203 N.W. 622 | Minn. | 1925
The city now sues the defendants and lays negligence at their door and seeks to recover the amount so received by the employe. The court dismissed the action and plaintiff has appealed from an order denying its motion for a new trial. Section 4291, G.S. 1923, sub. (2) provides for subrogation.
The insurance policy contains this provision:
"K The Company shall be subrogated, in case of any payment under this Policy, to the extent of such payment, to all rights of recovery therefor vested by law either in this Employer, or in any employee or his dependents claiming hereunder, against persons, corporations, associations or estates."
Our compensation act recognizes the insurer as such. Section 4288, G.S. 1923. It does not compel a municipality, as it does some employers, to carry insurance. Section 4288, G.S. 1923. The municipality, however, may carry such insurance if it so chooses. Nohl v. Board of Education,
The injured employe had a common law action, if the facts warranted it, against defendants under sub (2) sec. 4291, G.S. 1923. He also had his claim against his employer under the compensation act. *56
He could pursue both. He claimed and received compensation and under the statute his common law action, at least in part, passed to the employer by virtue of subrogation. A statutory subrogation has the same characteristics as if it were a creature of equity. It is enforced solely for the purpose of accomplishing the ends of substantial justice and does not depend upon any contractual relation between the parties. When the employer has paid or obligated himself to pay an award of the Industrial Commission, he is by virtue of the statutory subrogation authorized to bring and maintain, in his own name, an action against a third person whose negligence was the proximate cause of the injury to the employe to whom the compensation was awarded, to recover a sum not in excess of the award. Section 4291, G.S. 1923, sub. (2). The payment or obligation to pay the award on the part of the employer is a condition precedent to his right to prosecute such action. Henderson Tel. Tel. Co. v. Owensboro Home Tel. Tel. Co.
That fundamental element which supports the doctrine of subrogation, namely, the call for substantial justice, is absent. The city has been protected by the insurance company paying the employe. The city has paid nothing. It is not obligated to pay anything. It has not suffered any damage by reason of the alleged negligence of the defendants. It cannot maintain this action. Its payment of the premium to the insurance company does not change this situation. It was not incurred or paid because of the alleged negligence of defendants. It also relates to other employes and cannot be viewed as a loss or damage which supports this action by plaintiff. The city is not the real party in interest. Every action must be prosecuted by the real party in interest. Section 9165, G.S. 1923; 33 Cyc. 1558. Broderick v. Puget Sound T.L. P. Co.
The insurance company and not the city has suffered the loss to the extent of the amount of money paid. If anyone is entitled to prosecute the alleged cause of action, it would be the insurance *57 company. There is no law or reason to support the assertion that the city should profit by its employe's injury in a street tragedy. True, the city is entitled to credit for the existence of the insurance by virtue of its contract with the insurance company, but this insurance was taken out for its own protection and for just such an emergency as this. The insurance has protected it so completely that it has had no loss. Such right of subrogation as the law gave the city, it, by contract, assumed to pass to the insurance company. Analogous rights in case of fire insurance are fully discussed in 26 C.J. 465.
Affirmed.