158 F.2d 363 | 5th Cir. | 1946
Pritchard & Company had the general contract to build a large gasolene plant at an estimated cost of $14,500,000. The Contractor sublet on a cost-plus-fixed-fee basis parts of the work to several sub-contractors. Among them was a sub-contract for the installation of the electrical work, estimated to cost about $100,000, the fixed fee being $7,400 in addition, let to Howard P. Foley Co., herein called the Sub-Contractor. The Sub-Contractor’s contract contained an agreement to save and hold harmless the Contractor from all suits and claims based upon alleged injury to any person or property in the course of the performance of this contract by Sub-Contractor. On a certain morning shortly before going to work several of the Sub-Contractor’s employees were in a room of the Contractor called the
Appellant Casualty Company cites Texas authority that in that State an indemnity contract may be enforced though the loss arose from the indemnitee’s sole negligence, if that is the contract, such an agreement not being against public policy, 23 Tex.Jur. 525; and that the circumstances and object of the indemnity contract as well as express words may show that it covers losses due to indemnitee’s negligence: Houston & T. C. R. v. Diamond Press Brick Co., 111 Tex. 18, 222 S.W. 204, 226 S.W. 140; Galveston, H. & S. A. R. Co. v. Harolson, Tex.Civ.App., 264 S.W. 624; City of Polytechnic v. Redmon, Tex.Civ.App., 217 S.W. 730, reviewed by the Supreme Court, Tex.Com.App., 236 S.W. 73. See also Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Atlantic Co., 66 Ga.App. 791, 19 S.E.2d 364, and Cacey v. Virginia R. Co., 4 Cir., 85 F.2d 976. In these cases it was thought that because the arrangement made was for the sole accommodation of the indemnitor, and the indemnity could have little or no application unless in matters arising out of the indemnitee’s actual or imputed negligence, such matters were intended to be covered. On the other hand it is certainly the general rule that, where the indemnity is not contracted for from, an insurance company whose business it is to furnish indemnity for a premium and where indemnity is the principal purpose of the contract; but from one not in the indemnity business and as an incident of a contract whose main purpose is something else, such as a sub-construction contract, the indemnity provision is construed strictly in favor of the indemnitor. The cases regarding such provisions in a sub-contractor’s agreement with the main contractor are reviewed in the recent note to Walters v. Rao Elec. Equip. Co., 143 A.L.R. 312, and especially Par. III, page 315 and ff. They are all found to deny a liberal construction in favor of the Contractor.
The precise words of this agreement are these: “Sub-contractor shall save and hold harmless Contractor, Agent and Owner from and against all suits for claims that may be based upon any alleged injury (including death) to any person or damage to property that may occur or that may be alleged to have occurred, in the