Wood v. Young

271 P. 734, 127 Or. 235, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 303
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 271 P. 734 (Wood v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Young, 271 P. 734, 127 Or. 235, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 303 (Or. 1928).

Opinion

*237 BROWN, J.

Black’s Law Dictionary thus defines the term “release”:

“The relinquishment, concession, or giving np of a right, claim, or privilege, by the person in whom it exists or to whom it accrues, to the person against whom it might have been demanded or enforced.”

Anderson’s Dictionary of Law says:

“Release.- The act or writing by which some claim or interest is surrendered to another person.”

The plaintiff says that, a few days after the collision a draft was delivered to him for his minor son, Le-Roy Wood, the amount represented thereby constituting full consideration and settlement of' the son’s claim for damages against defendant for the total destruction of his automobile. The draft reads:

“$615.00. Albany, Ore., O’ct 4, 19—5.
“At sight pay to the order of W. L. Wood and LeRoy Wood Six Hundred’ Fifteen and no/100 Dollars, in settlement of claim of damages against John Young.
“Ronald L. Reilly.
“To Oregon Surety & Casualty Company,
“Board of Trade Building*,
“Portland, Oregon.”

Across the end of the draft appears the following matter:

“This draft will not be paid unless receipt on reverse side is properly executed.”

On the back of the draft appears the following release, which the defendant invokes as a full discharge of all claims against him:

“Release.
“Received of John Young this 4th day of October, 1925, the sum of Six Hundred Fifteen and no/100 *238 Dollars in full satisfaction, liquidation and discharge of all claims against the said John Young on account of the happening herein set forth, to wit, collision with our automobile, whether now or hereafter to become manifest, arising directly or indirectly from said happening which occurred on or about the 1st day of October, 1925.
“(Signature) LeRoy Wood. (Seal) “W. L. Wood.
“Witness:
“J. V. Shank.”

The chief ground upon which the validity of the judgment is questioned is the failure of the court, upon defendant’s motion, to direct a verdict for him. This necessitates a thorough analysis of the evidence adduced by plaintiff.

According to the record, on October 1, 1925, LeRoy Wood, accompanied by his father, plaintiff herein, was operating an automobile in a southerly direction on the Pacific Highway between Portland and Albany. When he reached a point about three miles south of Aurora, he saw the defendant’s car coming from the south at a high rate of speed, and crisscrossing from one side of the highway to the other. Becoming alarmed, he pulled his car off the pavement on the right and stopped. Defendant’s ear approached without decreasing its speed, and, still swerving in its course, struck the car in which plaintiff was riding midway of its body, demolishing it, throwing plaintiff out of the car, and hurling him a distance of 20 feet. When plaintiff regained consciousness, the defendant gave him his business card and requested him to call upon him at his office in Portland. Two or three days later plaintiff and his son, LeRoy, called upon the defendant, who took them to the office of an insurance company, whose *239 representatives in turn took them to the offices of their attorney. Up to that time no claim for personal injuries had been mentioned; the only claim, according to plaintiff and his witnesses, being with relation to the damaged automobile. At the attorney’s office plaintiff was advised that the car would be examined and an adjustment made thereon, and he was requested to call the office from Albany at 5 p. m. on the following day. Plaintiff testified:

“I went there to call them up. I handed this number in to Central, and this man that wrote out the check tapped me on the shoulder, and he said he had come to settle for the car and I needn’t call up. He asked me what the price was. I told them to get a small car of some kind. I told them a small car like an Overland, like the boy had. * * I asked him what his proposition was. He was willing to buy some cheap car. I told him he couldn’t settle with me that way; that we would have to have a car just like the boy had, he was at work, and if he had one that would suit the boy, we would let him off; either to get a car to suit the boy, or leave the price for a new car. He didn’t say a word. He turned around and wrote out the cheek. He handed it to me. I didn’t read it, only noticed it covered the price of a car, and I handed it to the car man and said, ‘Does that suit you?’ He said, ‘Yes.’ Then Reilly stepped out, and I said my son would be up soon and for him to look over the cars, and for ‘you to keep it.’ * #
“Q. Then he kept this draft? A. The garageman, Mr. Shank. % * I said, ‘I suppose this covers the price of the car.’ He (Reilly) said, ‘Yes.’ So I read it and found out it covered the price for the garageman, but Reilly told me he didn’t have any right to settle up my affairs at all; just for the car.
“Q. He had no business with your trouble? A. No, just for the car, is all. * * I said to him, ‘This here covers the car, I suppose.’ "When I read it he said, ‘Yes, it does.’ * *
*240 “Q. Now, Mr. Wood, you relied on their statements to you when they turned that over to you? A. Yes, sir. ’ ’

The plaintiff then testified that the car that had been demolished was the property of his minor son; that he had signed the .contract with his son in the purchase of the car, and that “I just signed it (the release) for security, the same as I did the contract.” He again testified that throughout the transaction the adjuster was representing the defendant and the insurance company, and, as such representative, ■ informed him that the draft was delivered in payment for the automobile only. He testified that the adjuster “told me he didn’t have any right to settle up my affairs at all; just for the car”; and that plaintiff relied upon this statement.

Plaintiff’s son, LeRoy Wood, the owner of the car, testified that, in their conversation with the representatives of the insurance company in Portland, nothing was said about the personal injuries sustained by his father or himself, and that the only subject referred to was payment for the car. This testimony is corroborated by that of Lester Wood, brother of LeRoy.

From 24 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2 ed.); page 308, we take the following pertinent observation with relation to release of claim for personal injuries:

“Where one receives injuries in a railroad or other accident, it is a general practice to procure from the injured person a release of damages, often while he is suffering from the effects of the accident, and usually upon payment of a small sum of money. * *

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Bluebook (online)
271 P. 734, 127 Or. 235, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-young-or-1928.