The proposition of the learned counsel for the appellants is, “ that a release or discharge of one of several joint trespassers is a release or discharge of the whole trespass;” and he argues that it is immaterial what the form of the agreement is between the parties, so long as it is sufficient to bar the right of the injured party from thereafter maintaining an action for such trespass against the party with whom the agreement was made; and that an agreement not to prosecute the party for the trespass, made upon a sufficient consideration, is equally as effective to bar such action against him, as a technical release. In this latter proposition we thinlc the learned counsel is supported by the great weight of authority. Nearly all the authorities hold that, although an agreement not to sue one or more of several joint and several contractors or joint wrongdoers, made upon a sufficient consideration, is not a technical release or discharge of the debt due or of the damages sustained, yet, to avoid circuity of actions, the party with whom the agreement has been made may set it up as a bar to an action brought against him alone for such debt or damages. Lacy v. Kynaston, 2 Salkeld, 575; 1 Parsons on Contracts, 28, note i, and cases cited.
The learned counsel for the respondent contends that, in order to bar an action for a trespass against all of several joint wrong-doers, by an agreement made between the injured party and one or more of such wrong-doers, by which, for a valuable consideration, he agrees not to prosecute or look to them for any of his damages, the contract must be such as shows, either in fact or in law, that the injured party has received full compensation for his injury; and that when the contract, whether under seal or otherwise, shows that the compensation *146which, he receives from the parties whom he contracts not to prosecute further, or whom he in fact discharges from further liability to him for damages, was not intended as a full compensation for his injuries, he may still pursue the other wrongdoers for his damages, giving them the benefit of the sums he may have received of those who have purchased their peace. In the language of the learned counsel, “the injured party is entitled to full compensation for his injuries, and to but one compensation.” When, therefore, the injured party receives a full compensation in fact from one of two or more joint wrong-doers, or when he enters into such a contract with one that the law raises a presumption that he has received such full compensation from him, such receipt of compensation, or such agreement, is a bar to an action against the other wrongdoers. To bar the action of the injured party it must be shown either that he has received full compensation for his injuries, or what was intended as a full compensation, or that he has released one or more of the wrong-doers by a technical release, under seal.
When a technical release, under seal, is given by the injured party to one of several joint wrong-doers, the courts have quite uniformly held this to release all, and that it is a good bar to an action against those not named in the release. The reason of this rule is based upon the nature of the release under seal. The release being under seal, and absolute, its meaning cannot be controlled by parol evidence, and the law raises a conclusive presumption that it was given in full satisfaction in fact for the injury, and upon a sufficient consideration, The effect of this technical release under seal, and the legal presumptions which arise therefrom, and which cannot be controlled by any parol proofs, is well illustrated in- the case of Bronson v. Fitzhugh, 1 Hill, 185. In that case two parties, common carriers, were charged by the plaintiff with negligence. Before the action was commenced, the defendant Eitzhugh had agreed in writing, without seal, with the plaint*147iff, “in consideration that the plaintiff would release Throop, the other defendant, from all liability in this matter, that any liability which he, Fitzhugh, might have incurred, or was subject to in the premises, should in no respect be impaired or affected by the release.” The plaintiff thereupon released Throop, and, as is evident from the statement of the case, by a technical release, under seal, containing no reference in it to the agreement made with Fitzhugh. The plaintiff brought his action against Throop and Fitzhugh, and the process was served on Fitzhugh alone, and he set up the release of Throop as a defense, and the court held the release a bar to the action against Fitzhugh. The ground of the decision was, that, the release being under seal, its effect was a question of law, and no parol evidence could be received to control the effect which the law gave to it. Justice Beousou', who delivered the opinion of the court, says: “The deed, being taken most strongly against the releasor, is conclusive evidence that he has been satisfied for the wrong; and after satisfaction, although it moved from only one of the tort-feasors, no foundation remains for an action against any one. A sufficient atonement having been made for the trespass, the whole matter is at an end. It is as though the wrong had never been done.”
There is no dispute in the authorities on this question. All hold that a technical release of one of two or more joint wrongdoers, under seal, discharges them all, and is a good bar to an action against any or all of them; and the reason of the rule is above stated. Upon the production of the release, the law conclusively presumes that the injured party has been fully satisfied for the wrong done, and this legal presumption cannot be changed or disproved by any parol evidence. See Cocks v. Nash, 9 Bing., 341; Brooks v. Stuart, 9 A. & E., 854.
It is insisted by the counsel for the respondent, that when the contract which is set up as a release of one of several joint -wrong-doers is not a-technical release, the construction of *148which is fixed by the law, then the intention of the parties is to govern; and if it be clear that there was no intention on the part of the injured person to release his cause of action against all the wrong-doers, and that the sum received was not in fact a full compensation for his inj ury, nor intended to be such by the parties, then any agreement of the injured party not to prosecute one or more of several wrong-doers, in consideration of the payment of a specified sum of money, does not discharge the other wrong-doers, except to the extent of the money so received. In other words, when the contract is not of such a nature that the law deems it conclusive evidence that the inj ured person has been satisfied for the wrong, then it becomes a question of fact for the court or jury whether what he has received of the one wrong-doer was received in full satisfaction of his wrong; and, if it appears that it was not so received, it is only pro tantos, bar to an action against the other wrong-doers. And this view of the case, we think, is sustained by the great weight of authority, in all cases where the amount of the damages is the subject of proof and computation, as in this case, though there is some conflict in those cases where the damages are not th'e subject of proof and computation, but rest mostly in the discretion of the jury, as in cases of assault and battery, slander, libel, false imprisonment, and other actions of that nature.
It is probable that one reason why the rule above stated has not been so universally adopted by the courts in the class of actions above named, is that in such cases the real amount of injury which the plaintiff has sustained is so much a matter of uncertainty that it would be very difficult to tell, before a verdict was obtained, what they were, and any sum received from one of the wrong-doers to buy his peace might well be considered a full compensation for the injury sustained. In cases where there is no technical release and discharge of one of several joint wrong-doers, whether the receipt of money from one, accompanied with an agreement not to prosecute *149him for the wrong, is a discharge of the other wrong-doers, depends upon the question whether such money was received as an accord and satisfaction for the whole injury. If it was, then all are discharged; if it was not, but only as a part satisfaction, then it is a discharge of the others only pro tanto. A court or jury would more readily infer that a receipt of $200 from a party who had assaulted and beaten another, by the party injured, was intended as a satisfaction for the whole injury done, than if the same sum of money had been received by the injured party of one of two or more persons who had tortiously converted a thousand bushels of wheat worth $1,000. See Brown v. Cambridge, 3 Allen, 475; Stone v. Dickinson, 5 Allen, 29. The distinction made by the courts between the class of cases above mentioned, where there is no fixed legal measure of damages, and those where there is a fixed legal measure, is considered and commented upon in the following cases: McCrillis v. Hawes, 38 Me., 568; Gilpatrick v. Hunter, 24 Me., 18; Eastman v. Grant, 34 Vt., 390; Ellis v. Bitzer, 2 Ohio, 295; Knickerbacker v. Colver, 8 Cow., 111.
In the case of Eastman v. Grant, supra, which was an action for assault and battery, in commenting upon the effect which must be given to the contract made with two of the joint wrong-doers, by which, in consideration of $100 paid by each, the plaintiff agreed not to prosecute them, and to save them harmless from all liability to the plaintiff for all damages sustained by reason of the assault and battery, the court says: “ The plaintiff’s claim rests solely in damages. There was no criterion by which the amount could be definitely determined. It was a matter of mere estimation, based on opinion and judgment, not of computation based on any fixed data. If the question were submitted to a jury, they could determine it only by estimation. Here the plaintiff and the Bowens got together and determined the matter for themselves. They estimated the damages and fixed the amount of the plaintiff’s claim against them, and they paid it and were discharged. . . . *150There is nothing in the ease to indicate that the amount faid was not the full amount of the damages, and the extent of the plaintiff’s claim on them. If the plaintiff had brought his action against the Bowens and had recovered $200 damages, and they had paid the j udgment, that clearly would have discharged all. If these parties agree upon the amount without the intervention of a court or jury, and the amount is paid, the effect, we apprehend, must be the same. The plaintiff’s claim is the same against all the parties engaged in the trespass. He may pursue them jointly or severally to enforce it, tut when that elaim is once paid it is cancelled as to all the parties.”
It will be seen, from the opinion of the court in this case, that the reason for holding that the settlement by the two joint wrong-doers was a bar to the action against the others, was put upon the ground that the evidence showed that the plaintiffs had received from the two what was agreed upon between the parties to be a full compensation for the injury the plaintiff had sustained by the assault and battery, and not solely xipon the ground that the plaintiff had agreed not to prosecute these parties further for such injury. The rule governing in actions of tort is briefly stated by Judge Cooley in his work on torts, 139: “The bar arises not from any particular form that the proceedings assume, but from the fact that the injured party has actually received satisfaction, or w'hat in law was deemed the equivalent.” Story on Contracts, § 997, says: “A parol release to one of several joint obligors will never operate as a complete discharge of the others wriless the debt be fully satisfied by hi/rn. If it be partially satisfied, it may pro tanto be pleaded in discharge of the others.” The courts have uniformly applied the same rule to actions of tort.
Bobeetsoh-, C. J.,in 8 Kobt., 713, says: “The sole ground of the effect of a release of one of several joint contractors ‘or wrong-doers, in discharging all, is that it was, in presump*151tion of law, a satisfaction; and whenever a release was in such form, or accompanied by such restrictions, as to repel such presumption, it did not necessarily discharge all.”
Parsons, in his work on Contracts, vol. 1, p. 29 (6th ed.), says: “If an action be brought against many, and to this an accord and satisfaction by one be pleaded in bar, it must be complete, covering the whole ground, and fully executed. It is not enough if it be in effect only a settlement with one of the defendants for his share of the damages; nor would it be enough if it were only this in fact, although in form an accord and satisfaction of the whole.”
Justice Miller, in the case of Lovejoy v. Murray, 3 Wall., 1-17, says: “ When the plaintiff has accepted satisfaction in full for the injury done him, from whatever source it may come, he is so far affected in equity and good conscience that the law will not permit him to recover again for the same damages. But it is not easy to see how he is so affected until he has received full satisfaction, or that which the law must consider as such.”
It is not claimed by the learned counsel for the appellants that the contract made between the plaintiff and Comstock • shows that the plaintiff received the $200 as satisfaction in full for his damages, or that it was understood between the parties that the $200 was a full compensation therefor, or that the plaintiff intended to relinquish his right to claim further compensation and damages from the defendants for his injury. ■The finding of the jury is express that it was understood at the time that the plaintiff intended to look to the defendants for the balance of his damages over the $200 received of Comstock.
But it is insisted by the counsel for the appellants that because the plaintiff bound himself, by a valid contract, not to prosecute Comstock for the trespass, he was discharged from all further liability to the plaintiff on account of such trespass, and the other wrong-doers were also discharged, notwith*152standing it was not so agreed or intended by the parties. It is possible that this rule might apply to a case of two or more persons who were jointly and not severally bound by contract. If, in such case, the person to whom the parties were jointly bound should make a contract upon sufficient consideration, by which he discharged one, no action could be maintained against the other joint contractors, because the rules of practice in such cases require that all the joint contractors shall be sued together, and the other parties may insist upon such joinder of parties. If, therefore, one of the joint contractors has been discharged from further liability by the plaintiff, so that the joint action cannot be maintained against him, it must fail as to all. Bowen v. Hastings, 47 Wis., 236. In such cases, however, when it is apparent that it was not the intention of the parties to discharge or satisfy the debt or claim, but only to relieve one party from all liability to pay the same, the courts have usually avoided the difficulty by construing such contract as a simple contract not to sue the party , discharged, and permit the action to proceed against all the parties notwithstanding the contract, leaving the discharged party to his action against the plaintiff for any damage he may sustain by reason of his being sued contrary to the conditions of such contract. Line & Nelson v. Nelson & Smalley, 38 N. J. Law, 358; Solly v. Forbes, 2 Brod. & Bing., 38 (6 E. C. L., 11); Couch v. Mills, 21 Wend., 424; Price v. Barker, 1 Jurist, 775 (N. S.); Dean v. Newhall, 8 T. R., 168. Admitting that the hile contended for by the learned counsel for the appellants would apply to the case of joint contractors,.it could have no application to joint wrong-doers, who are always held liable to the injured party severally as well as jointly.
The contract set up in this case shows that the plaintiff did not receive the $200 from Comstock in satisfaction or as full compensation for the injury he had sustained by the trespass, and that it was not the intention to release the other joint *153trespassers from liability for the trespass. The plaintiff’s agreement not to sue Comstock for the trespass, under the circumstances disclosed by the evidence in this case, does not, therefore, discharge the other joint trespassers except pro tanto. The court below properly rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the damages he had sustained by reason of the trespass, less the sum of $200 received- of Comstock. This rule is, we think, supported by the great weight of authority, as will be seen by an examination of the large number of authorities cited by the learned counsel for the respondents. The following cases fully sustain the position stated: Snow v. Chandler, 10 N. H., 92; McCrillis v. Hawes, 38 Me., 568; Spencer v. Williams, 2 Vt., 209; Chamberlin v. Murphy, 41 Vt., 110; Sloan v. Herrick, 49 Vt., 328; Matthews v. Chicopee Co., 3 Robt., 712; Bloss v. Plymale, 3 West Va., 393; Shaw v. Pratt, 22 Pick., 307; Pond v. Williams, 1 Gray, 630-636; Bank v. Messenger, 9 Cow., 37; Line v. Nelson, 38 N. J. L., 358; Irvine v. Milbank, 15 Abb. Pr., 378 (N. S.); Solly v. Forbes, 6 Eng. Com. Law, 11; Thompson v. Lack, 54 Eng. Com. Law, 551; Bank v. Curtiss, 37 Barb., 319-20; Gunther v. Lee, 45 Md., 60-67.
Many other cases will, be found in the books holding the same doctrine, and so far as we have been able to find there are very few which hold the contrary doctrine. Nearly all the cases in which it has been held that an agreement by the injured party discharging one or more of several joint trespassers was a discharge of all, proceed upon the ground that the contract evidencing the discharge showed that the plaintiff had received a full compensation and satisfaction for all his injuries from the person discharged. The case of Gunther v. Lee, last above cited, proceeds upon this distinction. In that case one of the joint wrong-doers had been released under seal, with a reservation that the release should not prejudice the plaintiff’s right to proceed against the other wrong-doers for damages claimed by the plaintiff. The court says: “Here *154the release expresses a consideration on its face which, was received, in full satisfaction of the wrong complained off and then holds the proviso in the release void, as rejmgnant to the legal effect and operation of the release itself. '
As was insisted by the learned counsel for the respondent, with great clearness and ability, there is no hardship in this rule. Certainly the receipt of a partial satisfaction from one of two joint tort-feasors is no injury to the other who is after-wards sued for the trespass. On the other hand, it is to his benefit, as he has the advantage of what was paid by his associate in the wrong in reducing the judgment against him. The party injured is under no duty to the joint wrong-doer to proceed at all against his associate, and his refusal to proceed against him is no ground of defense. As it is wholly optional with the injured party to proceed against one of two joint wrong-doers for the whole of his damages, there is no equity in holding that, because he has received a part satisfaction for his injury from the one not proceeded against, upon an agreement not to sue him for the wrong, the other may set up such receipt as a complete defense to the action. Tie is benefited and not injured by such proceeding. Again, suppose the injured party has obtained judgment against two wrong-doers: he is under no obligation to collect the damages equally of both; and if he should direct the execution to be levied and collected out of the property of one, he would have no redress, and no power to compel his co-defendant to contribute; or if the plaintiff in such case should direct the execution to be collected in part only out of the property of each, neither would have any right to control the amount which should be so collected of the other. And certainly such discretion could not be set up as a bar by either to the collection of the part directed to be collected of his property.
The defendants suffered no damage in consequence of the contract made between the plaintiff and Comstock. The plaintiff is not, therefore, affected by any equity in favor of *155tbe defendants. As no technical release was given to the joint wrong-doer, and the contract proved clearly shows that the plaintiff did not receive the $200 in satisfaction of, or as full compensation for, his injury, there was no defense to the plaintiff’s action except as to the $200 received, and of this the defendants had the benefit.
Notwithstanding any general remarks found in this opinion, it will be understood that the decision of the court goes no further than holding that the facts of this case do not show a release of the defendants from liability for damages, and that the majority of the members of the court do not now decide that a similar agreement made with one of two or more joint trespassers, in an action for an assault and battery, false imprisonment, or similar actions, in which the damages rest mainly in estimation and opinion, would not be a bar to an action against the others.
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.