184 Iowa 219 | Iowa | 1918
On July 14, 1913, the defendant, a liability insurance company, by its duly authorized agent, issued a policy of insurance to Robert Fullerton, plaintiff herein, indemnifying him for the period of one year against loss arising or resulting from claims for damages on account of bodily injuries sustained or alleged to have been suffered by any person or persons by reason of the ownership, maintenance, or use of a certain described Pierce-Arrow automobile, kept and used by said owner for the purpose of business calls and pleasure. Among other things, the policy provided that, in case any suit was brought to enforce a claim of that nature, plaintiff would promptly give notice thereof to the company, which would assume and conduct the defense in plaintiff’s name, but at its own cost, whether the claim so sued upon was groundless or not. The company also reserved to itself the right to settle any claim at its own cost at any time. When the policy was issued, it was known and' understood by the company that plaintiff did not himself drive or operate the car. At that time, and at the time of the accident hereinafter mentioned, plaintiff was a resident of the city of Des Moines, and head of a family. He had a son and daughter, both of whom had arrived at their majority, but were still living at home, as dependent members of his family.- On July 3, 1914, while the policy was in full force, plaintiff’s said son, Donald P.
Mrs. Jacobson also presented a claim for damages on her own account; and for a considerable period, negotiations were carried on between her and the appellant, looking to an adjustment of such claim without litigation, but no agreement upon the amount to be paid was reached. In December, 1914, Mrs. Jacobson brought suit upon her claim in the district court of Adair County, naming as defendant in such action Donald P. Fullerton, son of the plaintiff in this action. Plaintiff promptly gave notice of this action to the insurance company, which caused its own attorneys, Sullivan & Sullivan, to appear and assume conduct of the defense. As the district court of Polk County afforded a more convenient venue for all parties, Sullivan & Sullivan requested counsel for Mrs. Jacobson to dismiss the suit in Adair County and begin it anew in Polk County, agreeing that, if this was done, they would appear thereto for the defense, and accept or waive service of formal notice. This agreement was made and performed. The action in Adair County was dismissed, and petition filed in' the district court of Polk County in time for the January, 1915, term of the district court. Service of notice was accepted, December 28, 1914. On December 30, 1914, Sullivan & Sullivan, appearing for the defense, filed a motion to require plaintiff to give a cost bond. On February 18, 3915, and before the issues had been settled, Sullivan & Sullivan with
In his petition, plaintiff sets out the facts substantially as hereinbefore related. He further avers that the policy was applied for and issued with the mutual agreement and understanding that it was to cover all damages and claims for damages resulting from injury to any person by the operation of said car when driven by his servant or any member of his family, and “if the contract as written is found not to be fairly susceptible of that construction, then it does not express the real contract between the parties, and it should be reformed or corrected to express such intent.” The defendant denies the allegations of the petition, in so far as it charges any failure of the policy to express the’ contract of insurance, and denies that it has in any manner failed to perform its agreement. It admits the issuance of the policy sued upon, but alleges that the injuries
Trial to the court upon the issues thus joined resulted in plaintiff’s favor, and a decree for the relief prayed was entered. The defendant appeals.
If plaintiff’s case were left to rest solely upon his own unaided testimony as a witness on the trial below, this objection would have to be held good; for, in some respects, his statements of what occurred when the insurance was taken out are vague and uncertain; but, taking all the circumstances attending that transaction together with the practical interpretation put upon the policy by the company, as well as by plaintiff, from the time of its issuance down to the date when the company withdrew from the Ja
“I signed Exhibit A (the policy), and the blanks were filled out by a clerk under my direction. That is, I gave the policy writer the information to fill out the blanks. Q. And did that, as you understand it, cover the items that you gave him or her to put in the policy as expressed in this exhibit? A. I think so. Q. And this, at the time, expressed what you thought the policy ought to be? A. At the time the policy was issued. Q. That is what you intended to have in the policy, just as it appears now? A. At the time the policy was issued.”
It does not even appear that the witness read the policy, after it was filled out by Ms clerk. He does say that he was told, or that he knew the fact to be, that Mr. Fullerton did not himself drive or operate the car, and that he so informed the company; but aside from this, he states
Still further, as bearing upon the understanding by the company as to the nature of its agreement, we find, as already noted, that, on being notified of the accident, it promptly responded, took charge of the negotiations for settlement with the Hockenburgs, and in fact made such settlement, paying a very substantial sum to effect it. It sought a similar settlement with Mrs. Jacobson, but failed to reach an agreement on terms; and when she brought suit against plaintiff’s son, the driver of the car, it again responded to plaintiff’s notice and took up the defense, and not until a later date did it discover a reading or construction of its policy which would relieve it from liability. That, during all this time, plaintiff believed and acted upon the belief that his policy covered a case of this kind, is very evident; and that defendant gave him every reason to understand that such was its own construction of their contract, is equally clear. We are of the opinion, therefore, that, if any reformation of the policy was necessary to entitle plaintiff to a recovery, the proved facts and circumstances to which reference has been made, afford ample support for a decree granting such relief.
In avoidance of this proposition, appellant pleads and relies upon the admission that Donald P. Fullerton was of legal age at the time of the accident. It is true that the son had arrived at. his majority. He was, however, a young man, just out of school, living at the parental home, a member of the family, and as yet dependent upon his father. Under such circumstances, the mere fact that he was more than 21 years old would not require the application of any other rule of law than we have already, stated.
Counsel remind us, at this point, that the rule by which effect is given to the conduct of the parties to the contract, as indicating the proper construction to be placed upon its terms, is applicable only where the written agreement is ambiguous or doubtful; and they say that the writing now under consideration is clear and unequivocal. Admitting the general correctness of the rule that resort is to be made
For the reasons stated, we are satisfied that the trial court correctly interpreted the contract of insurance.
III. We are further disposed to the view that, the insurance company having, with full knowledge of the facts, undertaken to defend against the claim and suit of Mrs.
“The view that the contract means that the insurance company, after taking control of the proceedings in a suit against the assured, cannot be thereafter discharged, except by payment of the indemnity to the assured, or securing his discharge from the claim, is thought to best conform to the intent of the parties, and is adopted.”
See, also, Lombard v. McGuire, (N. H.) 97 Atl. 892. Quite in point, also, is Fuller Bros. T. L. & B. Co. v. Fidelity & Cas. Co., 94 Mo. App. 490 (68 S. W. 222). There, the defendant had insured an employer against liability for personal injuries to his employes. One Groza, an employe, being injured in an operation of an elevator, made claim for damages, and the insurer, on notice from the employer, assumed the defense and conducted it to final settlement. Later, another employe, one Hobert, suffered a similar injury in the same elevator, and also made claim for dam
“We are thus furnished with the indubitable evidence of the meaning the, defendant assigned to the policy. As said in the case of St. Louis Gaslight Co. v. City of St. Louis, 46 Mo. 121: ‘In a case of that kind, whose interpretation should prevail? If the court gives one differing from that understood by the parties, it makes a new agreement — the very thing most to be avoided. If it leaves the parties to be governed by their understanding of their own language, it in effect enforces the contract as actually made. That they should be so permitted to construe their own agreement, accords with every principle of reason and justice.’ It is obvious, from the acts and declarations of the parties, that they understood the policy to cover the liability of plaintiff to its employees for injuries suffered by them while engaged in work, in or about its elevators; and, that being so, it becomes our duty to adopt that understanding as the proper guide to its meaning.”
The rule so applied is manifestly a reasonable one, and no principle of law is suggested by counsel which prevents its application to this case.
We find nothing in the record requiring a reversal of the decree of the district court, and it is, therefore,' — -Affirmed.