delivered the opinion of the court.
The only question to be considered is whether, under the testimony given at the trial, it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to return the money which she had received as a condition precedent to her right to main*443tain this action. Her testimony is to the effect: That ahont 3 o ’clock in the afternoon of May '8, 1911, she paid her fare and became a passenger on the defendant’s electric cars from Portland, Oregon, to Boring, in this state. As the train, in the front car of which she was riding, rounded a curve at full speed in a deep cut, it collided with a freight train. That she did not know how she escaped from the car, whether through the door or the roof; her first realization of the accident appearing when she saw her torn hat lying on the embankment and she found herself standing on the track beside the wreck, having sustained a scalp wound and other severe bruises about her head, face, body and limbs. That after waiting in the rain about an hour a relief train arrived from Portland, and with it came the defendant’s claim agent, who inquired of the witness where she was going. That, replying to the inquiry, she told him that she had expected to visit friends living in the country about six miles from Boring, and that they were to have met her at that station; but having been delayed by the accident, and not being able to reach that village until late in the evening, she did not know what to do. Thereupon the agent said: “ ‘Here is $20. It will get you out there. Sign this receipt.’ * * He did not read the writing to me, nor did I read it.” That she signed the writing, relying upon the agent’s representations, and supposing it to be a receipt for the money. That when she appended her name to the paper she was greatly excited and afraid she would not get away from the scene of the accident in time to meet her friends'. The testimony further shows that in consequence of the injuries so received the plaintiff was unable to resume work until the following November; that she now suffers much *444pain in her side, has grown very nervous, and is much emaciated. '
Rev. John Cummisky, a Catholic clergyman, who at the time of the accident occupied a seat in the rear car of the train, testified that he subscribed his name as a witness to the plaintiff’s signature on the writing in question. Referring to her mental condition at that time, he, in answer to the court’s direction, “State what her conduct was, how she acted,” replied, “She showed a condition of being greatly shaken up, and in no condition whatever to sign anything. ’ ’ Alluding to a remark made by the defendant’s claim agent when the plaintiff accepted the money, the witness further testified:
“I heard him say to her that the $20 was to defray expenses for the rest of the journey on account of being detained — on account of the wreck.
“Q. What did he say about the paper when he handed it to her to sign, if anything?
“A. He asked her to sign this as a receipt.”
Without adverting to any additional authorities, the judgment herein must be affirmed upon the decisions rendered in the cases of Foster v. University Lumber Co., 65 Or. 46 (131 Pac. 736), and Woods v. Wikstrom, 67 Or. 581 (135 Pac. 192), to which we adhere. The defendant undertook safely to transport the plaintiff to her destination, and because she was detained by the wreck, and feared she would not arrive in time to meet her friends that evening, the claim agent, who hastened to the scene of the accident, solicitous for the welfare of the passengers, and recognizing a moral obligation on the part of his principal immediately to relieve the injured, offered to donate to her $20 to enable her to resume her journey. The *445plaintiff then being only 18 years old, and probably not having the wisdom of more experienced women, accepted the money as compensation for the hindrance which was occasioned by the accident. There was, therefore, a meeting of the minds of the contracting parties with respect to the payment and receipt of the money, as far as can be ascertained from theJanguage employed. She is presumed to have known the contents of the paper to which she subscribed her name, but owing to the shock which she had received, and her fear, occasioned by the delay, that she would not reach her destination that night, and relying on the agent’s representation that the writing was a receipt for the money she signed it.
We place this decision on the elementary proposition that the donation by the defendant’s agent was in consideration of a recognition of a moral obligation by his principal, and the payment having been made on account thereof the contract became executed, and hence no rescission thereof was necessary. The law applicable to the facts involved may be deduced from the following illustration: The owner of a horse loaned it to another, to whom, pursuant to the terms of an express contract, he sold a sheep, receiving the value thereof; but the purchaser fraudulently took a bill of sale of the horse without the owner’s knowledge. In such case it cannot be said that there was no aggregate mentvum as to the sale of sheep, or that the consideration therefor should be returned before an action to recover the value of the horse should be maintained. In the case supposed the consideration for the sheep was legal, while in the case’ at bar it was only moral; but in principle there can be no difference, when the latter contract is fully executed.
*446The defendant conld not restore to the plaintiff the delay which had resulted from the wreck of the car in which she was a passenger, and this being so she was under no obligation to return the money which she had received as a compensation for the hindrance and as a donation with which to discharge anticipated obligations. The evidence was sufficient to authorize a submission of the cause to the jury, and in refusing to grant a nonsuit no error was committed.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Mr. Chief Justice McBride and Mr. Justice McNary concur. Mr. Justice Burnett dissents.