Mensforth v. Chicago Brass Co.

126 N.W. 41, 142 Wis. 546, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 249
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 126 N.W. 41 (Mensforth v. Chicago Brass Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mensforth v. Chicago Brass Co., 126 N.W. 41, 142 Wis. 546, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 249 (Wis. 1910).

Opinions

[549]*549Tbe following opinion was filed April 26, 1910:

EeewiN, J.

Tbe questions involved are wbetber tbe writing signed by tbe plaintiff was, when signed, a valid discharge of bis canse of action set up in tbe complaint, or wbetber, if not such when signed, it became so by tbe subsequent acts and conduct of plaintiff. Tbe court below held that it was a question for tbe jury wbetber tbe release when executed discharged and satisfied tbe plaintiff’s claim, but that tbe evidence established as matter of law that tbe plaintiff, after tbe signing of tbe release, affirmed it, and thereby made it a valid release and satisfaction of bis cause of action, and directed a verdict for tbe defendant.

Tbe release in question purports on its face to satisfy and discharge all claims for damages growing out of tbe accident, and was signed at tbe hospital ten days after the injuries were received and while the plaintiff was in bed suffering pain. Tbe evidence tends to show that be bad to be propped or held up in bed while be signed, and that be bad no glasses and could not read tbe paper without them, and was deaf, and when tbe paper was read by tbe officer of tbe defendant be beard only a few words of it, and that the whole thing seemed to him like a flash in a dream; that defendant’s officer who procured tbe release represented to plaintiff before be signed that they bad looked into tbe case and were not to blame for tbe falling of tbe wall, and that it was an accident, but that they would still keep him, pay expenses and doctor’s bill and a few dollars to reimburse him. Plaintiff testified that be caught a few words when tbe paper was being read to him, and said, “But after that I dwindled down,” and that be did not know what be was signing, and did not know that tbe paper be signed contained a release of bis damages against the defendant, if be bad any. No inquiry was made at tbe time of signing tbe release as to tbe extent of tbe injuries, and there is [550]*550nothing in the evidence going to show that the defendant then considered that there was any liability and represented to plaintiff that there was not and that the settlement was not based on compensation for the injuries, but that what it was doing for plaintiff was a mere gratuity, except from what appeared upon the face of the instrument signed by the plaintiff. The plaintiff was earning when injured about $100 per month, and was sixteen weeks in the hospital after the injury. He received after signing the receipt $100 in three instalments, and nothing was said when the money was paid to him as to what it was for. Without further detailing the evidence the court is of opinion that the question of the validity of the release as a bar to the cause of action set up in the complaint was for the jury. Lusted v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 71 Wis. 391, 36 N. W. 857; Schultz v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 44 Wis. 638; Union Pac. R. Co. v. Harris, 158 U. S. 326, 15 Sup. Ct. 843; Smith v. Occidental & O. S. Co. 99 Cal. 462, 34 Pac. 84; Bussian v. M., L. S. & W. R. Co. 56 Wis. 325, 14 N. W. 452; Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co. v. Cunningham, 59 Kan. 722, 54 Pac. 1055.

A valid release in writing sufficient to bar the plaintiff’s claim not having been established as a matter of law, it becomes necessary to determine whether the evidence on af-firmance or ratification justified the court in directing a verdict for the defendant. The evidence, as well as the legal inferences to be drawn therefrom, as to whether there was a release of the plaintiff’s cause of action is conflicting. The plaintiff never saw the release after it was signed until it was produced upon the trial of this action; nor did he have any definite knowledge that a cause of action existed in his favor against the defendant until shortly before he commenced this action. True, there is some evidence that several months after the release was signed he was informed that he had jeopardized his case by signing the release. [551]*551But tbe evidence is vague and indefinite and not sufficient to inform him that he in fact had a cause of action or the nature of the release he had signed, or warrant him in beginning suit until he was finally informed about the defective construction of the wall by one Johnson, who was also injured, and that he then advised his attorney to bring this action. There could be no affirmance or ratification of the release without full knowledge of its terms. Nor could there .be a release of the cause of action without unequivocal acts of plaintiff showing expressly or by necessary implieation that he intended to release. And there can be no ratification or affirmance unless plaintiff knew or ought to have known all the facts and circumstances attending the act to be ratified. McDermott v. Jackson, 97 Wis. 64, 72 N. W. 375; Herring v. Skaggs, 73 Ala. 446; Pfeiffer v. Marshall, 136 Wis. 51, 116 N. W. 871. Ratification presumes the existence of knowledge of all the facts, and one not informed of the whole transaction is not in a position to ratify the same. King v. Mackellar, 109 N. Y. 215, 16 N. E. 201. Nor was the receipt of the $100 an affirmance of the release unless paid in satisfaction of the plaintiff’s cause of action, or received after he knew or ought to have known that he had a cause of action and that the money was paid in satisfaction of it. There is evidence that the defendant did nothing but what it offered to do on the theory that plaintiff had no cause of action against it, and that the $100 was paid long before plaintiff received the information from Johnson which induced him to bring the action.

The transaction involved in procuring the release on its face bears the impress of unfairness. The plaintiff was in the hospital only ten days when the release was procured and remained there fourteen or fifteen weeks thereafter. When he signed the paper he was suffering pain and was unable to sit up, and not in condition to carefully consider his [552]*552rights in the matter. A friend of his accompanied the officer of defendant to aid in getting the release signed. No inquiry was made as to the extent of the injuries and no pretense to settle for them, but, on the contrary, the officer of the defendant represented to plaintiff that he had no claim for damages. Such practice was a fraud, constructive if not actual, upon the plaintiff, if he did in fact have a cause of action and the defendant knew or ought to have known that such claim for damages existed. Lusted v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 71 Wis. 391, 36 N. W. 857. In Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co. v. Cunningham, 59 Kan. 722, 727, 54 Pac. 1055, 1057, the court in referring to such a settlement said:

“Where such unseemly haste is made in obtaining settlements with parties who have sustained such serious injuries, and where the amount paid is so trifling and utterly disproportionate to any just compensation, it seems like wasting time to nicely discuss questions of evidence bearing on the plaintiff’s capacity to transact business.”

It cannot be said that the ease before us comes within the class where negligence in signing a paper prevents the party from afterwards questioning its contents.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 N.W. 41, 142 Wis. 546, 1910 Wisc. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mensforth-v-chicago-brass-co-wis-1910.