This is an action of the case in assumpsit based on an employer’s liability insurance policy issued by the defendant "''to the plaintiff. The amended declaration contains three counts, together with the common counts.
On October 23, 1906, the defendant company which was engaged in the business of furnishing employers’ liability insurance issued to the plaintiff corporation, then doing business under the name of Humes, Cruise & Smiley Co., a policy of insurance, whereby the defendant agreed to indemnify the plaintiff for one year against loss from liability imposed by *248 law upon, the assured for damages arising solely from injuries caused by any accident and suffered by any employee, whose compensation was given in a certain schedule, at any of the •places mentioned in said schedule, and also to undertake at its own cost the settlement of any claim and the defense of any suit arising from such injuries. The policy also provides that the assured shall give immediate notice to the defendant of any such accident and of any claim made as a result of it; that in case of suit being brought, all papers and information relating to it shall be given to the defendant and thereupon the defendant company “shall at its own cost, undertake on behalf of and in the name of assured, the settlement of such claim or the defense of such suit, or the prosecution of any appeal deemed advisable by the Company,” and that the assured “ shall not without the written consent of the Company interfere in any negotiation for settlement nor in any legal proceedings, nor incur any expenses other than for imperative surgical relief at the time of the accident.”
On December 7,1906, while this policy of insurance was in force, one Dennis A. Driscoll was injured while working on a building which the plaintiff was .constructing at North Attleboro, the same being one of the places mentioned in said schedule. It appears from the testimony that Driscoll was one of seven plasterers furnished by a Mr. Cunningham to the plaintiff with the understanding that the latter should take full charge of them and pay their wages, and that Mr. Cunningham should receive fifty cents a day for the use of these men. The plaintiff paid the wages of these men, including Driscoll’s, furnished them material with which to work, and through its foreman gave orders to them as to their work. The wages of Driscoll were included in the pay-roll, on the basis of which the annual premium on this policy was computed and paid. The plaintiff gave the defendant notice of the accident, and of the claim of Driscoll against the plaintiff, and of the suit subsequently brought by Driscoll against the plaintiff in the Superior Court. After Driscoll commenced suit the defendant in the case at bar investigated the accident and con *249 sidered the question, as to whether Driscoll was an employee of this plaintiff and was worldng as such at the time of the accident. After such consideration this defendant, through its attorneys, without reservation, assumed the entire conduct of the defence of the Driscoll suit in all proceedings in the Superior Court, and before this court upon exceptions. In the Superior Court the jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff Driscoll in the sum of $1,600, which verdict was approved by this court upon exceptions. In the determination of the exceptions in the suit of Driscoll against the,plaintiff in the suit at bar, this court considered whether Driscoll was a fellow servant of certain employees of this plaintiff and decided that Driscoll was not an employee of this plaintiff. Upon execution this plaintiff was compelled to pay the judgment against it in the Driscoll suit. The defendant refused to reimburse the plaintiff for the amount paid upon the Driscoll judgment, on the ground that such judgment was not covered by the said policy of indemnity issued by the defendant to the plaintiff. This suit is brought on said policy for reimbursement and indemnity.
The third count of the amended declaration in this case, after setting out the terms of the policy upon which suit is brought, alleges the accident to Driscoll, but does not allege that Driscoll was an employee of the plaintiff at the time of the accident. Said third count further alleges that the defendant was notified of the accident and of the commencement of the Driscoll suit and "that the defendant corporation, with full knowledge of the facts of said case, and especially of the facts relating to the employment and work of the said Dennis A. Driscoll, *250 and without any protest or reservation whatsoever, and in accordance with the provisions of said, policy, undertook the defense of said legal proceedings in the name and in behalf of the said plaintiff corporation;” and further, “That because and by reason of the defendant’s assuming full control of the defense in the said action brought by the said Dennis A. Driscoll against the present plaintiff corporation as aforesaid, with full knowledge of the facts and without protest or reservation of any kind whatsoever, the defendant corporation waived any and all right of objection that said claim and action was not covered by the said policy and the said defendant corporation should not now be permitted to disclaim liability under the aforesaid policy of insurance because the said Dennis A. Driscoll, at the time of the aforesaid accident, was not an employee of the plaintiff corporation, or because of any other reason whatsoever.”
The defendant demurred to said third count on several grounds, all based upon the fact that it does not appear by the count that Driscoll was at the time of the' accident an employee of the plaintiff corporation or that Driscoll’s claim was covered by said policy.
By the allegations of said third count the relation of this plaintiff and defendant with regard to the Driscoll suit arose entirely from said policy of indemnity. The defendant’s obligation under said policy was to indemnify the plaintiff against loss from liability imposed by law upon it for damages arising from injuries caused by accidents to its employees. When the said Driscoll was injured the defendant was notified of that fact and later of his suit against the plaintiff. The question then arose and was considered by these parties, whether Driscoll was or was not an employee of the plaintiff. All the facts as to the employment and work of Driscoll at the time of the accident to him were fully disclosed to the defendant. If the defendant was then in doubt as to its liability to indemnify the plaintiff for loss arising from the Driscoll suit, it might have taken the position that Driscoll was not an employee of the plaintiff, have refused to assume the defence of his suit *251 against this plaintiff and have awaited the result; thus leaving the plaintiff free to defend the suit in its own way through its own attorney or to compromise the same, as it might desire or might be able; or the defendant might have endeavored, by some agreement with the plaintiff, to have been permitted to assume the conduct of the defence of said suit on condition that it should not thereby be considered to have enlarged its obligation or liability under the policy, in the event of a final decision that Driscoll was not an employee of the plaintiff. The defendant, however, without reservation, and with an apparent admission of liability in the premises, did take upon itself in behalf of this plaintiff the conduct of the defence of said suit, both in the Superior Court and before this court, upon exceptions. When it was finally decided in this court that Driscoll was not an employee of the plaintiff, the defendant for the first time claimed that it was not liable to indemnify the plaintiff for its loss in consequence of the injuries to Driscoll. With the possibility that it might be liable to the plaintiff under the policy, the defendant, for its own purposes, desired to have complete control of the defence in the Driscoll suit. Because of the apparent admission of liability arising from the defendant’s conduct, the plaintiff turned over to it such complete control of the plaintiff’s interests in said suit, thus depriving itself of any advantage that might arise from a conduct of the matter by its own attorneys in its own way. The defendant cannot be permitted now to say that the plaintiff was not injured thereby, or that the travel and the result of the proceeding would have been the same if the plaintiff had taken charge of the matter for itself. Such claims are based entirely upon conjecture.
In
Tozer
v.
Ocean Acc. etc., Corp.,
The defendant has also urged that the principle of estoppel cannot be applied to extend the liability of the defendant beyond the terms of the policy and to furnish indemnity to the insured for loss'arising from an accident to a person not an employee. The doctrine of quasi-estoppel is broad enough to include such a result, and its application is not restricted, as the defendant urges, to cases where the conduct of the insurer precludes him from insisting upon a forfeiture for the violation of a condition contained in the policy. It is the nature of this principle to extend liability; it is not invoked for the purpose of enforcing a true obligation or one that is clearly defined by the terms of a contract. In this consideration it is not material what the defendant’s real liability under the policy was, for by its own election of positions it is now precluded from asserting that its liability was not in accordance with its apparent admissions. In
Employers’ Liability Assur. Corp.
v.
Chicago &c. Co.,
Other cases, based upon employers’ liability insurance contracts, in which the doctrine of estoppel has been applied, are:
Glen Falls &c. Co.
v.
Travelers’ Ins. Co.
The third count of the amended declaration sets out a cause of action and the demurrer to said count was properly overruled.
We find no reversible error in the ruling of the Superior Court excluding evidence, offered by the defendant, to show that said Driscoll was not in the employ of the plaintiff at the time of the accident. There was a count in the amended declaration, which alleged that Driscoll was in the employ of the plaintiff at the time of the accident, but the case was plainly tried before the justice of the Superior Court sitting without a jury, upon the third count. The evidence before the justice fully warranted him in finding that the defendant’s conduct precluded it from raising the question as to Driscoll’s employment, and in that view it was immaterial whether, in fact, Driscoll was or was not employed by the plaintiff.
The testimony fully warranted the decision of the justice and we find no error therein.
Defendant’s exceptions are overruled.
By rescript already filed the case has been remitted to the Superior Court with direction to enter judgment upon the ■decision.
