164 A. 135 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1932
Argued December 13, 1932. On June 14, 1924, Joseph J. Fletcher, operating an automobile, ran into a milk wagon driven by Philip Gerber, and seriously injured him. Fletcher carried two policies of indemnity insurance, one in the Importers and Exporters Insurance Company, protecting him from property damage, and one in the New York Indemnity Company, covering injuries to other persons. The day after the accident, Fletcher notified his insurance broker, Macht, of the accident, and Macht, in turn, informed Myers, agent for the Importers and Exporters Insurance Company; Myers also was the broker who procured the defendant's policy from the New York Indemnity Company. Under Macht's testimony, Myers was to advise both companies. On December 30, 1924, Gerber brought an action of trespass against Fletcher. The summons was duly served on Fletcher, who forwarded it to Macht. On January 9, 1925, the statement of claim was filed, which the defendant alleged was the first knowledge he had that personal injuries had been sustained. On January 27, 1925, the New York Indemnity Company, through W.F. Marshall and Company, general agents, received their initial information of the accident, injury and suit. The case came on for trial, the insurance companies taking no part therein, and a verdict was rendered in the sum of $1,500, on which judgment was entered. Gerber, thereafter, issued an attachment execution summoning the Union Indemnity Company and the New York Indemnity Company as garnishees, the latter having been absorbed by the former. Judgment was obtained against the garnishees, but the court thereafter entered judgment n.o.v. for the insurance companies; and this appeal followed.
The defense in the attachment proceeding was that prompt notice of the accident and of the suit had not been given to the insurance company. The policy required the insured to give prompt notice of the accident, *229
with fullest information obtainable at the time, and of any claim made, and if suit is brought to enforce such claim, to forward to the executive office of the company, in New Orleans, Louisiana, or New York City, all documents relating thereto. "Prompt" is defined by Webster to mean "ready, quick, immediate, instantly." The policy clearly contemplated that the insured should be advised of the accident within such reasonable time so that ready action could be taken. These requirements are not unreasonable, and it was the clear duty of the defendant to comply therewith by promptly reporting the accident. Conditions of this character are usual and are designed to enable the insurer to inform itself by investigating the circumstances of the accident while the matter is yet fresh in the minds of all, and prepare for a defense, if necessary, or determine whether it is prudent to settle any claim arising therefrom: Bartels Brewing Co. v. Employers' Indemnity Co.,
In Trask v. State Fire and Marine Ins. Co.,
A most liberal interpretation of the terms of the policy could not justify a delay of seven months in giving notice to the insurance company. The broker was the agent of the insured, not of the New York Indemnity Company. The defendant attempted to excuse his failure to give prompt notice by stating that in so far as he knew there was no injury to the driver of the wagon. This unconvincing reason does not give him refuge. The defendant was personally involved in this accident, and it is alleged, and not denied, that the plaintiff was thrown from his wagon to the ground. His injuries must have been more or less serious, and very probably were apparent, as they were assessed by the jury in the sum of $1,500. The record before us does not disclose the exact information given by the defendant to Macht after the accident, but Macht testified that he expected Myers to notify both companies. Evidently this notice gave some information of personal injuries; otherwise, there was no necessity to advise the New York Indemnity Company.
This case is readily distinguished from Schambelan v. Preferred Acc. Ins. Co.,
The contract being clear and specific as to the requirement of a prompt notice, and as there was not that due diligence shown as required by the terms of the policy, and no just reason advanced for non-compliance therewith for a period of seven months, the appellant is not in a position to complain of the action of the learned court below.
Finding no merit in the assignments of error, judgment of the lower court is affirmed.