The action in the Circuit Court was in assumpsit; upon a policy of insurance issued by the defendant in error to the plaintiff in error, insuring the plaintiff in error against loss from common law or statutory liability for damages on account of bodily injuries, fatal or non-fatal, accidentally suffered by anjr person or persons, and caused through the negligence of the assured by means of the horses or vehicles in his service (the plaintiff in error being engaged at the time in the teaming and omnibus business), subject to certain special and general agreements, one of which was as follows:
“If thereafter any suit is brought against the Assured to enforce a claim for damages on account of an accident covered by this Policy, the Assured shall immediately forward to the Company every summons or other process as soon as the same shall have been served on him, and the Company will at its own cost defend against such proceeding in the name and on behalf of the Assured, or settle the same, unless it shall elect to pay to the Assured the indemnity provided for.”
The declaration, as finally amended, after setting forth the policy of insurance, including the provisions as above, averred that on the 18th of August, 1902, the plaintiff in error became and was, liable for damages on account of bodily injuries accidentally suffered by one Cora Whelock, caused on said day, through the negligence of the plaintiff in error, by means of horses and vehicles in its service; that immediate notice thereof was given to the defendant in error; that on the 23rd day of September, 1902, suit was commenced in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois, against plaintiff in error, by said Cora Whelock, to recover damages on account of the injuries so suffered; that on the 10th day of October, 1902, a summons was filed in the court where such suit was brought, with the Sheriff's return thereon that it had been served upon plaintiff in error by delivering a copy thereof to one J. J. Gany, Secretary of said plaintiff in error; that said Gany was not at the time of such service, clerk, secretary, superintendent, general agent, or any agent of said plaintiff in error, upon whom summons could be served; that one John B. Wilbur, was at that time secretary of said plaintiff in error, and that said summons was not served on him; that said paper thus filed was the only summons, and the only return purporting to have been issued and return
A demurrer, general and special, having been filed to this declaration (the special causes of demurrer being chiefly a particularization of the objection that no copy of any summons was immediately sent •to the defendant in error, as required by condition two of the policy), judgment ivas entered sustaining the demurrer, and giving judgment to defendant in error for costs.
The contention of defendant in error, put into logical sequence, is that inasmuch as the summons filed in the Whelock suit cannot be attacked or denied by the plaintiff in error in this case, it is a summons within the meaning of condition two above set forth, and that inasmuch as neither that nor any other summons was forwarded to the defendant in error, the plaintiff in error has failed to comply with the condition that requires that “the assured shall immediately forward to the company every summons or other proceeding as soon as the same shall have been served on him.”
But is this a case in which the return, in the Whelock case, cannot he challenged? Many cases are cited by defendant in error, illustrating the circumstances under which an officer’s return upon a summons may not be contradicted. Bank of Ean Claire v. Reed, 232 Ill. 233, 240, 83 N. E. 820, 122 Am. St. Rep. 66; Brown v. Kennedy, 82 U.
But assuming that the summons was one that, under condition two, should have been immediately' forwarded to defendant in error, the averments of the declaration still show, in our judgment, a substantial compliance with the contract; for defendant in error was put in full information of all the facts transpiring up to that time — had all the data upon which to base its judgment as to what defense might be made to the Whelock action, and how the defense could be conducted. In contracts of this kind, to escape liability, the insurer must show that the breach, is something more than a mere technical departure from the letter of the bond — that it is a departure that results in substantial prejudice and injury to its position in the matter. Rumford Falls P. Co. v. Fid. & Cas. Co., 92 Me. 574, 43 Atl. 503; Ward v. Maryland Cas. Co., 71 N. H. 262, 51 Atl. 900, 93 Am. St. Rep. 514.
The judgment of the Circuit Court will be reversed, and the case remanded with instructions to overrule the demurrer, and to proceed further in accordance with this opinion.