DocketNumber: Appeal, 37
Judges: Kephart, Schaefer, Maxey, Drew, Linn, Stern, Barnes
Filed Date: 3/29/1938
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Plaintiff was employed by the McKinney Steel Company as the operator of a locomotive crane. The steel company and defendant, Scottdale Connecting Railroad *Page 208 Company, used a railroad siding in common. Plaintiff was directed by his employer to load sand on the siding and the crane was put in position by a locomotive belonging to the steel company. When plaintiff had completed loading the sand, the crane could not at once be moved from the siding owing to the presence of cars thereon. Plaintiff, upon learning this, decided to do some work on the brake under the flat car on which the crane operated. He and his helper got underneath the car. They placed no signal or warning device indicating their presence beneath the car and informed no one that they were there. An engine of defendant backed some cars into the siding, they bumped into other cars standing upon it, which in turn ran down a slight grade in the track and bumped into the crane car, injuring plaintiff, who was still underneath it. It was not shown that the engineer of the locomotive or the fireman knew of the presence of plaintiff beneath the crane car.
The trial court held plaintiff guilty of contributory negligence under the authority of Cypher v. Huntingdon BroadTop Mountain R. R. Coal Co.,
But, beyond anything else, a release executed by plaintiff bars recovery. It was signed, about a month after he was injured, in triplicate. The consideration named in it, $150, was paid by check, which contained a printed release on its face. The check was left with plaintiff by the man who made the settlement. It was endorsed by plaintiff and his wife. She took it to a bank and received the money it called for, which was spent. No repudiation was made of the settlement, or of the release, until this suit was brought some two years later. *Page 209 The money was not returned; plaintiff testified his attorney offered to return it. His endeavor to nullify the release is largely based upon the statement that he did not read or understand the import of the papers he admittedly signed, that he was upset nervously at the time and suffering pain because of his injuries, and could not read owing to the condition of his eyes, and by reason of the further fact that the man who made the settlement told him the money was donated by his fellow workmen, an account which is at least somewhat countered by the circumstances that the check was drawn on a Philadelphia bank, that he had received a donation two weeks before of $14 or $16, and that when plaintiff returned to work he did not thank any of the men who might have contributed the money represented by the check. The attending physician, subpoenaed by plaintiff but not called by him, and called by defendant, testified that plaintiff at the time he signed the release had no nervous condition, nor was his mental capacity in any way impaired so as to affect his understanding of the terms of settlement or of appreciating what he signed. No testimony was offered in plaintiff's behalf that his mental capacity was in any way impaired.
In the recent case of Vogel v. Taub,
Judgment affirmed. *Page 210