24 N.W.2d 836 | Minn. | 1946
Plaintiff sustained personal injuries and property damage as the result of a collision between his automobile and that of Edward J. Maitrejean, defendant's insured, on a public highway in Wisconsin. Insured's automobile was operated at the time by a third person, but under the circumstances his negligence was legally attributable to insured under the law of Wisconsin. At the time of the accident, insured, who was a resident of Wisconsin, was insured against liability for such risks by defendant under a policy of automobile liability insurance issued in that state. The policy provided that defendant agreed to pay in behalf of the insured all sums for which he should become obligated by reason of liability imposed upon him for either personal injuries or property damage caused by accident or arising out of the ownership, maintenance, or use of his automobile, subject to the conditions set forth in the policy. Among the conditions is the no-action clause3 already mentioned. It provides that no action shall lie *430
against the insurer unless as a condition precedent thereto the amount of the insured's obligation shall have been determined either by a judgment against the insured after actual trial or by an agreement joined in by the insurer. Plaintiff asserts that the policy, having been issued in Wisconsin, is governed by the law of that state and that under § 85.93 an insurer is liable directly to a person injured by its insured's negligence without the recovery of a judgment establishing liability against the insured. Plaintiff has not recovered a judgment against the insured. Section 85.93 provides in effect that the provisions thereof shall be deemed a part of the contract of insurance and that the insurer shall be liable to a person injured by the insured's negligence. Section
Plaintiff contends that § 85.93 imposes upon the insurer liability directly to the person injured for the insured's negligence without joinder of the insured, and that §
The issues thus raised are to be resolved by the application of a few simple rules of the conflict of laws. We shall assume, as the parties have and as we held in Kertson v. Johnson,
The case of Kertson v. Johnson,
Decisions of the supreme court of Wisconsin have determined that § 85.93 relates to substantive rights and that §
After the decision in the Bergstein case, the Wisconsin legislature in dealing with the problem there presented, accepting the court's views that § 85.930 related to matters of substantive right and that the matter of joinder of the insurer in such cases related to *436
matters of remedy and procedure, and following the court's suggestion mentioned, turned its attention from matters of substantive right to those of remedy and procedure, and, instead of again amending § 85.93 so as to impose greater substantive liability, amended §
A determination by the courts of the state of a statute under which a party claims contractual rights that it relates only to procedure goes directly to the question as to whether thelex loci contractus creates substantive rights, because a holding that a statute relates only to procedure is an inferential one that it does not relate to substance. Because the Wisconsin court is the proper one to determine the proper construction of the statutes of that state, we accept as final its decision that §
Our conclusion is that whatever substantive rights plaintiff has against defendant arise exclusively under § 85.93. Because that section, as construed by the Wisconsin court, does not make an insurer liable directly to a person injured for the negligence of the insured where the policy contains a no-action clause and the plaintiff has not recovered a judgment establishing the insured's obligation, there is no basis here for predicating a right of recovery in *438
favor of plaintiff against defendant. The provisions of §
The order appealed from should be and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.
"Any person or organization or the legal representative thereof who has secured such judgment or written agreement shall thereafter be entitled to recover under this policy to the extent of the insurance afforded by this policy. Nothing contained in this policy shall give any person or organization any right to join the company as a codefendant in any action against the insured to determine the insured's liability."
"260.11(1) Any person may be made a defendant who has or claims an interest in the controversy adverse to the plaintiff, or who is a necessary party to a complete determination or settlement a the questions involved therein. A plaintiff may join as defendants persons against whom the right to relief is alleged to exist in the alternative, although recovery against one may be inconsistent with recovery against the other; and in all such actions the recovery of costs by any of the parties to the action shall be in the discretion of the court. In any action for damages caused by the negligent operation, management or control of a motor vehicle, any insurer of motor vehicles, which has an interest in the outcome of such controversy adverse to the plaintiff or any of the parties to such controversy, or which by its policy of insurance assumes or reserves the right to control the prosecution, defense or settlement of the claim or action of the plaintiff or any of the parties to such claim or action, or which by its policy agrees to prosecute or defend the action brought by the plaintiff or any of the parties to such action, or agrees to engage counsel to prosecute or defend said action, or agrees to pay the costs of such litigation, is by this section made a proper party defendant in any action brought by plaintiff on account of any claim against the insured."
"The statute of another state has, of course, no extraterritorial force, but rights acquired under it will always, in comity, be enforced, if not against the public policy of the laws of the former. In such eases the law of the place where the right was acquired, or the liability was incurred, will govern as to the right of action; while all that pertains merely to the remedy will be controlled by the law of the state where the action is brought. And we think the principle is the same, whether the right of action be excontractu or ex delicto."
As Chief Justice Marshall, in a somewhat different connection, said in Elmendorf v. Taylor,
"This Court has uniformly professed its disposition, in cases depending on the laws of a particular State, to adopt the construction which the Courts of the State have given to those laws. This course is founded on the principle, supposed to be universally recognized, that the judicial department of every government, where such department exists, is the appropriate organ for construing the legislative acts of that government. Thus, no Court in the universe, which professed to be governed by principle, would, we presume, undertake to say, that the Courts of Great Britain, or of France, or of any other nation, had misunderstood their own statutes, and therefore erect itself into a tribunal which should correct such misunderstanding. We receive the construction given by the Courts of the nation as the true sense of the law, and feel ourselves no more at liberty to depart from that construction, than to depart from the words of the statute."