Court Opinion

ID: 6442988
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:18:50.236917+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:52:39.652830
License: Public Domain

Dolan, J.
This is an action of contract or tort which was tried to a jury. At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant filed a motion for a directed verdict; this was denied, subject to the defendant’s exception. The jury *388returned a verdict for the defendant on the first count, and for the plaintiff on the second count, of her declaration. Before recording the verdict on the second count the judge reserved leave with the assent of the jury (G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 231, § 120) to enter a verdict for the defendant, and then reported the case for the determination of this court, the parties having stipulated that, if the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was properly denied, judgment is to be entered on the second count in accordance with the verdict, otherwise it is to be entered for the defendant. The first count of the plaintiff’s declaration alleges negligence on the part of the defendant in selling her a pair of shoes which were defective, and in their subsequent repair. The second count alleges a breach of contract by the defendant to repair the shoes in a careful and workmanlike manner. The particular allegations of this count need not be recited in detail since the circumstances connected with the making of the alleged contract and its alleged breach will appear hereinafter.
There was evidence that early in the month of April, 1934, the plaintiff purchased a pair of shoes in the defendant’s shoe department. The shoes were of the Oxford type with heels approximately two and one quarter inches in height: ordinary high heels. She wore the shoes at a social function about fifteen days after the purchase, and on Friday, April 20, 1934, wore them to work. Returning therefrom on that day she fell down “the subway stairs.” The heel of one of the shoes “came off.” The following Monday she took the shoes “back to the store” and talked with the “floor superintendent,” showed him the shoe and heel and told him what had happened. The floor superintendent was “the one who supervised adjustments on the shoe department floor.” Complaints as to the condition of shoes would be referred to him. The plaintiff asked him for new shoes and he replied that the shoe could be repaired “as the peg was loose.” He pointed to a “hole down the middle of the heel, and said that was where it went.” The plaintiff again asked for new shoes but the floor superintendent said “Well, you leave it to me and I will see that *389they are fixed properly, and that they will be all right”; that he “would repair it properly, that . . . [the plaintiff] would be able to wear it, and it would be good in appearance as well as safety.” He said “the peg is out . . . there is no peg in this shoe ... we will see to it that it is fixed properly.” The plaintiff left the shoes with him. There was a repair shop in the basement of the defendant’s building where shoes were repaired. A few days later the plaintiff went back and received the shoes, which seemed “all right.” On the following day, May 1, she wore the shoes, and, during the evening, while starting down the stairs from her home she felt a weakness in the heel, fell and was injured. The heel had become detached from the shoe and “the same hole was in the heel with no peg in it.” There was testimony of an expert shoe repairer from which the jury would have been warranted in finding that the shoe had been repaired in an improper, unworkmanlike and negligent manner, and that if the shoe had been repaired properly the heel would not have come off. The defendant admitted receipt of proper notice.
The defendant contends that the verdict on the first count of the plaintiff’s declaration, alleging negligence on the part of the defendant, established that no negligence in the repair of the shoe by the defendant was proved; that the evidence falls short of establishing a binding contract on the part of the defendant; that it does not establish that the original purchase of the shoes was made in such circumstances that there was any implied warranty of quality resulting from the provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 106, § 17; that it is apparent that the plaintiff had no real claim to be compromised nor had a bona fide cause of action; and that in this situation “the essential basis for a settlement is absent.” We are of opinion, however, that the return by the jury of a verdict for the defendant upon the first count of the plaintiff’s declaration in tort for negligence in the sale and repair of the shoe did not as matter of law preclude the jury from returning a verdict for the plaintiff on the second count in contract. The second count does not rest upon any negligence or implied warranty of quality arising *390out of the sale of the shoes, but rests upon the express promises to repair the shoe so that the plaintiff would be able to wear it, and. that it would be good in appearance and “safety,” made by the defendant when the plaintiff sought to return the shoes, and upon her forbearance to prosecute her claim in consideration of the defendant’s promises. The issues involved in the second count were essentially unlike those involved in the first count. Sherman v. Werby, 280 Mass. 157, 161. Newhall v. Enterprise Mining Co. 205 Mass. 585, 588.
The defendant’s further contention that at the time it agreed to repair the shoe the plaintiff had no real claim to be compromised, nor a bona fide cause of action, and that their existence was an essential basis for a compromise and the defendant’s promises were gratuitous, cannot be sustained. It is well settled that the abandonment of a claim believed to be well founded and made in good faith and “not frivolous, vexatious or unlawful, although not of such character in law or fact or both as finally to commend itself to the judgment of the tribunal of last resort, is the surrender of a thing of value and is a sufficient consideration for a contract.” Codman v. Dumaine, 249 Mass. 451, 457-458. Easton v. Easton, 112 Mass. 438, 443. Prout v. Pittsfield Fire District, 154 Mass. 450, 453. Blount v. Wheeler, 199 Mass. 330, 336. Sherman v. Werby, 280 Mass. 157, 160. See Am. Law Inst. Restatement: Contracts, § 76 a. The case of Palfrey v. Portland, Saco & Portsmouth Railroad, 4 Allen, 55, cited by the defendant, is disposed of by what is said in the case of Blount v. Wheeler, 199 Mass. 330, 337.
In the case at bar the jury “saw all the parties . . . upon the witness stand, and their manner of testifying may have furnished the basis for an opinion as to the purpose of the . . . [plaintiff] in making . . . [her claim against the defendant]. These and all the other circumstances of the case, together with the presumption, which exists commonly that people act in good faith rather than corruptly” would warrant the jury in finding that the claim which the plaintiff forsook in reliance upon the defendant’s promise *391“was a real one honestly undertaken.” Silver v. Graves, 210 Mass. 26, 31. The jury could also have found that there was a breach by the defendant of its express promise to repair the shoe “properly . . . ]so that] it would be good in appearance as well as safety,” as a result of which the plaintiff suffered the injuries complained of.
The defendant's motion for a directed verdict was properly denied and, in accordance with the stipulation of the parties, judgment is to be entered for the plaintiff on the verdict returned on count 2 of the plaintiff's declaration.

So ordered.