after stating the facts: This case is clearly governed by
Clark v. Bonsal,
We
presume, and must do so, that the plaintiff’s assumption that he can recover, where there has been no judgment against the assured by the employee, and no payment by it of the latter’s claim or any part thereof, is based upon the last words we have taken from the opinion in
Clark v. Bonsal, supra,
as to the attachment or sequestration of the assured’s claim against the indemnity company. But such an inference from that language is manifestly not warranted. Before any claim can be sequestered, it must take the form of a right to sue the indemnity company, because of a loss sustained by the assured, and this right does not accrue to the assured “until some damage has been sustained, either by payment of the whole sum or some part of an employee’s claim” by the employer, according to the following passage taken from the opinion
*530
in that ease: “But, unless the contract expressly provides that it is taken out for the benefit of the injured employees and the payment of recoveries by them, none of the cases holds that an injured employee may, in the first instance, proceed directly against the insurance company.” The Court, in
Bain v. Atkins,
The case of
Clark v. Bonsal, supra,
was approved in
Hensley v. Furniture Co., supra,
and more recently in
Lowe v. Fidelity Co.,
So that it appears to be thoroughly well settled that in a case of this hind there can be no recovery by the employee against the indemnity company until there has been a loss by the assured in the manner described in the decisions to which we have referred, and such a loss had not been suffered in this case.
The other positions taken by the plaintiff are untenable and require no discussion, as the case turns upon the question we have considered. The same stipulations are in this policy which are in those upon which the above decisions were based.
It was, therefore, error to overrule the demurrer. It should have been sustained as to the Maryland Casualty Company, and the action as to it must be dismissed.
Reversed.
