief for appellant of twenty-eight closely printed pages presenting very numerous assignments of error, and a brief on part of the appellee of corresponding length.

The case made by the plaintiff was that he was injured in a collision with a water train of the defendant, and that the collision resulted from the negligence of the defendant’s officers in sending out the latter train *81 without a proper equipment of men.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W. 556, 80 Tex. 73, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-colorado-santa-fe-railway-co-v-harriett-tex-1891.