Stanek v. Libera

75 N.W. 1124, 73 Minn. 171, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 776
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
DocketNos. 11,105-(173)
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 75 N.W. 1124 (Stanek v. Libera) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanek v. Libera, 75 N.W. 1124, 73 Minn. 171, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 776 (Mich. 1898).

Opinion

MITCHELL, J.

These were actions or proceedings in garnishment, under Gr. S. 1894, § 5819.

The supplemental complaints filed by the plaintiffs alleged the following facts, viz.: That the defendants were engaged in the business of contracting and building, which required the employment of servants or employees; that in June, 1894, the garnishee executed to the defendants an employer’s liability policy, insuring them for 12 months against liability for damages on account of injuries suffered by their employees, to an amount not exceeding $2,500 on any one employee, and not exceeding $10,000 in the aggregate; that in July, 1894, the plaintiff’s intestates were killed while in the employment of the defendants; that on October 19, and November 4, respectively, in 1896, each of the plaintiffs recovered a judgment against the defendants for $3,079.92 for damages caused by such deaths; that they caused summons to be served upon the garnishee, requiring it to appear and answer touching its indebtedness to the defendants; that upon such examination the garnishee denied being indebted to the defendants in any sum whatever,- when in fact it was, upon the facts stated, indebted to them on the policy in the sum of $5,000.

It is sufficiently accurate for present purposes to say that by its answer the garnishee admitted all the facts alleged in this complaint, but alleged that in September, 1896, for a valuable consideration by it paid to them, the defendants surrendered the policy, and in writing released it from all liability whatever under and on account of it. A copy of the policy was attached to the answer, from which it appeared that one of its provisions was that the assured should, at the expense of the insurer, render all reasonable assistance in obtaining information relative to injuries and their cause, and in the adjustment of claims and the defense of suits.

In reply to this the plaintiffs denied that the defendants had ever released or agreed to release the garnishee from any of the obligations or agreements contained in the policy; that the actual facts were as follows, to wit: That the garnishee being- indebted to the defendants in a large sum for services rendered prior to September, 1896, in defense of these and other actions then being defended by [176]*176the garnishee pursuant to the terms of its policy, it and the defendants entered into a contract whereby it was mutually agreed that the garnishee should pay the defendants a specified sum for such services, in consideration of which the defendants should release it from all further claims on account of the services, and deliver the policy to it, and that in consideration thereof the garnishee should relieve the defendants from any further liability by reason of said actions, and take the policy, and settle with the plaintiffs, or successfully defend the actions, and, in case judgment was rendered in any of them against the defendants, pay and satisfy the same in full, and hold the defendants harmless therefrom; that the agent of the garnishee, with whom the agreement was made, presented to the defendants for their signature a paper writing which he represented to them contained the foregoing agreement as made by the parties, and that defendants, trusting in and relying upon this representation, signed the paper, believing that it correctly set out the terms of the agreement as actually made; and that, if it contained any other or different agreement, the same was unknown to the defendants, and was fraudulently inserted by the garnishee’s agent.

■ We have been thus particular in stating the allegations of the pleadings, in order that the nature of the actions, the theory upon which plaintiffs proceeded, and the issues presented, may clearly appear. It is evident that the plaintiffs are seeking to hold the insurance company, as garnishee, solely as the debtor of the defendants on the policy; and that they proceed upon the theory that this policy is still on foot, as a valid and subsisting contract between the insurance company and the defendants. It is also clear that no question of the rescission of any contract is involved in the case. Plaintiffs’ reply presents a case where the parties have entered into a lawful oral agreement just as they intended, but in reducing it to writing, through the fraud of one party, and the mistake of the other party caused by such fraud, the written instrument fails to express the real agreement. This might be a good ground for reforming the written instrument, if necessary, but not for rescinding the contract. The element of fraud and mistake did not inhere in the contract itself, but only in the simulated [177]*177written evidence of it. This eliminates from the case several of the questions discussed by counsel.

The main question of fact litigated on the trial was, what were the terms of the actual agreement made between the defendants and the insurance company in September, 1896, and, as incident to that,' whether the agent of the insurance company fraudulently misrepresented to the defendants the contents of the written instrument, or whether the latter knew and understood its contents when they executed it. This instrument (Exhibit A), dated September 26, 1896, was signed by the firm of Libera & Mlnazek, by the hand of Libera, and by both defendants individually, and purported on its face to be a full release of the insurance company from all liabilities and obligations of every kind on or on account of the policy, for the consideration of $500, the receipt of which was acknowledged.

It appeared in evidence that this instrument, which was prepared by the company’s agent, was signed by both defendants at Walnut Grove, where the defendant Mlnazek was then at work, and whither the agent of the company, accompanied by defendant Libera, had gone to procure his signature; that after it was signed it was retained by Libera, who returned with the agent to Winona, and did not deliver it until four or five days afterwards, when the company’s agent paid him the $500 named in the instrument, and also an additional $500, which Libera exacted as a condition of his delivery of the instrument.

Certain questions of fact were submitted to a jury (all other issues being reserved for trial by the court), in answer to which they found, in substance, that neither of the defendants knew or understood the contents of Exhibit A when they signed it; that before' they signed it the company’s agent falsely and fraudulently represented to them that the writing provided that the insurance company would defend or settle the suits against them, and relieve them from all further claims of the plaintiffs involved therein; and that defendants believed these representations, and signed the instrument because of such belief. After adopting as facts these special findings of the jury, the court further found, among other things, that at the time of the delivery of Exhibit A the defendant [178]*178Libera had full knowledge of the contents of the instrument, and surrendered the policy to the company. Upon these findings the court held that the company was not indebted to the defendants, and discharged it as garnishee.

The main contention of the plaintiffs on this appeal is that the finding that Libera knew the contents of the instrument when he delivered it was not justified by the evidence.

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Related

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280 N.W. 183 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1938)
Knudson v. Anderson
272 N.W. 376 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1937)
Wilson v. Geiss
190 N.W. 61 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1922)
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Mlnazek v. Libera
86 N.W. 100 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 N.W. 1124, 73 Minn. 171, 1898 Minn. LEXIS 776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanek-v-libera-minn-1898.