142 A. 268 | Conn. | 1928
The plaintiff recovered a judgment against one LeClere for personal injuries caused by the latter's negligence in the operation of an automobile. At the time the injuries were received LeClere was insured by the defendant against loss from liability imposed by law for such injuries. This action is brought under Chapter 331 of the Public Acts of 1919, by which, if the defendant in an action to recover for such injuries is insured against loss from such liability, the judgment creditor is subrogated to the rights of the assured against his insurer.
One of the conditions of the policy written by the defendant was that the insured therein "shall at all times render to the company all cooperation and assistance in his power." The defendant in its special defense alleged a breach by LeClere of this condition of the policy in that he signed and delivered to the defendant's agent a few days after the accident a statement which tended to free him from responsibility for the accident, but upon the trial of the action testified in substance that plaintiff's injuries were caused by his (LeClere's) negligence. *651
Corrections in the finding are sought for the purpose of showing that LeClerc's signed statement contains the substance of what he stated to defendant's agent. The corrections if made would be immaterial, since the signed statement is made a part of the finding and the court found that he gave the statement to the defendant's agent, and that the testimony given by him on the trial conflicted with and was different from the statement. Nor is any correction necessary in the statement of the appellant's claims of law, since those made sufficiently present the only questions in the case which are, (1) did the defendant's liability under the policy and the statute become fixed as of the time of the accident, (2) if not, did LeClerc breach the condition of the policy that he would "render to the company all cooperation and assistance in his power" by first making a statement to the defendant's agent and thereafter repudiating it and giving evidence upon the trial which conflicted with it?
Chapter 331 of the Public Acts of 1919 provides that every insurance company which shall issue a policy insuring against loss by reason of liability for bodily injury or death by accident, or damage to property "shall, whenever a loss occurs under said policy, become absolutely liable, and the payment of said loss shall not depend upon the satisfaction by the assured of a final judgment against him for loss, damage or death occasioned by said casualty." It further provides that no such policy shall be canceled or annulled by any agreement between the company and the assured after the latter has become responsible for any such loss, and that a judgment creditor in an action against the assured for such loss or damage shall be subrogated to the rights of the assured under the policy if the judgment is not satisfied within thirty days after it is rendered. The trial court reached the *652
conclusion that the statute fixed the liability of the defendant as of the time of the accident, and that it was not subject to be defeated by any subsequent action of the assured. This construction of the statute involved a misconception of its true purpose and effect. Prior to the enactment of this statute the usual policy of automobile liability insurance contained a provision that the insurer should be liable only in cases where the assured had actually paid a judgment obtained against him, and we held that such a policy was one of indemnity against loss, not against liability, and that payment of the judgment was a condition precedent to recovery; Shea v. United States Fidelity Guaranty Co.,
The trial judge states in his memorandum of decision that "no act of LeClerc or the defendant company, and no agreement between them after the injury can cancel or annual the contract of insurance." The statute, to effectuate its manifest purpose to safeguard the rights of the injured person, prohibits any cancellation or annulment of the policy by any agreement between the insurance company and the assured after *654 the injury. A failure of the assured to comply with any of the terms of the policy, which compliance is under the policy a condition precedent to his recovery, does not constitute such an annulment or cancellation by agreement with the insurance company as to come within the prohibition of the statute. As we have said, the statute gives the injured person the same rights as the assured under the policy but no greater rights, and does not, for the benefit of the injured person, deprive the company of any defenses which it may have under the policy, save only the one specifically mentioned in the statute. If, therefore, the assured, LeClerc, breached the condition of the policy requiring him to render to the defendant "all co-operation and assistance in his power" there can be no recovery under the policy.
It remains to be considered whether there was such a breach of this condition of the policy by the assured. The duty resting upon the assured under this clause of the policy was to render to the defendant cooperation and assistance, presumably assistance in establishing any defense which it might have to an action upon the policy. He signed the statement, Exhibit 1, giving a version of the facts which tended to exonerate him from blame for the accident. It could hardly be said that this constituted any failure in cooperation with the defendant, but rather the reverse. Later, upon the trial, he gave another version of the facts which was substantially different from and conflicted with his previous statement, and which was practically a confession that the accident was the result of his negligence. It is not alleged or claimed that LeClerc testified falsely upon the trial; indeed it seems to be assumed by the parties and the court, though the finding does not cover that point, that the version of how the accident happened given by him upon the trial *655
was the correct one. It cannot be said, therefore, that there was a failure of cooperation and assistance by reason of truthful testimony given by LeClerc upon the trial. A failure to report the accident or to give notice of the suit or to give any information regarding the accident, might constitute a breach of this covenant. So if LeClerc in his statement or his testimony had untruthfully assumed liability for the accident that would have been, to say the least, a failure to co-operate and assist. But, as we have said, the giving of a statement, which though incorrect, gave a version of the accident which tended to free the assured of any charge of negligence and therefore to relieve the company of liability to the person injured, cannot be said to constitute a failure to render the cooperation and assistance required of the assured in this clause of the policy. It has been held that a failure to cooperate, within the terms of such a provision in a liability policy, is not shown by the fact that the assured gave testimony at an inquest that differed from his testimony at the trial in the absence of anything to show that he wilfully testified falsely. Taxicab MotorCo. v. Pacific Coast Casualty Co.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.