Hume v. American-West African Line, Inc.

36 F. Supp. 880, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3801
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 3, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 F. Supp. 880 (Hume v. American-West African Line, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hume v. American-West African Line, Inc., 36 F. Supp. 880, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3801 (S.D.N.Y. 1941).

Opinion

CLANCY, District Judge.

Plaintiff burned his hand on June 20, 1940, while engaged as a seaman on a vessel of the defendant, Moore-McCormack Lines, Inc. He was treated first at the Broad Street Hospital and then, upon complaining to that defendant’s claim adjuster, was told to attend the Marine Hospital and did so. On July 1, 1940, the claim adjuster gave him $15. He did not discuss settlement but instead told him to obtain an abstract from the Marine Hospital to determine whether or not there would be any scars. This engagement was repeated on July 8th with like results. On July 15th, another adjuster saw him for the first time. The plaintiff professed a desire to settle his claim and: asked for $250. He was told by the adjuster to report to a doctor employed by the defendant company for examination, the adjuster making the appointment with the-doctor, and to report back in a week with, his certificate of discharge from the Marine-Hospital, when the company’s private doctor would probably have made his report.. He was then paid another $15. On July-23rd he called at the office of the claim adjuster with his certificate of discharge from: the Marine Hospital which read: “Dis[882]*882charged — Fit for duty July 15, 1940.” The company doctor’s report was in the claim adjuster’s hands. Plaintiff himself says the company’s doctor did not examine his lungs and defendant affirms its ignorance then of any sign of tuberculosis in plaintiff. The sum of $150 was agreed upon in settlement to include the three $15 payments already made. Plaintiff was told he must sign a release and that by executing it he “would be signing his life away.” He said he knew this but wanted to go back to his Nebraska home and signed a petty cash voucher for $150 and executed, in triplicate, a general release running to the defendant, Moore-McCormack Lines, Inc. The plaintiff read the release in the presence of the claim adjuster and filled out the blanks in all three copies in ink. He was again told he was signing his life away. Three witnesses to his execution of this document signed the release. In their presence he acknowledged that he fully understood its contents. One week after the delivery of the release, plaintiff found he was suffering from tuberculosis. About four weeks later a summons was served on both defendants with a complaint stating an alleged cause of action for negligence causing it. Both defendants move on affidavits setting up the release and the facts attending its execution for summary judgment.

The plaintiff’s papers in opposition to this motion do not even pretend to contradict any of the assertions made by the defendant, with the single exception of a line in the plaintiff’s attorney’s affidavit that “The plaintiff merely signed where indicated by the defendant.” Whether the defendant indicated where plaintiff was to sign or not does not seem important. There is no hint of a claim of coercion or duress or fraud. Plaintiff signed the release but once and then it was over the words: “This is a release.” But in addition, he wrote responsive answers to several questions. In answer to question (6) D: “What is this paper which you are signing?” he wrote in, in his own hand: “release of everything.” He answered “yes” in his own handwriting to questions inquiring whether he intended his answers to be relied on, whether he had read the papers from beginning to end, and whether he knew what he was signing. He wrote: “yes” to the inquiry whether he knew that the paper he was signing “settles and ends every right or claim you have for damages as well as for past or future maintenance.” All of these questions are in large, clear print of a vermilion color. Even the plaintiff’s attorney, in his brief, professes no doubt that the claim agent may have warned his client that he was “signing his life away.” No single circumstance attending the document’s execution is disputed. There is no claim made that the plaintiff is ignorant or was lacking in intelligence and we think it fully established that his execution of the release was his own understanding, deliberate act performed after a free, untrammeled and comprehending meeting of his mind with that of his employer’s representative. We are unable to discern any question of fact whatever to warrant any hesitation in reaching this conclusion.

We take, as a serious consideration, the fact that the plaintiff is a seaman and, therefore, a ward of the Court. But unless this fact, standing alone, voids a release, we cannot save him in his present situation. Callous though it may now sound, there is no ground asserted on which to base a conclusion that there was any inadequacy of consideration. Indeed, the answering affidavit does not even mention that as a possible defense to the release. Inadequacy of consideration alone would be no ground for cancellation when unaccompanied by other inequitable incidents. Pomeroy, 4th Edition, § 928. Any conclusion one might strain to reach that an inadequacy existed here and that it was so gross that fraud was a necessary conclusion — and without such a conclusion we are unable to relieve the plaintiff — is forbidden by the plaintiff’s own failure to question the defendant’s statement and description of what transpired at the time of the execution of the release and by his omission to present to the Court any issue of fraud or overreaching. We have reached the conclusion that if the release in this case is not valid and binding upon the plaintiff, that it is inconceivable under what circumstances a valid general release may be executed by a seaman.

The determination of the meaning and effect of the release thus becomes a question of law. The release is a printed form and its contents are comprehensive. It releases the defendant, Moore-McCormack Lines, Inc., and its employees and charterers and ship from every cause of action which “I now have, or may hereafter have on account of injuries and illness suffered by me as follows:”. There then follows in typewriting: “Burn 3rd degree of right hand and fingers; burn 1st degree [883]*883of forehead, face, left forearm June 20, 1940.” There then follows in print, with the exception of the word “release” which is written in the plaintiff’s hand: “And, in addition to that, I release them from each and every right and claim which I now have or may hereafter have because of any matter or thing which happened before the signing of this paper, it being my intention by the signing of this paper, to wipe the slate clean as between myself and the parties released, even as respects injuries, illnesses, rights and claims not mentioned herein or not known to me. (1) I know that this paper is much more than a receipt. It is a release. I am giving up every right I have. (2) In making up my mind to sign this release I am using my own judgment without regard to anything that has been told me by anybody. (3) I know that in signing this release I am, among other things, now settling in full for all injuries, illnesses and disabilities which I have had already, which I have now, and which I may have in the future, either because of the particular occurrence mentioned above or because of any other occurrence in the past, or because of both, even though I do not know that I have had already, have now or may have in the future such injuries, illnesses and disabilities, and even though they are not mentioned particularly in this release.”

Any constriction of the intent of the release to the injuries described in the typed insertion would import the violent deletion of the next clause stated to be “in addition to that” and including future or unknown injuries and the several clauses which explicitly include other injuries or causes of injury.

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Bluebook (online)
36 F. Supp. 880, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hume-v-american-west-african-line-inc-nysd-1941.