Johnson v. Von Scholley

106 N.E. 17, 218 Mass. 454, 1914 Mass. LEXIS 1432
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 106 N.E. 17 (Johnson v. Von Scholley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Von Scholley, 106 N.E. 17, 218 Mass. 454, 1914 Mass. LEXIS 1432 (Mass. 1914).

Opinion

Braley, J.

The defendants and the railway company upon the record were concurrent tortfeasors, and an unqualified release of the company under seal would have discharged them. Feneff v. Boston & Maine Railroad, 196 Mass. 575. Boston Supply Co. v. Rubin, 214 Mass. 217. But the covenant not to sue put in evidence by the defendants did not operate as a discharge of the plaintiff’s cause of action; it only barred the remedy against the company for reasons stated in Matheson v. O’Kane, 211 Mass. 91.

The amended answer, however, pleaded in general terms an accord and satisfaction with the company whereby the defendants had been relieved from liability. It is settled that, not having been parties or privies to the instrument, the defendants could show by paroi evidence that the instrument did not express the actual compromise. Kellogg v. Tompson, 142 Mass. 76. See Snow v. Alley, 151 Mass. 14.

The correspondence between the various attorneys representing the plaintiff and the company, as well as his personal letter to it, were admissible as evidence of a demand for damages, and as preliminary to the final agreement in so far as the negotiations were authorized by him. Pickert v. Hair, 146 Mass. 1. Loomis v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad, 159 Mass. 39. James v. Boston Elevated Railway, 201 Mass. 263. It is to be noted that previous to September 21, 1912, the correspondence relates only to a claim against the company, or notice to it by the plaintiff of the discharge of former counsel and the retaining of new counsel. No offer to settle without suit appears.

The authority of an attorney under a general retainer to compromise a claim of his client’s, which is referred to in Brewer v. Casey, 196 Mass. 384, 388, where the earlier cases are cited, is not presented by the record. See also Gilman v. Cary, 198 Mass. 318.

The plaintiff’s instructions in writing to counsel then acting for him, offered in evidence by the defendants but improperly excluded, expressly authorized a settlement upon condition “that my rights be reserved against the Burkhardt Brewing Co.,” the name under which the defendants are described in the writ, although the legal form in which the settlement should be expressed [458]*458is not stated. It was left to Ms counsel. The conversations between the agent of the company to whom the instructions had been transmitted and the plaintiff’s attorney, which took place before the covenant not to sue was executed, also were admissible if limited to the restrictions imposed by the instructions. New York, New Haven, & Hartford Railroad v. Martin, 158 Mass. 313, 316, 317. Riley v. Boston Elevated Railway, 195 Mass. 318, 322. Lewis v. Gamage, 1 Pick. 347. The jury should have been permitted to determine on all the evidence whether the covenant not to sue embodied the settlement the plaintiff had authorized, and which had been actually effected. If they found that it did, the defendants had not been discharged. But, if notwithstanding the covenant not to sue, the defendants on whom rested the burden of proof had shown that the plaintiff in fact had compromised Ms claim without qualification, the action could not be maintained. Boston Supply Co. v. Rubin, 214 Mass. 217.

Exceptions sustained,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 N.E. 17, 218 Mass. 454, 1914 Mass. LEXIS 1432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-von-scholley-mass-1914.