The facts of this case are set forth in
Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company v. Bennett, Ky.
App.,
Sec. 14 of the Constitution guarantees that “every person for an injury done him in his land, goods, person or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law...” Sec. 54 provides that the legislature “shall have no power to limit the amount to be recovered for injuries resulting in death, or for injuries to person or property.” The issues here are whether at common law when the Constitution containing the foregoing provisions was adopted (1891), an insurer under a policy of casualty insurance had an independent or nonderivative right of indemnity to recoup its loss from one whose tortious conduct against the insured party caused the loss, and, if so, whether such right of recovery would be constitutionally protected against statutory abolition or limitation. Our conclusion is that there was no such right of recovery at common law when the Constitution was adopted and that even if there had been, it would not fall within the protection of Secs. 14 and 54.
We have no difficulty in accepting it as a principle of long standing that when “the tortious conduct of a third party is the cause of a loss within the terms of a policy of insurance, the insurer, upon payment of the loss, becomes subrogated by operation of law to whatever right the insured may
*476
have against the wrongdoer.”
Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Roper,
The theory that an insurer has a cause of action under general principles of indemnity or restitution as distinguished from sub-rogation appears to have originated, in this state at least, with two opinions by this court in a workmen’s compensation case.
Ruby Lumber Co. v. K. V. Johnson Co.,
It is equally interesting to note that between the two Ruby Lumber Company cases the court held in
National Biscuit Co. v. Employers Mut. Liability Ins. Co.,
The problem in the Ruby Lumber Co. cases was that previous opinions by the court had established that the principal contractor (the alleged wrongdoer) was not “some other person” whom KRS 342.055
3
authorized the employe himself to sue. Cf.
McEvilly v. L. E. Myers Co.,
The circumstances under which the common law erected a right of indemnity in this state were discussed in
Brown Hotel Co. v. Pittsburgh Fuel Co.,
In the Ruby Lumber Co. cases, KRS 342.-060 (now KRS 342.70Q[2]) placed the employer and the principal contractor in the same category, in the sense that if the employer had failed to provide workmen’s compensation coverage the principal contractor stood good for it. Therefore, while neither was liable in tort, both were responsible for the compensation, and as between the two it was the principal contractor who was the wrongdoer and the employer who was exposed to vicarious liability by force of law. So it was substantially within the traditional setting of common-law indemnity for the court to place the ultimate burden of the loss on the wrongdoer.
Under comparable circumstances the court reached the same result in
Whittenberg Eng. & Const. Co. v. Liberty Mat. Ins. Co.,
Ky.,
It was not until
Kentucky Util. Co. v. Jackson County R. E. Corp.,
Ky.,
The right of indemnity asserted in the Kentucky Utilities Company case was founded on facts that were strictly analogous to the situation in the Brown Hotel case. Absent the element of workmen’s compensation, two parties were liable for the wrongful death, but it was the primary or active negligence of the one which had exposed the other to that liability. Whether the right of indemnity under those circumstances had developed by case-law to the point of recognition in 1891 is extremely doubtful, but we need not pursue the point here, because it is quite beyond cavil that in 1891 neither workmen’s compensation nor no-fault automobile or vehicular insurance law existed. It is not possible that the kind of indemnification sought in this case could have been established as common law at the time the Constitution of this state was adopted. 6
There is still another ground upon which Const.Secs. 14 and 54 cannot be applicable. Aside from the mention of defamation in Sec. 14, these constitutional provisions expressly apply only to actions for death, personal injuries, and property damage. Cf.
Kentucky Hotel v. Cinotti,
298 Ky 88,
In amplifying the reasons for our conclusion that the judgment of the trial court was correct we do not mean to imply any criticism or disapproval of the opinion of the Court of Appeals. We are particularly in agreement with the observation that it “is not unreasonable to hold that an insurer who elects to do business in the state also impliedly consents to be bound by the statutes regulating the industry.”
The decision of the Court of Appeals affirming the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. Specifically, KRS 304.39-070 (3) and (4) and KRS 304.39-140 (3).
.In that case the compensation paid was greater than the amount of money recovered by the employe’s estate in its wrongful-death action against the tortfeasor. The compensation carrier, claiming it had a right to recoup its damages from the tortfeasor, sued for the difference. The claim was denied, necessarily suggesting that the true basis for recoupment by an insurer is not indemnity, but simple old-fashioned subrogation.
. Now KRS 342.700 (1).
. Now KRS 342.700 (2).
. See also
Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Louisville & Nashville R. Co.,
Ky.,
. For an illuminative discussion of the indemnity theory, see
Hendrickson v. Minnesota Power & Light Company,
. The choice of words in
Happy v. Erwin,
Ky.,
