111 So. 584 | Miss. | 1927
The declaration is on an insurance policy issued by the appellee on an automobile owned by the appellant, which declaration alleges that the automobile was struck by a train of the Yazoo Mississippi Valley Railroad Company while being driven across the tracks of the company by its owner, one of the results of which was that the automobile caught on fire and was so far consumed as to be a total loss. To this declaration, the appellee filed a special plea, alleging, in substance:
That the policy contained the following subrogation clause:
"And upon payment of any loss, damage, claim, or expense under this policy, the company shall be subrogated to the extent of such payment to all rights of recovery of assured against others for such loss, damage, claim, or expense, and the company shall be entitled, if it so desire, to institute, conduct, and prosecute, in the name of the assured, or in its own name, any claim of the assured for indemnity, damages, or otherwise against any third party."
That Farmer sustained personal injuries when his automobile was struck by the train and that he sued the railroad company for damages both to his person and to the automobile. While the suit was pending, Farmer amended his declaration so as to eliminate any claim for damages to the automobile, and an agreed judgment was then rendered in his favor against the railroad company for the sum of three thousand dollars, which he has collected, thereby releasing the railroad company from liability for the destruction of the automobile and rendering inoperative *605 the subrogation clause of the insurance policy, because of which the insurance company is relieved from liability on the policy.
A demurrer to this plea was overruled, and Farmer replied thereto that he agreed to the rendition of the judgment against the railroad company on condition that the declaration be so amended — "as to eliminate therefrom any claim against said railroad company for damages to his said automobile, stating as reasons for such condition that the amendment was desired for the reason that said plaintiff, J.H. Farmer, intended to hold the Union Insurance Company of Indiana liable for his loss through the damage by fire to his said automobile, under its policy of insurance sued on herein, and intended to proceed by suit against that insurance company to enforce collection of such amount as might be due him from said company."
A demurrer to this replication was sustained, and, upon Farmer's declining to plead further, the suit was dismissed.
The injury inflicted on Farmer's person and his automobile, when struck by the train, constitutes a single cause of action, and can only be split into more than one cause of action in exceptional cases necessary for conserving the ends of justice.Kimball v. Railroad Co.,
The promise of the insurance company to pay Farmer for injury to his automobile was conditioned on its becoming thereby subrogated to his right of action for damages against the person who inflicted the injury thereto; and, when he released the railroad company from liability for injury to the automobile, he destroyed the right of subrogation of the insurance company to his cause of action therefor, and thereby released it from liability on its promise to pay for injury to the automobile.
By his replication to the plea. Farmer sought to avoid this rule by alleging facts which, according to his contention, show that he did not release the railroad company from liability to be sued by the insurance company for injury to the automobile in the event it should pay therefor under the terms of its policy; and, in support thereof, he invokes the rule which is set forth in 14 R.C.L. 1405, par. 568, as follows:
"Where the insurer releases the wrongdoer, reserving in the release his rights against the insurer, the reservation necessarily includes the right of the insurer to *607 sue the wrongdoer; otherwise the reservation would be ineffective."
Assuming that this is a correct statement of the rule, and that the facts alleged in the replication indicate that Farmer intended to reserve a right of action for the insurance company against the railroad company, the rule can have no application here, for the reason that the settlement made by Farmer with the railroad company was at the end of a lawsuit in which both the railroad's interest and his were fixed by a judgment to which the law attaches certain legal consequences, which cannot be restricted by parol in a collateral attack on the judgment, for "judicial records required by law to be kept are said to import unerring verity, and to be conclusive evidence against all the world as to their existence, date, and legal consequences."Jones v. Williams,
Affirmed.