123 Misc. 784 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1924
The plaintiff moves for summary judgment under rule 113 of the Buies of Civil Practice for the sum of $2,500 as demanded in the complaint. The plaintiff sustained injuries on the 2d day of February, 1923, by reason of the alleged negligence of the operator of a taxicab owned and controlled by the Hale Taxicab Company. She obtained judgment against that company in the Supreme Court of the state of New York in the sum of $10,000, with costs. The judgment was docketed in the office of the clerk of the county of New York on the 25th day of March, 1923. Execution was issued to the sheriff of the county of New York and returned wholly unsatisfied, and no part of the said judgment has ever been paid. At the time of the accrual of her cause of action against the said company there was outstanding and subsisting a policy of insurance of the New York Mutual Casualty Taxicab Insurance Association purporting to cover the Hale Taxicab Company under the provisions of section 282-b of the Highway Law. Thus the complaint alleges substantially and asks judgment against the New York Mutual Casualty Taxicab Insurance Association for the amount of the policy. The association in its answer admits the allegations of the complaint, except as hereinafter mentioned, but as a separate and distinct defense pleads that the damages in the action brought by the plaintiff against the taxicab company were assessed by the sheriff’s jury and judgment entered in favor of the plaintiff upon the return of the writ of inquiry and that such judgment was not obtained as a result of a trial of the issues in the said action in accordance with the requirements of the policy of insurance which is the basis of this suit. The issue raised by this defense seems to be the only controversy between the parties. It involves both a legal and an ethical question.
Section 282-b of the Highway Law, as added by chapter 612 of
It seems that that section preserves to a party the right to enforce a claim in any manner provided by law and, therefore, by application to court and the assessment of damages by a sheriff’s jury in case there is default.
After all, the real parties in interest, at the time of the issuance of the insurance policy, were the public, of which the plaintiff was one, and the defendant insurance association. It is well established that two parties may make a contract voluntarily for the benefit of another, which may be enforced by the latter. Here two parties, the taxicab company and the insurance association, by compulsion of the statute have made a contract for the benefit of the public, enforcible by the public. To allow that contract to be evaded upon slight or technical grounds would be against public policy. Indeed the policy of insurance extends some recognition to this conclusion providing that the “ failure of the assured
Motion granted. Clerk is directed to enter judgment as demanded in complaint.
Judgment accordingly.