Witt v. Watkins

579 P.2d 1065, 1978 Alas. LEXIS 523
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1978
Docket3287
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 579 P.2d 1065 (Witt v. Watkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Witt v. Watkins, 579 P.2d 1065, 1978 Alas. LEXIS 523 (Ala. 1978).

Opinion

OPINION

Before BOOCHEVER, Chief Justice, and RABINO WITZ, CONNOR, BURKE and MATTHEWS, Justices.

BOOCHEVER, Chief Justice.

Bates B. Witt sued Clyde Watkins for damages arising out of injuries sustained on October 28, 1975 in an automobile collision. Witt was a passenger in an automobile driven by Watkins. As an affirmative defense, Watkins alleged that the suit was barred because Witt had entered into an agreement releasing Watkins from all claims. Based on the release, Watkins’ motion for summary judgment was granted. Witt has appealed, claiming that the release is unenforceable because it is the result of a mutual mistake as to the nature of his injuries.

The motion for summary judgment is supported by the affidavit and deposition of Mark S. Rauch, who was the Field Claims Representative for State Farm Insurance Company, Watkins’ insurer. In opposition, Witt filed an affidavit and the written report of Dr. F. Leland Jones, one of the physicians who treated him.

From those documents, it appears that Witt was initially treated in the emergency room of Providence Hospital where he was advised by the attending physician that he had sustained several bruised ribs in the accident. He was fitted with a rib belt and released that same day. On November 3, 1975, complaining of right rib and back pain, he was examined by Dr. Laufer. The doctor informed him that he had one or two cracked ribs and several bruised ribs.

On November 17, 1975, he received a complete physical examination from Dr. F. Leland Jones. Witt complained of discomfort in the right flank and right chest areas. Dr. Jones confirmed the diagnosis of cracked ribs and also discovered a slight elevation of alkaline phosphatase. Because the area of injury was near the kidneys, Dr. Jones decided to perform some kidney func *1067 tion tests and to refer Witt to Dr. Prindi-ville, a specialist in internal medicine, and Dr. Coles, a urologist.

Dr. Jones advised Mr. Rauch of Witt’s condition and told Rauch that to the best of his knowledge, Witt’s continued back and flank pain was not related to the accident. Dr. Jones also indicated to Witt that the back pain was not related to the accident.

Further examination by Drs. Prindiville and Coles revealed a bladder problem, for which surgery was recommended. Dr. Prindiville informed Witt that the symptoms were probably not related to the automobile accident and further stated that the back problem would probably be alleviated by the bladder operation.

Witt first engaged in settlement negotiations by contacting Mr. Rauch early in March 1976. Rauch offered $1,500.00 plus medical bills submitted to date. This offer was declined by Witt. According to Rauch, Witt indicated that he had discussed the matter with his attorney 1 who had advised him to take not less than $5,000.00, plus medical bills, if he decided to settle. On March 8, 1976, the parties agreed on a settlement figure of $3,000.00, plus paid medicals.

An agreement was executed by Witt which released Watkins from any and all claims “on account of all injuries, known and unknown, both to person and property, which have resulted or may in the future develop” from the accident of October 28, 1975.

On or about May 3, 1976, Witt’s bladder was removed by Dr. Sayers who, according to Witt’s affidavit, “discovered that my back had been broken in two places (two broken vertebrae), . . . ” and told him that the broken vertebrae were “quite probably related to the automobile accident of October 28, 1975.” Witt alleges that, in signing the release, he acted under the mistaken belief that the only injury sustained in the accident was to his ribs and that, had he known of the broken vertebrae, he would not have executed the document.

Rauch indicated in his deposition that from what Witt and Dr. Jones had told him, he could not be sure whether Witt’s internal problems were related to the accident or not. In his conference with Witt, Rauch could recall no mention of a back injury. Rauch did say he believed that there was something “unknown as to the exact nature, . . . extent . . . [and] cause of all Mr. Witt’s medical problems.” In his opinion, the possibility of unidentified problems entered into the settlement. The trial judge concluded that there was a unilateral mistake of fact on Witt’s part as to the nature of his injuries when he signed the release, but that there was no such mutual mistake as would render the release unenforceable.

As might be anticipated, there are a vast number of eases raising the issue of whether releases for personal injuries are enforceable under varying circumstances. 2 Generally, a release may be avoided for fraud or mutual mistake of fact. 3 The traditional approach is summarized by Willi-ston as follows:

A release though general in terms will be reformed so as to cover merely the right with regard to which the parties were dealing and exclude rights of which they were ignorant. This principle has sometimes been extended so as to exclude from the operation of a release unknown or unexpected consequences of a known right to which the release applied and was intended to apply. Thus, where a release is given by one injured in an accident and more serious injuries develop than were supposed to exist at the time of the settlement, it is a question of *1068 fact whether the parties assumed as a basis of the release the known injuries, or whether the intent was to make a compromise for whatever injuries from the accident might exist whether known or not. On a fair interpretation not only of the language of the instrument, but of the intention of the parties, the latter supposition is more likely, but presumably out of tenderness for injured plaintiffs some courts have gone very far in finding the facts in accordance with the former possibility. Equity will reform or rescind in a direct proceeding a release given for accidental injuries, but the more common recognition of the equitable principle that a release will be avoided in case of an injury unknown at the time of settlement occurs where the release is avoided in an action at law brought to recover damages for the injury, (footnotes omitted) 4

Except where the mistake is known to the other party to the transaction, 5 Willi-ston criticizes extending relief for a unilateral mistake because of its contradiction of the objective theory of mutual assent in the formation of contracts. 6 If one views the parties to the contract from the standpoint of objective reasonable parties, one cannot consider the subjective mistake of fact under which one of the parties was laboring, where the other party is unaware or has no reason to be aware of such a mistake. Judge Frank, in his perceptive concurrence in Ricketts v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 153 F.2d 757, 765 (2d Cir.

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Bluebook (online)
579 P.2d 1065, 1978 Alas. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/witt-v-watkins-alaska-1978.