Opinion by
Mr. Justice Moschzisker,Plaintiff, Robert Edmund Ralston, claimed damages, alleged to have been suffered by bim through injuries to his wife, due to the negligence of defendant company; he recovered a verdict for $2,000, upon which judgment was entered in his favor; defendant has appealed and asks judgment n. o. v.
A formal release, bearing the admitted signatures of both plaintiff and his wife, was proved; but he contended it was procured by fraud. The issue as to the alleged fraud was submitted to the jury and found against defendant; the question for determination concerns the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict.
We shall state the case according to plaintiff’s version ; but, at the same time, we note that, so far as the procurement of the release is concerned, most of the facts asserted by him are flatly denied by defendant.
Mrs. Ralston was injured, while a passenger upon one of defendant’s trolley cars; the following morning, her husband informed the transit company of the accident; a few hours later, one of the defendant’s claim agents called at the Ralston residence, and, in the presence of plaintiff, took a written'' statement from his wife, in which a claim was made against defendant “for the sum of $25,” to cover damages suffered by reason of the accident; when upon the stand, plaintiff more than once denied any such claim had been made, asserting he was “positive about that,” also saying he was “positive” the subject of a settlement was not even discussed at the time in question, or until the third visit of defendant’s agent. He likewise emphatically denied that his wife had signed any statement whatever concerning the accident; but, when shown the waiting to which we refer, containing his own signature as a witness, he retracted his former testimony, with the excuse that the matter *262had been so long ago he could not remember. At no time, however, did plaintiff allege any irregularity in connection with the procurement of this written statement, which is of importance, for it inaugurated negotiations that culminated in the signing of the release, here attacked; also, it indicates the amount finally paid closely approximates that originally claimed.
To set aside the release, plaintiff presented merely the testimony of himself and wife; and that given by the latter differs in several material respects from plaintiff’s own version — both as to the preliminary negotiations leading up to final settlement and what actually occurred at the execution of the release. It is not necessary to state in detail these differences, for the fact that they exist is the material circumstance to which we wish to call attention.
It appears plaintiff knew that the man, who procured the release, was a representative of defendant company, and that he cabled for the very purpose of negotiating a settlement. Subsequent testimony shows several other visits by defendant’s agent, culminating in the payment seven days after the accident of $20 — an amount midway between $15, originally offered by defendant, and $25, first claimed by plaintiff.
The release was executed by both Ralston and his wife, in the presence of defendant’s agent, and another, entirely disinterested, subscribing witness. The latter was not produced at trial, it being testified on plaintiff’s behalf that she was dead; although it appears, by an affidavit since filed, that such testimony is either false or mistaken, for the witness is still alive. This matter is discussed at length in our opinion disposing of the appeal in the case of Carrie Ralston, and need not be further referred to here.
Ralston and his wife both testified they executed the release without reading it, and in ignorance of its contents. So far as plaintiff is concerned, his only excuse for not reading or otherwise informing himself as to *263the contents of the paper, is that Ms wife was crying at the time he put Ms signature thereto, and, when he asked defendant’s agent, “What is on this paper?” the latter “flew up like a wild tiger, just as much as to say 'What do you ask me that for, what do you think I am?’ ” Then, plaintiff said, “I simply signed it.” After this, he was asked, “Did you read it before you signed it?” to which he replied “No, sir, he wouldn’t let me.” Plaintiff does not attempt to say what means, if any, were taken to prevent Mm from reading or informing himself as to the contents of the paper; so Ms mere assertion, that the agent “wouldn’t let” him read it, can only be referred to the prior vague statement to the effect that, when he (plaintiff) asked about the contents of the paper, the agent flew up “like a wild tiger.”
The testimony which we have already recited — together with allegations that the paper was folded in such a way plaintiff could not observe its contents, that the agent told him it was a “receipt” for money paid to date, and he would return later and make other payments, to culminate in a final settlement — constitutes the evidence relied upon to set aside a somewhat lengthy, formally drawn, sealed release of damages, admittedly signed by a thoroughly literate and mentally capable man of affairs, after negotiations with one whom he knew to be an adjuster of claims representing the defendant company.
Each of the following cases, in one respect or another, is relevant to the one in hand; and, when considered together, as a line of authorities, the principles here applicable will appear therefrom.
Pa. R. R. Co. v. Shay, 82 Pa. 198: Plaintiff, who signed a release, said he could neither read nor write; but execution of the paper was not denied. He did not know contents of instrument, understood it to be simply a receipt for expenses, and did not intend to release damages when he put his name thereto. While the representative of defendant told plaintiff it was a receipt *264(as it was), it also was a release, which, he did not tell plaintiff. The case was submitted to the jury, to find whether the release had been “obtained by fraud.” We said there was no evidence to justify submission, and, applying the rule laid down by Justice Gibson in Greenfield’s Est., 14 Pa. 489, 496 — “If a party who can read will not read a deed put before him for execution...... he is guilty of supine negligence, which......is not the subject of protection either in equity or law” — we reversed a judgment for plaintiff. This authority is followed in many later cases, and is cited as late as O’Reilly v. Reading Trust Co., 262 Pa. 337, 343.
Seeley v. Citizen’s Traction Co., 179 Pa. 334: Plaintiff, a woman, released damages, for $25, six days after the accident; she testified that she did not “comprehend the nature of the writing.” The trial court instructed for defendant, and we affirmed a judgment in its favor. No evidence of “trickery or fraud” appears; but the case is important here because we there recognize (p. 338), as a relevant consideration in passing upon the validity of the release, the fact that plaintiff was a person of “intelligence and fair education” — as is the present plaintiff.
Bruns v. Union Traction Co., 185 Pa. 533: Plaintiff’s husband was hurt at his work, August 9th, and died, as the result thereof, August 15th; the day before his death, he executed a release, upon payment of $40. The evidence tended to show the paper was signed when deceased was “mentally competent,” and after he had “bargained” with the representative of defendant company; the fact of this prior bargaining was taken into consideration in affirming judgment on a directed verdict for defendant, as it must be in the case now before us.
Kane v. Chester Traction Co., 186 Pa. 145: Plaintiff, a woman, signed a release; she claimed it was obtained through fraudulent representations by defendant’s agent, who told her the local judge was a stockholder in defendant company, and, therefore, she had no chance *265to win a suit at law. We said, assuming as a fact that such false statement was made, there was no “clear testimony” that it induced the execution of the release; and stated (p. 150) the “flimsy nature” of the alleged misrepresentations was such as not to affect the judgment of a person of “common sense.” We also said “the fact that the injuries proved greater than they looked to be at the time of the release is not to be considered at all,” citing Seeley v. Citizens Traction Co., 179 Pa. 334. Judgment for defendant was affirmed. Here again the apparent “common sense,” or intellectual capacity, of the person who signed the release is taken into account in passing upon the evidence as to its validity.
In DeDouglas v. Union Traction Co., 198 Pa. 430, binding instructions were given for defendant, and judgment in its favor affirmed. Plaintiff, a woman, signed a release, a few days after the accident, on payment of $50. She testified that an agent of defendant company called on her, paid the money, and asked for a receipt; whereupon she put her name to a paper which he produced. We held the proofs insufficient to overcome the release, saying: When evidence to set aside a release is not “clear, precise and indubitable,” the issue “should be withdrawn from the jury.” This is an authority that, in such eases, it is the right and duty of the court to judge as to the sufficiency, in quality, of evidence to go to the jury, on a question of alleged fraud in the procurement of a release.
Ogden v. Phila. & West Chester Traction Co., 202 Pa. 480: Plaintiff signed a release, and afterward set up an oral agreement, made at same time (by way of inducement), which entitled him to compensation beyond that given under the release. A judgment on the verdict for plaintiff was reversed. We held (p. 485) that the evidence was not “clear, precise and indubitable,” and the trial judge, “as chancellor,” should have so declared (p. 486); that the evidence was not sufficient to “warrant the destruction of a written instrument”; and, ap*266plying the rule in Pa. R. R. Co. v. Shay, 82 Pa. 198, in that regard, stated (p. 487) : “Where a chancellor could not reform a written instrument......because of the doubtfulness of the parol evidence to set it aside...... he should not permit twelve chancellors in a jury box to nullify it.”
Laird v. Union Traction Co., 208 Pa. 574: Plaintiff executed a release, on payment to him of $150, the day after the accident; a judgment for defendant, following binding instructions in its favor, was affirmed. Plaintiff claimed he was unconscious from his injuries, when the release was signed. We said, “To set aside a written instrument, the evidence must be clear, precise and indubitable, whether the allegation be fraud practiced by the beneficiary under it [i. e. the person to whom the release is given] or incapacity by him who executed it”; and added, there was no evidence of fraudulent representation or undue persuasion when the release was executed, but there was “some slight evidence on part of plaintiff that he was in a state of unconsciousness” at that time. The case is treated as though there were no evidence of fraud present; and this apparently because of the insufficiency of the testimony as to plaintiff’s unconsciousness ; for, if plaintiff were really in a state of unconsciousness, when the release was taken from him, and defendant knew it, the obtaining of the paper under such cii’cumstances would, in itself, be a fraud. This authority is valuable here, for it clearly rules that tbe trial judge, in such cases, acts as a chancellor in passing on the legal sufficiency of the proofs (pp. 576-7) — as to Avhether or not they measure up to the standard required — and, if he considers the evidence not of a quality to be reasonably found “indubitable,” he should not submit it to the jury.
Hicks v. Harbison-Walker Co., 212 Pa. 437: Plaintiff, Avho signed a release, on payment of $25, claimed the person who obtained his signature thereto “misrepresented it as a receipt for money donated to him”; he *267could not read, and did not ask to have the paper read. We considered plaintiff’s “mental capacity”; and, noting that bis story was uncorroborated, applied tbe rule from Greenfield’s Estate, 14 Pa. 489. Judgment on binding instructions for defendant was affirmed.
Spritzer v. Pa. R. R. Co., 226 Pa. 166: Damages were released, for $200. Plaintiff claimed be “was not in mental condition to appreciate wbat be was doing” at tbe time tbe release was signed. Judgment on a verdict for plaintiff was reversed. This court said (p. 168) : “Starting with tbe presumption in favor of tbe release, tbe burden was on plaintiff to show conditions wbicb would avoid it in law.” We then note that, “when tbe attempt is not to alter but to overthrow a release,” one witness is sufficient; adding, however, that, plaintiff having failed to prove be did not know wbat be was doing, tbe release must prevail. In tbe course of our consideration of tbe law, we state (p. 173) : “Nothing short of evidence precise, clear and indubitable can be allowed to overcome a written instrument; when it does not come up to this measure, tbe case should be withdrawn from tbe jury.”
Baranski v. Wilmsen, 56 Pa. Superior Ct. 153 (Rice, P. J.): Plaintiff signed a release written in English; judgment in bis favor was reversed, because there was no sufficient evidence to justify tbe “special finding” of tbe jury that defendant procured plaintiff to sign by “fraud” (p. 158). Baranski was a foreigner, who could neither read nor write English, but tbe negotiations, leading to tbe release, were carried on in a language be understood. Tbe paper was executed three weeks after tbe accident, when tbe injured man was mentally capable. Plaintiff did not ask to have tbe paper read to him; although be requested an interpreter be provided, wbicb was declined (p. 160). While Baranski was not told tbe document was not a release, neither was be informed it was of that character. Tbe Superior Court applied tbe rule laid down in Pa. R. R. *268Co. v. Shay, 82 Pa. 198, saying (p. 161) : “If one who can, will not read a paper put before him for execution, he is guilty of supine negligence,” which “is not the subject of protection either in equity or at law,” adding, “nothing short of evidence precise, clear and indubitable can be allowed to overcome a written instrument,” and, when the proofs do not measure up to this standard, “the case should be withdrawn from the jury.”
While all said in the case last cited is not adopted, it is important for the definition we are about to give, and its application by Judge Bice. “When the terms clear, precise and indubitable, are used, in defining the requisite proof of a particular fact to be made out by oral testimony, it is meant that it shall be found that the witnesses are credible, that they distinctly remember the facts to which they testify, that they narrate the details exactly, and that their statements are true.” After this definition (which is approved by us in Lindemann v. Pittsburgh Rys. Co., 251 Pa. 489, 492, 494, infra), President Judge Bice states that, since plaintiff gave several discrepant versions, concerning the circumstances relating to the execution of the paper in controversy, doubt was cast upon the “distinctness of his recollection and the exactness of his statements”; therefore his evidence could not be considered “clear, precise and indubitable.” For instant application of the rule under discussion, see next to final paragraph of this opinion.
The line of cases just reviewed furnishes ample authority for holding, as we do, that, under the evidence at bar, plaintiff’s claim should have been withdrawn from the jury by binding instructions for defendant.
Where a writing is executed by reason of misrepresentations as to its contents, the instrument is not the deed of the party who signed it (Green v. North Buffalo Township, 56 Pa. 110, 114); but, in order to set aside a solemn written instrument on this principle, the facts alleged for that purpose must be “definitely and distinctly established”: Burt v. Burt, 221 Pa. 171, 174. Of *269course, whether the evidence is true is a question of fact (Pusic v. Salak, 261 Pa. 512, 519), but whether it meets the required standard which justifies its submission to the jury (to pass upon its truth) is always a question of law; and, as we have seen from numerous authorities here cited, some of the qualities required of evidence, to set aside a written instrument on the ground of fraud in its procurement, are that the witnesses depended upon for that purpose shall “distinctly remember the facts to which they testify” and “narrate the details exactly”: Lindemann v. Pittsburgh Rys. Co., 251 Pa. 489; Baranski v. Wilmsen, 56 Pa. Superior Ct. 153, supra.
Here, the transcript of plaintiff’s evidence shows that he either deliberately falsified certain material facts or (in the words of Judge Rice in the case last cited) that he cast serious doubts upon “the distinctness of his recollection and the exactness of his statements.” Under these circumstances, the evidence was not of the standard required to justify its submission to the jury as sufficient warrant for setting aside a solemn written instrument. As said by Mr. Justice Green, in Wojciechowski v. Spreckels’ S. R. Co., 177 Pa. 57, 65, “No man’s deed for the house he lives in would be safe if it could be destroyed by such testimony as this”; and we may add that all future efforts to compromise damage claims might well be abandoned if formal releases can thus easily be set aside.
To say the least, the testimony relied upon by plaintiff, to sustain his allegation of fraudulent procurement of the release, plainly shows either a confusion in Ms mind as to the real facts leading to the execution of the instrument or, if not that, then it discloses the case of a man, mentally capable and with business experience, dealing with another, whose character — as the representative of one against whom he had a claim — was fully known to him, and with whom for several days he had been in negotiation for settlement, signing a release (which he had an opportunity to read, had he seen fit *270to take advantage of it), upon payment of an amount midway between tbe sum originally claimed by Mm and that originally offered by defendant. Looking at the matter from the first aspect, the evidence was not up to the standard required by law to accomplish the end in vieiv, and, from the other, it presents a case of what Mr. Justice Shakswood, in Pa. R. R. Co. v. Shay, 82 Pa. 198, 203 (quoting Chief Justice Gibson), designates as “supine negligence”; which, he correctly adds, is “not the subject of protection, either in equity or at law.”
The following cases, relied upon by plaintiff, where releases have been set aside, are all distinguishable from the one at bar; but, as will be observed, even some of these fully recognize the principles which we have applied in determining that defendant is entitled to judgment in its favor.
Ettinger v. Jones, 139 Pa. 218, is one of those cases which must be confined to its own peculiar facts. A woman, whom defendant had got into trouble and promised to marry, signed a release, at his urgent solicitation, when she was under great mental stress; the only consideration was that imparted by the seal upon the instrument, and a renewal of the promise to marry when defendant got out of trouble with another woman. In affirming judgment for plaintiff, we held the release, obtained by “trick and fraud,” was void.
Gibson v. W. N. Y. & Pa. R. R. Co., 164 Pa. 142, is a case where plaintiff proved that, when his name was put upon the release, he was mentally incapable, from the effects of anaesthetics administered a short time before. Apparently, it was not alleged defendant either knew of ■•jr took advantage of plaintiff’s weakened mental state, the sole contention being that, owing to his lack of mind, no contract existed. In deciding this issue was for the jury, we said (p. 149) : “Where a fraud......in the creation of the instrument, is the defense, it is a purely equitable one and equitable rules will be enforced as to the measure of proof to sustain it, but where the defense *271rests on the existence of a fact involving no element of. fraud, the evidence is for the jury, under the common law rules of evidence.”
Julius v. P., A. & M. Traction Co., 184 Pa. 19, is much like the case just reviewed.
Clayton v. Consolidated Traction Co., 204 Pa. 536: Plaintiff, a woman, signed a release, upon payment of $5, ten days after the accident; she afterwards claimed it was procured by fraud. Judgment on a verdict against defendant was affirmed. Plaintiff testified a man called at her house, claiming he was a friend of the car conductor who had caused the accident, and said he had come to see her in regard to getting the former reinstated in his position. At a second interview, this man inquired how much expense she had been put to, and, when told $5, gave her the amount, asking for a receipt. He produced a paper, folded in such way plaintiff could not read it; neither did he read it to her, but designated the place where he desired her to sign. Plaintiff did not know the man was a representative of the company. This testimony was fully corroborated by a disinterested witness. We said (p. 541) that defendant’s agent not only misrepresented the true character of the release, but “prevented” its contents from being known, and this, taken with the other circumstances in the case, constituted such fraud as to avoid the instrument. However, we there expressly recognize the authority of Pa. R. R. Co. v. Shay, 82 Pa. 198; and DeDouglas v. Union Traction Co., 198 Pa. 430, but distinguish them on their facts; we also recognize the authority of Greenfield’s Estate, 14 Pa. 489, and, in this connection, state that the mere circumstance of the release not being read to plaintiff would not convict defendant of fraud in procuring it; finally, we direct attention to the fact that the man who called upon plaintiff did not introduce himself as a representative of defendant or, in any sense, negotiate for a settlement of her claim against the traction company. These facts, *272■with other apparent differences, distinguish the case from the one now on appeal.
In McCaw v. Union Traction Co., 205 Pa. 271, while a release was set aside, on ground of fraud in its procurement, the report fails to show the character of the evidence, except that plaintiff claimed he was unconscious when the paper was alleged to have been executed by him. The only assignment concerns critical comments by the trial judge on the release. The case is not enlightening.
Gordon v. Great A. & P. Tea Co., 243 Pa. 330: Plaintiff signed a release, which he claimed was procured by fraud. Judgment, entered on a verdict for plaintiff, was affirmed. A payment of $150 had been made at the time the release was signed; but plaintiff presented evidence to show he was then in an enfeebled mental condition, as the result of a “head operation,” necessitated by the accident; that the representative of defendant informed him the '$150 was a gratuity from his employers, “to put” him over the holidays, and the word “release” was not mentioned; that a document was placed before him with only the signature line exposed; and he was hurried in the execution of the paper, which the representative of the company stated was merely a receipt. We said (p. 335) the evidence was sufficient to justify the plea that plaintiff’s mind “was so enfeebled at the time he signed the paper he could readily have been made a dupe of designing persons,” and this, together with the other evidence in the case, was ample to sustain a finding that he was deceived and defrauded into the execution of the alleged release, adding, “the fact that plaintiff did not read or require the paper to be read to him” could not (under the peculiar circumstances) be given binding effect, for he had not been afforded a “fair opportunity for examination” thereof, and had been deceived as to its contents. We there note the distinction between cases where the effort is to “reform” and those in which the attempt is to “set aside” written instruments; also, in the latter class of cases, *273the difference between those where either the “element of frand or mental enfeeblement” appears, and instances where snch elements are lacking. Here, in the pending case, the effort is to set aside the release, and, while frand in its procurement is alleged, the evidence depended upon to prove that element fell short of the legal standard required for the purpose, as already shown in our review thereof, and as we shall hereinafter briefly discuss. The facts at bar and those in the last cited case differ in many apparent respects.
Lindemann v. Pittsburgh Rys. Co., 251 Pa. 489: Plaintiff signed a release, upon payment to him of $50. At trial, there was ample evidence, — both lay and expert,— to sustain plaintiff’s contention that the release had been executed when he was mentally incapable; and the issue was decided accordingly. All that is said in the opinion of the court below, affirming judgment on the verdict (adopted per curiam) must be read with the peculiar facts of the case in mind. This definition, relevant here, is there approved: “Indubitable proof is evidence that is not only found to be credible, but of such weight and directness as to make out the facts alleged beyond a reasonable doubt.”
In Hogarth v. Grundy, 256 Pa. 451, it was alleged plaintiff signed a release, on payment of $200. Plaintiff admitted some money was given him by his employers; but said it was at a time when he was suffering intensely from the effects of an amputated arm. The agent of defendant, who called to get the release, did not make known to plaintiff who he was, and the latter did not know him; he told the injured man that he was going to give him a “little money,” as a “present” from his employers, “to help Aim out on expenses.” Plaintiff had no recollection of signing the release, — which contained only his mark — or any other paper, and he denied that the man, who brought the money, said anything about a settlement of his claim against defendant. He was corroborated by his wife. We affirmed judgment for plain*274tiff; but, as may be seen, the case is readily distinguishable from the one before us.
Vanormer v. Osborn Machine Co., 255 Pa. 47: Plaintiff signed a release in consideration of $1,150, and subsequently claimed it was obtained by fraud. He testified the agent of the company, which insured defendant, got his signature by pretending to have a telephone conversation with his, plaintiff’s, doctor, an eminent eye-specialist, “in which the agent quoted the doctor,” who had just examined plaintiff, as saying the latter’s right eye, “would come out all right, and he would soon be able to resume his work.” The injured man, relying on the information thus conveyed to him, as to his physical prospects for the future, signed the release; whereas the pretended conversation was an absolute falsehood, and plaintiff soon afterwards lost the sight of his eye. We sustained a judgment entered on a verdict against defendant; for the evidence was ample in every way to show a direct case of fraud in the procurement of the release.
We have reviewed the cases cited to us by counsel on both sides, and believe they comprehend all recent rulings on the subject in hand; we shall now refer to the latest relevant authority. In Palkovitz v. American Sheet & Tin Plate Co., 266 Pa. 176, 181, plaintiff, an ignorant foreigner, who did not understand our language, signed a release, typed in English. On appeal, affirming judgment in his favor, we said that, since defendant’s own, principal, witness had proved the alleged release to have been procured under such circumstances as to destroy entirely its effectiveness, it was “not in a position successfully to maintain plaintiff had failed to produce sufficient evidence to that end.” While the statement just quoted is sufficient to distinguish the case from the one now before us, yet another distinguishing point between the two is the illiteracy of Palkovitz, as compared with the plaintiff at bar, who is a man of fair English education, a bookkeeper by profession, en*275gaged, at a salary of $3,000 a year, as an auditor of accounts, which work had trained him to be “accurate and careful,” as he admitted on the stand.
Of course, every slight departure or variation in testimony, depended upon to set aside a written instrument on the ground of fraud, will not condemn the proofs as insufficient; but, in the present instance, as already pointed out, the evidence clearly fails to measure up to the required legal standard, which, as hereinbefore shown, is that in such cases the proofs must be clear, precise and indubitable. The first mentioned requirements mean that the witnesses must be credible, distinctly remember the facts to which they testify and narrate the details exactly (Lindemann v. Pittsburgh Eys. Co., supra); and, to the extent we are at present concerned with the last requirement — that the statement of the witnesses must be indubitable, or true (that is, so far as we are concerned with its application to the preliminary consideration of the evidence by the court, to judge of its sufficiency to go to the jury) — it simply means that, disregarding counter-attacks on plaintiff’s proofs, they must have the appearance of truth, at least to the extent of being free from manifest inconsistencies, or marks of inherent unreliability. Unfortunately for plaintiff, this cannot be said of the testimony upon which he depends, and the court below erred in law when it refused so to hold.
The assignments of error are sustained, the judgment in favor of plaintiff, Robert Edmund Ralston, is reversed, and, so far as his claim is concerned, judgment is here entered for defendant.