90 Pa. Super. 201 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1926
Argued December 13, 1926. The plaintiff issued a policy of insurance on an automobile of the defendant, protecting said defendant against liability for personal injury, property damage and collision. Defendant's automobile collided with another and in accordance with the terms of policy, the plaintiff settled for the damages and paid to him the sum of $178. When he received this sum, he gave what is known as a subrogation receipt, dated January 8, 1921, in which he agreed to subrogate the plaintiff, the Commercial Casualty Insurance Company, to all claims, demands and actions which he had against anyone whose negligence caused the damage. There was also a clause in the policy which provided: "In case of loss and/ or expense under this policy, the company shall be subrogated, to the amount of such payments, to the assured's right of recovery against others for such loss and/ or expense, and the assured shall execute all papers required and shall co-operate with the company to secure such rights."
On March 26, 1921, the defendant made settlement directly for the damages sustained, with the party whose negligence occasioned them and gave a release in full without the consent of the insurance company. Thereupon, the insurance company brought suit against him for the amount they had paid him, alleging that through his giving a release in full to the party whose negligence occasioned the damages, it was deprived of its right of subrogation. The trial judge, jury trial being waived, found for the plaintiff. *203
When the defendant gave the Dusel-Goodloe Compay the tort feasor, the release, the insurance company, who held his subrogation agreement was required to give its consent to the release if its subrogation right was to be given up. It was also entitled to this under the terms of the policy. Unless it released its right of subrogation, the defendant could not take it from it. In the case of Manley v. Montgomery,
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.