Stacy v. F. M. Hoyt Shoe Co.

141 A. 467, 83 N.H. 281, 1928 N.H. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedApril 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 141 A. 467 (Stacy v. F. M. Hoyt Shoe Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stacy v. F. M. Hoyt Shoe Co., 141 A. 467, 83 N.H. 281, 1928 N.H. LEXIS 16 (N.H. 1928).

Opinion

Branch, J.

The defendant contends that the release above set forth constitutes a bar to the present action as a matter of law. It bases its argument upon the rule that “the release of one joint tort-feasor is a bar to a suit against the others.” The law was thus stated in Wheat v. Carter, 79 N. H. 150, and this statement may have its uses as a concise formula by which reference may be made to a number of legal doctrines incapable of compression into such limited compass, but as pointed out in that case, it cannot be accepted as an accurate exposition of the law. It must constantly be borne in mind that the release is not in and of itself a bar to a subsequent suit against a joint wrongdoer. It is rather the satisfaction of the claim for the injury sustained which bars further actions. Wheat v. Carter, supra; Carpenter v. Company, 78 N. H. 118; Masterson v. Railway, ante, 190. A release of one jointly liable may or may not establish such satisfaction. Masterson v. Railway, supra. It should also be observed that the reference to “joint tortfeasors” does not mean that satisfaction for an injury by one inures only to the benefit of others who are in fact and in law jointly liable for the w'rong. It is sufficient if a claim of liability for the wrong in *284 question was made against the releasee and included in the settlement with him. “When a pretended claim for a tort has been settled by treaty, and satisfaction rendered the claimant by one so connected with the trespass as to be reasonably subject to an action and possible liability, as a joint tort-feasor, the satisfaction rendered will release all who may be liable, whether the one released was liable or not.” Cleveland &c. Ry Co. v. Hilligoss, 171 Ind. 417, 425; Carpenter v. Co., supra, 124.

In the present case the defendant seeks to secure the benefit of the release of the United Shoe Machinery Corp. upon the ground that it evidences satisfaction of a wrong for which it and the releasee were jointly liable. Before the defendant can avail itself of the rule thus invoked it must be made to appear that the liability released was of the kind to which the rule applies, viz., that the wrong was one for which the Machinery Corporation and the defendant were, or might have been jointly liable, or that a claim of liability for this wrong was made against the releasee by the plaintiff when the settlement with it was negotiated. In other words, the subject-matter of the contract releasing the Machinery Corporation must be ascertained and defined in order to establish the defendant’s right to claim under that contract. The language of the release itself is inadequate for this purpose. The phraseology indicates that it is very likely an adaptation of a printed form and its terms are so broad as to be inconclusive for the pin-pose of determining what specific liabilities or claims of liability were actually dealt with at the time of its execution. There is nothing in the release to show either that the Machinery Corporation was jointly liable with the defendant for the death of the intestate or that a claim of liability for causing his death was made against it by the plaintiff and discharged by the release. In fact it contains recitals that may mean that such was not the fact. It recites that the payment is made under the employers’ liability and workmen’s compensation act. This statement is ambiguous because the statute referred to (P. L., c. 178), as indicated by its title, is of a dual character. It provides compensation to injured workmen in certain employments and under certain conditions and establishes a new rule of liability for damages to injured employees if compensation is not available to them. There is nothing in the statement above quoted to indicate whether the payment was made in settlement of a claim for compensation with which the defendant could have no concern, or a claim for damages for which the defendant might be jointly liable. Either *285 of these claims might have been made under the statute referred to.

In Wheat v. Carter, supra, which was a petition for an injunction to restrain the prosecution of an action at law by Carter against Wheat upon the ground that he had already released his employers, the court said: “the test to determine whether the release is a bar to his suit against the plaintiffs is to inquire as to the extent of the claim he made at the time he settled with Fellows & Son. Was he claiming to recover all the loss he sustained as the result of the original injury to his hand or only the loss which resulted immediately from that injury? However the fact may be in other states, in this jurisdiction the issue raised by that inquiry is an issue of fact to be determined, like all such issues, by the weight of competent evidence.” The same test should be applied in the present case.

An examination of the statute clearly indicates that payment of the compensation therein provided was not intended to be a full equivalent for the damages suffered. No allowance for the element of pain and suffering is made and the compensation provided is, by its terms, expressly limited to a partial allowance for incapacity. P. L., c. 178, s. 19. Since the theory upon which a discharge of one wrongdoer operates to discharge others is that their common liability has been fully satisfied, it follows that if there has been only a partial satisfaction of that liability, it should constitute only a partial discharge of other wrongdoers. It is accordingly held that a covenant not to sue one party does not discharge the liability of others who may be jointly liable (Masterson v. Railway, supra) and a release of one containing a reservation of rights against another disproves satisfaction. Carpenter v. Company, supra, 120. By parity of reasoning it must be held that the release of a statutory liability to make partial compensation for an injury does not operate as a full discharge of others who may be liable for the same wrong.

It was argued by the defendant that the acceptance of compensation under the statute operates to bar all actions against third persons for the same injury, by reason of the following provision of the act: “In case the injured workman, or in event of his death his executor or administrator, shall avail himself of this chapter, either by accepting any compensation hereunder, by giving the notice hereinafter prescribed, or by beginning proceedings therefor in any manner on account of any such injury, he shall be barred from recovery in every action at common law or under any other statute on account of the samp injury.” P. L., c. 178, s. 11. The *286 suggested interpretation of the statute cannot be adopted. The act concerns itself solely with mutual rights and liabilities based upon the relationship of master and servant. It does not purport to define, enlarge or restrict the rights of workmen against persons other than their employers, and it must, therefore, be held that the only actions which are barred by the acceptance of compensation are actions against the employer.

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Bluebook (online)
141 A. 467, 83 N.H. 281, 1928 N.H. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stacy-v-f-m-hoyt-shoe-co-nh-1928.