Margaret Neeff v. Emery Transportation Company (An Ohio Corporation) and Midwest Transfer Company of Illinois (An Illinois Corporation)

284 F.2d 432, 4 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 247, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3116
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 6, 1960
Docket4, Docket 26097
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 284 F.2d 432 (Margaret Neeff v. Emery Transportation Company (An Ohio Corporation) and Midwest Transfer Company of Illinois (An Illinois Corporation)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Margaret Neeff v. Emery Transportation Company (An Ohio Corporation) and Midwest Transfer Company of Illinois (An Illinois Corporation), 284 F.2d 432, 4 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 247, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3116 (2d Cir. 1960).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

This appeal complains of the summary dismissal of the plaintiff’s personal injury suit on the ground that the pleadings did not include any allegation by the plaintiff that could be the basis of setting aside a release pleaded by the defendants. The appellant here strongly urges that the court erred in not permitting her to file an amendment attacking the release for fraud, overreaching or mutual mistake of fact, after the court had announced its opinion that the suit should be dismissed but before an order of dismissal was actually entered.

The plaintiff’s pleadings before the court consisted of a complaint, filed on December 2, 1954, and an amended complaint filed on April 9, 1958. These complaints alleged that the plaintiff, a New York resident, was injured in an automobile accident in Pennsylvania on September 2,1953, resulting from the negligence of the defendants. The defendants denied the allegations of negligence and alleged as a bar to the action that on September 22, 1953, in Pennsylvania, the plaintiff had, for a good and valuable consideration, executed a complete release; that “said plaintiff duly acknowledged satisfaction of all claims and demands whatsoever on account of or rising out of said occurrence, and further acknowledged that she was fully informed of the contents of the aforesaid general release and signed it with full knowledge of its meaning; that the said Margaret Neeff has at all times retained and continued to retain the consideration paid to her for said release and has not returned or *434 tendered said consideration back to the defendants, all of which the defendants now plead as a bar to this action.”

The plaintiff did not plead in reply to this defense of release. She was not required to do so in order to reserve her right to require the defendants to prove the fact of the execution of the release and of the retention of the consideration. Rule 8(d), F.R.Civ.P., 28 U.S.C.A., provides in part: “Averments in a pleading to which no responsive pleading is required or permitted shall be taken as denied or avoided.” Rule 7(a) provides that no reply to such an affirmative answer shall be allowed except by order of court requiring a reply. Thus, the pleadings were in such a posture when the trial court came to consider the defendants’ motion to dismiss as would permit the plaintiff to introduce evidence on the trial either to deny the execution of the release or to avoid its effect. See Cities Service Oil Co. v. Dunlap, 5 Cir., 101 F.2d 314, reversed on another ground 308 U.S. 208, 60 S.Ct. 201, 84 L.Ed. 196. Neither the appendix nor the brief of the appellees hints at any stipulation or concession made prior to, or at, the hearing on the motion to dismiss that deprived the plaintiff of her right to insist on proof of this affirmative defense.

The defendants’ principal contention in the trial court, renewed here, is that this release was a Pennsylvania contract, the validity and construction of which was to be determined by Pennsylvania law; that under Pennsylvania decisions, the failure of the plaintiff to tender the consideration to the defendants constituted a ratification of the release if it was found to be vulnerable, and that the release therefore stood as a bar to recovery. This argument, made in support of a motion to dismiss, had the fatal defect of overlooking, as the trial court did, the fact that neither the execution of the release nor the acts sufficient to work a ratification of it, if vulnerable, were proved, as they must be in the then state of the pleadings.

The trial court said in its opinion of June 19, 1959:

“The difficulty with the plaintiff’s position in the case at bar is that her complaint is barren of such allegations. The result is that the only issue raised by the pleadings, pertaining to the release, is whether the release was executed and delivered and the consideration paid. Inasmuch as that claim is not now controverted, the release stands as a complete bar to the action.”

The court erred in stating that the issue pertaining to the release “is not now controverted.” The issue was controverted in law, and in such a way as made permissible the introduction by the plaintiff of her proof to “avoid” the affirmative defense. See Moore’s Federal Practice, Second Ed., Vol. 2, pp. 1700-1701.

Nevertheless, whether or not the pleadings were such as would permit the plaintiff to avoid the defense of release by producing evidence of fraud or mutual mistake, she here filed a motion tendering an amendment to her complaint to allege as follows:

“15. (b). That heretofore a release had been obtained by the attorney or representative of the defendants by means of fraud, overreaching or a mutual mistake of fact, which release in the sum of $600.00 is void and voidable, should be set aside and not considered, except as a setoff to the damages hereinafter demanded.”

The refusal of the trial court to allow the plaintiff to amend her complaint violates the “when justice so requires” clause of Rule 15, F.R.Civ.P. When the court determined, on motion to dismiss the complaint, that the plaintiff should have pleaded an anticipatory reply to an affirmative defense (which we think was not correct under the “short and plain” provision of Rule 8(a)), the refusal of a request to remedy by amendment what it found to be a defect was error. See Downey v. Palmer, 2 Cir., 114 F.2d 116. In that case, in response to an action for statutory liability of a bank stockholder the defendants pleaded release; the plaintiff then filed a reply asserting that the release had been obtained by fraud. The *435 trial court held that the statute of limitations had barred the statutory action, and dismissed the suit without prejudice to the plaintiff’s right to file an action to cancel the release on the ground of fraud and for damages resulting from the fraud. This Court held that the court should not have dismissed the action, but should have given the plaintiff an opportunity to amend the complaint to attack the release. We think this same procedure should have been followed here.

In their briefs here the parties raise the question as to the applicability of the New York statute eliminating the requirement that a tender of the consideration be made before the release can be attacked. We agree with the trial court in deciding that Section 112-g of the New York Civil Practice Act 1 controls, and that in the Federal District Court sitting in New York a plaintiff who has received benefits from execution of a release need not tender back the benefits as a condition to the filing of a suit for the injury. Ciletti v. Union Pacific Railroad Co., 2 Cir., 196 F.2d 50.

The defendants claim, however, that the New York courts would not decide the case on the basis of § 112-g alone.

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Bluebook (online)
284 F.2d 432, 4 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 247, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/margaret-neeff-v-emery-transportation-company-an-ohio-corporation-and-ca2-1960.