295 N.W. 702 | Wis. | 1940
Action by Archer Ballroom Company against Great Lakes Casualty Company to recover on a public-liability insurance policy. From a judgment entered June 10, 1940, in favor of plaintiff, the defendant appeals.
The defendant issued to the plaintiff its public-liability insurance policy. The plaintiff, a Nebraska corporation, was operating a public dance hall in Omaha. Employees of the plaintiff inflicted personal injuries on a patron of the plaintiff who, had a ticket for admission to its hall. The injured patron sued the defendant to, recover for the injuries sustained. On trial to a jury a verdict was returned finding for the plaintiff and assessing his damages at $5,000 and costs. The court set aside the verdict and ordered a new trial. Before the case came to a second trial the patron settled the case for $581.10 and the plaintiff paid the amount. The instant case was submitted to a jury on a special verdict by which the jury found the reasonable value of the attorney's fees of the plaintiff in defending the patron's action to be $1,575. Other items of damage comprised in the verdict were answered by the court by consent of the parties. Judgment was entered by the court for the aggregate of these items and costs. No other questions were requested to be submitted to the jury, so that all issues of ultimate fact not comprised in the verdict were by sec. 270.28, Stats., to be determined by the court. The court by special findings determined that the patron brought action as stated and that on December 4, 1937, "while on the premises covered by" the policy in suit the *527 patron "was unlawfully and violently assaulted without just cause or provocation and through no fault of his own" by agents of the plaintiff; that on request by plaintiff to defend the patron's action, the defendant declined to do so for the expressed reason that the suit was "predicated upon assault deliberately inflicted, and as our [the] policy covers only accidental injury we must advise you that there is no coverage under [the] policy;" that on the patron's making his offer of settlement after the granting of a new trial the plaintiff submitted to the defendant the patron's offer of settlement and offered the defense of the suit to the defendant on payment of the expenses theretofore incurred by the plaintiff in defending the suit if it objected to the settlement proposed; that the defendant declined to accept plaintiff's offer and plaintiff thereupon paid to the patron the amount of his offer; that the several items comprised in the verdict were reasonably and necessarily expended by the plaintiff in the defense of the action; and on these facts the court concluded the plaintiff was entitled to recover and entered judgment accordingly. From the foregoing statement of facts it appears that the instant suit is brought on a public-liability insurance policy issued by defendant to plaintiff. By its terms the policy was issued "To insure . . . [the plaintiff] against loss from liability imposed by law . . . for bodily injuries . . . accidentally suffered or alleged to have been suffered," and "to defend . . . in the name . . . of the assured any claim or suit covered by this policy and brought against the assured, whether groundless or not, for damage suffered or alleged to have been suffered on account of such bodily injuries. . . ." *528
If the contract involved were a Wisconsin contract the case would be ruled by Fox Wisconsin Corp. v. Century Ind.Co.
"It is considered that when the supreme court of the state of Ohio is called upon to decide this question it will, in accordance with what appears to us to be the sounder reasoning, declare the law to be that the employer [the defendant here] is liable under the circumstances of this case."
So here.
But while the above is the rule as to assaults deliberately committed, the appellant urges that the rule does not apply in cases of provoked assault, and that the instant case is of the latter kind. The respondent claims that the appellant is estopped from asserting, or waived, this defense because the appellant at the outset denied coverage on the grounds that the patron based his action on an assault "committed without any just cause or provocation" and denied liability because the policy covered only "accidental injuries." There was no request to submit a question to the jury to, determine whether the assault involved was provoked. In this situation sec. 270.28, Stats., provides that it shall be assumed that the court found the fact covered by the omitted question in such a way as to support the judgment. The fact being assumed to be so found, the judgment must be sustained although the law be as claimed by the appellant. There is evidence in the record to support such a finding. There is, therefore, no need to consider whether the law be as claimed by the appellant or whether the appellant by denial of coverage is estopped from interposing the defense of a provoked assault., Under the statute last cited the only fact involved which could be reviewed would be the award of damages made by the jury if it were claimed to be excessive, but no such claim is made.
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed. *530