Southern Traction Co. v. Rogan
Southern Traction Co. v. Rogan
Opinion of the Court
On July 19, 1914, William Rogan was killed, while walking on the appellant’s track between Gross and Ralph, two stations not far from Waco, by one of the appellant’s motorcars. This suit was instituted by the appellee, Lula Rogan, his widow, in the early part of August thereafter, to recover the resulting damages. In substance, the plaintiff below alleged that the appellant’s right of way between those two stations was commonly used by pedestrians as a pathway, with the knowledge, consent, and acquiescence of the appellant; that William Rogan was deaf, and while walking north on the right of way between two stations known as Gross and Ralph was struck and fatally injured by one of appellant’s cars. It is alleged that the defendant was negligent in running the car at a reckless and dangerous rate of speed, in not warning William Rogan'of the approach of the car, and in failing to stop the car after discovering Rogan in a perilous situation. The appellant alleged, among other defenses, a settlement ; that after the death of William Rogan the appellee, Lula Rogan, in consideration of the sum of $519.50 paid to her as damages for the death of her husband, executed a release. ,By a supplemental petition the ap-pellee admitted the execution of the release, but alleged that it was procured through trickery, fraud and duress, and that at the time she signed the instrument she was mentally incapacitated to understand and comprehend its meaning. She tendered back the sum received, and further requested that in case she recovered a judgment this sum be deducted from the amount of the damages awarded to her.
The case was submitted to the jury upon the following special issues:
(1) “Was the plaintiff at the time she signed the release in question to the defendant traction company in such a condition of mind as to render her incapable of understanding and appreciating the nature and effect of such a release, even if plaintiff knew or had been advised of the contents thereof?” To this the jury answered “Yes.”
(2) “Did defendant’s motorman at the time in question, on discovering the peril of plaintiff’s deceased husband, use all the means at hand *1137 consistent with the safety of his car and the occupants thereof to avoid striking the deceased?” This was answered in the negative.
(3) The third issue related to the amount of damages, which the jury placed at $1,519.50, from which the court deducted $519.50 received as the consideration for the release theretofore executed.
Many of the material facts adduced on the trial below were undisputed. It was shown that William Bogan and his wife lived near the right of way of the appellant; that late in the afternoon of July 19, 1914, at the request of his wife, Bogan started to the house of a neighbor for the purpose of obtaining some milk. He used the path leading over the appellant’s right of way. One of the appellant’s motorcars going from Waco to Waxahachie overtook and struck Bogan, inflicting injuries from which he died. Bogan was a deaf-mute, but that fact was unknown to the motorman at the time. As will be observed, the only ground of liability was that of discovered peril. Upon that issue the testimony was conflicting, and will be discussed under an appropriate assignment.
While the- appellee attacked, in her petition, the validity of the release upon several distinct grounds, only one was submitted by the court as an issue of fact to be passed upon by the jury, that of the mental incapacity of the appellee at the time she made the settlement. Conceding the correctness of the appellant’s contention that the evidence was insufficient to support the finding made upon that issue as submitted, there was evidence sufficient to support a finding upon one or more of the other grounds upon which the validity of the release was attacked. It is undisputed that the appellee belonged to that class of unfortunates who can neither hear nor speak. The evidence tended to show that she was an ignorant woman and unfamiliar with her legal rights. She was carried directly from the burial of her husband to the office of the appellant’s claim agent, for the purpose of discussing a settlement. The negotiations between her and the claim agent were carried on through one of her husband’s brothers, who acted as an interpreter. She testified that her husband’s brothers, who were present, told her that Mr. Boss, the claim agent, would give her enough money to bury her husband; that that sum must be paid, or he, the claim agent, would have her husband’s body taken up and buried in the potter’s field. We quote the following from her testimony:
“He [the interpreter] said Mr. Boss vtos sorry for me and would help me, but I had to sign the paper. They asked me for my plans for the future. I did not know. I said we were planning to build a little house in Oaklawn. They asked me what it would cost to build our house. I said a small three-room house about $300 or $400. * * * Mr. Boss said he would pay for the funeral and leave me $400 to build my house and then I could go to work, and that he would help me only for pity because he was sorry for me; that my husband had no right to walk on the track; that there was a law against deaf-mutes going on the road. They told me to sign that writing; that if I did not sign it they would take his body up from the grave in Oak-wood Cemetery and throw it in the potter’s field. I did not read the writing that I signed. As to my mental and physical condition at that time, I was heartbroken. I was heartbroken, for I thought I had Silled him when I made him go after the milk. They had me up there in that office about a half an hour or an hour. I did not know what was in the writing that I signed and did not care as long as he could stay in the grave.”
If these facts are true, there is presented a situation where the contracting parties *1138 were not dealing upon anything lite equal conditions. To conclusively presume tlaat an ignorant deaf-mute widow, too poor to bury her dead, while enduring the griefs of recent bereavement made sharper by feeling of self reproach, should be able to protect her legal rights in a contest with a trained and unemotional representative of a great corporation, is demanding too much of the human mind. If at the time this settlement was made the appellee had a well-founded claim for damages against the appellant, the amount she then received was grossly inadequate. If she was induced to make that settlement and accept that sum by the representations that her husband at the time he was killed was unlawfully trespassing upon the property of the railway company, and for that reason she was not legally entitled to any compensation for his death, that what was offered was a mere gratuity, tendered through sympathy for her poverty and distress, and that, if the release was not then executed, the grave of her husband would be reopened and his body transferred to the burial ground for paupers, then she was overreached, coerced, and imposed upon in a way which the law cannot sanction.
One of the two special charges referred to above is based upon the conduct of the appellee in accepting the $400 the day after the release was executed and retaining it. It is contended that, even if she was mentally incapacitated at the time to execute a binding release, her contract was voidable only, and open to an affirmance when that disability was removed, and that the evidence conclusively shows an affirmance at a time when she was suffering from no mental incapacity. That argument is founded upon the assumption that mental incapacity was the only issue which should have been submitted in that connection. If when that charge was requested the pleadings and the evidence were such as to show that the ap-pellee may have been influenced to execute the release by fraud or duress, the bare fact that she on the next day accepted the money and failed to repudiate the settlement is not sufficient, as a matter of law, to defeat her right to recovery. There is no evidence that she then knew any more about her legal rights than she did the day before. If she had then been deceived as to her rights, or was acting under compulsion of some kind, the deception may have still continued. There could be no binding ratification by her of a voidable contract so long as she was subject to the disabilities or impositions which made the contract voidable.
Counsel for appellant refers to a group of cases which in effect hold that those in charge of railway trains have a right to presume that persons walking on the track will observe the usual danger- signals and seek a place of safety. But that doctrine has no application when those in charge of cars know, or have good ground for believing, that for some reason the warnings are not heard or will not be observed. H. & T. C. Ry. Co. v. O’Donnell, 99 Tex. 640, 92 S. W. 409. To constitute discovered peril it is not always necessary that the injured party should be in a place of actual danger. It is sufficient if it is apparent that he is about to enter a perilous situation. H. & T. C. Ry. Co. v. Finn, 107 S. W. 94; Id., 101 Tex. 511, 109 S. W. 918. The facts distinguish this case from the group to which the appellant refers. Here it appears from the motorman’s testimony that he discovered that the danger signal was not being regarded, and, according to his own admissions, he thought something was wrong with the man. That being true, he was put upon notice that an injury would probably result unless he stopped the car. We think the evidence was sufficient to justify the court in submitting the issue and to sustain the answer given.
The judgment is affirmed.
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