169 P. 1048 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1917
The appeal in this case is taken from a judgment entered in favor of the plaintiff. The plaintiff here first recovered judgment against a corporation named Pendleton Iron Metal Company, which judgment was for damages for personal injuries suffered by the plaintiff while in the employ of said corporation. At the time the injuries were suffered a policy of insurance had been issued by this defendant, insuring the Pendleton Company against loss by reason of accident to its employee. After judgment had been entered against the Pendleton Company in favor of plaintiff here, the Pendleton Company issued its promissory note to the plaintiff and thereupon caused the judgment to be satisfied of record, and thereafter an assignment was made by the Pendleton Company of all right of action which it had as against the appellant here under the contract of insurance. This action was then brought on account of such assigned claim.
The principal point argued in the briefs refers to that term of the policy of insurance which reads as follows: "No action for the indemnity against loss provided for in insuring agreement I of this policy shall lie against the company, except for reimbursement of the amount of loss actually sustained and paid in money by the assured in full satisfaction of a judgment duly recovered against the assured after trial of the issue, nor unless brought within two years after such judgment shall have been paid. . . ." Preliminarily it may be stated that the insuring agreement "I" referred to in the above quotation covered all principal loss which might be suffered by the assured. Appellant urges this court to decide that under the agreement providing that loss must be paid in money before an action can be maintained: 1. Payment by a promissory note is no payment at all; 2. That if the giving of a promissory note in satisfaction of the judgment debt against the assured constitutes payment in the ordinary case, such conclusion could not be applied here where the contract expressly provides that the loss must be paid "in *392
money." As to whether the giving of a promissory note in discharge of liability of an assured is to be considered as payment of the debt, where made in good faith and for that purpose, is a question no longer open to much difference of judicial opinion. The question is fairly settled by the authorities in the affirmative. This court had occasion to consider the precise contention made here under the first head, in the case of Rodgers v. Pacific Coast Casualty Co.,
Passing to appellant's second proposition, to wit, that the added requirement of the contract obligating the assured to pay "in money" must be actually satisfied before action is brought: The policy of insurance here exhibited is one of indemnity as distinguished from one insuring against liability; that is, the insurer here agrees to indemnify for loss actually suffered by the assured, and not to indemnify for liability incurred which liability would have been complete upon the entry of judgment against the policy-holder. In construing the term of the contract to which our attention is now directed, the reason for its insertion in the agreement and the purpose and intent to be served should be examined. It may reasonably be inferred that the insurer, recognizing the law that the assured under an ordinary indemnity agreement might satisfy a claimant's judgment in ways other than by the payment of money, determined to guard against that contingency; this by expressly requiring that the assured should be deemed to have suffered a loss only when he had paid "in money" a liability accrued against him. That this term should be considered as one affecting the contract of the insurer in a material way seems quite plain. The requirement *393
is to make the matter of the amount of loss one which is to be measured by the dollars expended and so place within the reach of the insurer easy proof as to loss actually suffered. Should we construe the term not to be of the substance of the contract and permit the loss to be recovered regardless of the kind of property which the assured parted with, then it might happen that the latter had paid in land, jewelry, or other merchandise, and thus an issue would arise as to the actual value of the thing given in payment of the obligation against which indemnity was claimed. We have no doubt at all that an insurer can by the condition of its contract relieve itself from the difficulties which might attend such a defense in an action brought upon its policy. Our attention is called by respondent to the case of Herbo-Phosa Co. v. PhiladelphiaCasualty Co.,
The judgment appealed from is reversed.
Conrey, P. J., and Works, J., pro tem., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on January 21, 1918. *394