230 A.D. 538 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1930
Morris Rosenberg, a contractor, the employer herein, entered into a written contract with the owner, Kulok Realty Corporation, to make certain alterations and repairs at the place where the accident to the deceased employee of Rosenberg happened. Rosenberg, his employer, had a policy of workmen’s compensation insurance covering this operation with the Zurich General Accident and Liability Insurance Co., Ltd., one of the appellants herein. Prior to the accident, the Kulok Realty Corporation took out a workmen’s compensation policy with the Employers’ Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd., respondent herein, which purported to cover the premises where the accident happened, and it was issued to cover “ Morris Rosenberg & /or Kulok Realty Corporation.” The advance premium was paid by the Kulok Realty Corporation. Rosenberg had no knowledge of the existence of this policy until after the accident. Originally an award of death benefits to claimants was made payable by the Zurich Insurance Company only. Subsequently the policy issued by the Employers’ Liability to the Kulok Realty Corporation was discovered and on April 19, 1928, a lump sum award to the widow was made by the State Industrial Board against both carriers, each being required to pay
It is urged by the appellants that contracts made for the benefit of third persons have been enforced by the courts of this State since the case of Lawrence v. Fox (20 N. Y. 268); that the Employers’
We prefer to rest our decision on another ground, urged by the appellants, to wit,. that the former award of the State Industrial Board against both insurance carriers, as coinsurers of Morris Rosenberg, having been affirmed by this court was res judicata as to coinsurance; and that the law of the case, thus determined, could not thereafter be disturbed by the State Industrial Board upon the facts presented.
“ Upon final determination of such an appeal the Board shall enter an order in accordance therewith.” (Workmen’s Compensation Law, § 23.) We do not overlook the general rule that the State Industrial Board has continuing jurisdiction (Workmen’s Compensation Law, §§ 22, 123), but it seems to us that where a case has been finally passed upon in the appellate courts, the law of the case has been settled as to all matters necessarily in issue and adjudicated. It is unimportant that this adjudication rested in-part upon a stipulation conceding coinsurance. “Where one makes concessions of record material to the issue, the decree involves a finding in accordance with such concessions.” (2 Freeman Judgments [5th ed.], § 660.) Estoppel by judgment includes both law and fact. “ Where the causes of action are the same the judgment is conclusive as to every matter of law or fact involved in the '.claim whether urged or not.” (Id. § 708.) Such a judgment on the merits “ need not be the result of a trial or hearing on controverted facts, if the parties have had a legally sufficient opportunity to present the merits of the controversy and have waived or otherwise lost the right to such a hearing.” (Id. § 725.) The • stipulation in question was an unqualified concession, signed by all parties including the State Industrial Board. “ Parties by their stipulations may in many ways make the law for any legal proceeding to which they are parties, which not only binds them, but which the courts are bound to enforce.” (Matter of New York, L. & W. R. R. Co., 98 N. Y. 447, 453; Crouse v. McVickar, 207 id. 213.) “ The agreement of the
The award should be reversed and the former award, holding the respondent Employers’ Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd., a coinsurer, reinstated, with costs against said respondent to the appellants.
Davis, Whitmyer and Hill, JJ., concur; Hasbrouck, J., dissents and votes for affirmance.
Award reversed and former award, holding the respondent Employers’ Liability Assurance Corporation, Ltd., a coinsurer, reinstated, with costs against the said respondent to the appellants.