This appeal arose out of an action against the Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, an automobile liability insurer, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, brought by the plaintiff John M. Novella, a judgment creditor of the defendant’s insureds, Russell Novella and Joseph Novella, to recover the amount of a judgment obtained for personal injuries sustained in a motor vehicle accident. The action was brought pursuant to General Statutes § 38-175, which provides for the subrogation of a judgment creditor to all the insured’s rights against the defendant insurer. The defendant interposed three special defenses based on clauses in the insurance policy itself, namely, that (1) the policy excludes coverage for injuries to an employee of the insureds arising out of and in the course of his employment; (2) the policy excludes coverage for any obligation for which the insureds may be liable under the Workmen’s Compensation Act; and (3) the insureds breached a clause requiring their cooperation. The issues were submitted to the jury which returned a verdict for the defendant. Following a denial of the plaintiff’s motions to set aside the verdict and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the trial court rendered a judgment for the defendant. From the judgment rendered, the plaintiff has appealed to this court assigning as error, inter alia: the denial of his motions to set aside the verdict and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict; the failure to include certain requests in the charge to the jury and the inclusion therein of portions claimed objectionable; in finding or refusing to find facts set forth in the claims of proof; and in rulings made during the trial.
From the evidence presented in the appendices to the briefs and taken in the light most favorable to the sustaining of the verdict, the jury reasonably could have found the following facts: Russell A.
On Saturday, May 19, 1962, Russell Novella told the plaintiff to drive the 1952 International to Mahopac for a paper drive to be held there. TMs would save Russell Novella from having to do it himself on the following day, Sunday. It was stipulated that on the way to Mahopae, the 1952 International, which the plaintiff was driving, went off the road and crashed, severely injuring the plaintiff.
At the time of the accident, the scrap yard had no workmen’s compensation insurance, but it did have an automobile liability insurance policy issued by the defendant. This policy contained, inter alia, two pertinent exclusionary clauses wMch stated that the policy did not apply (1) to bodily injury to any employee of the insured arising out of and in the course of employment by the insured, and (2) to any obligation for which the insured or any carrier
On January 8, 1963, the plaintiff sent a letter to the defendant alleging negligence on the part of the insureds. On January 16, Joseph Novella gave a signed statement to the eff ect that he had knowledge of some minor deficiencies on the truck in question and that the plaintiff drove that truck at least 90 percent of the time. On January 16, Russell Novella gave a signed statement stating that (1) the plaintiff’s job covered the operations of the scrap yard including the driving of scrap yard trucks; (2) the plaintiff’s normal work week was six full days (including Saturday); (3) the accident occurred within the scope of the plaintiff’s employment in the scrap business; (4) he had no knowledge that the truck in question was defective in any way before the accident; and (5) the truck was in regular use and in top shape. On January 18, in response to the claim letter of January 8, the defendant wrote to the plaintiff’s attorney indicating that the liability coverage excluded any liability for any employee and that since the plaintiff was an employee and injured in the course of his employment on the date in question, no coverage was in effect. On January 19, the plaintiff’s attorney wrote to the defendant stating that no claim was to be made under the Workmen’s Compensation Act and acknowledging that if
On May 15,1963, the plaintiff brought an action in negligence against the insureds to recover for his injuries, a copy of the complaint being sent to the defendant. On May 23, the defendant’s claims manager wrote to the insureds pointing out policy exclusion (d) concerning injuries to employees, that the defendant’s actions in defending were not to be construed as a waiver of this exclusion and recommending that they retain their own counsel. No mention of exclusion (e) concerning workmen’s compensation was made at that time since the defendant did not have actual knowledge that the scrap yard regularly employed two employees, and was therefore subject to the provisions of the Workmen’s Compenstation Act. It was not until about six years later, in June, 1969, long after the plaintiff’s suit against the insureds had concluded, that the defendant became aware that the insureds regularly employed two employees at the scrap yard.
The defendant engaged Attorney Arnold J. Bai to defend the action and, pursuant to the defendant’s recommendation of May 15, the insureds also retained Attorney Albert H. Hornig. Both attorneys filed appearances for the insureds. On June 4, Bussell Novella gave a sworn and recorded statement to Attorneys Bai and Hornig which contradicted his earlier statement of January 16, in that he now stated that (1) the plaintiff’s trip to Mahopac was not made in the course of his employment; (2) the plaintiff did not work on Saturday afternoon; (3) the plaintiff’s trip was done as a favor without compensation; and (4) he had knowledge that the steering wheel in the 1952 International had
The defendant always has taken the position that the plaintiff’s injuries arose out of and in the course of his employment and that exclusion (d) of the policy was applicable. Thus, two days after the above statements by Russell Novella to the effect that the scrap yard employed only one person and that the accident was unrelated to the plaintiff’s employment, John Lyons was sent by the defendant to examine the insured’s payroll book. Lyons was not an adjuster nor a claims representative nor an investigator. His sole assignment was to determine whether the plaintiff worked on Saturdays, and to establish whether the plaintiff was paid for the day of the accident with a view toward determining whether the accident would fall within the strictures of exclusion (d). The payroll book did not reveal to Lyons whether the scrap yard regularly employed two employees.
Attorney Bai filed an answer in the negligence case, but did not include a special defense to the effect that the plaintiff’s injuries arose out of and in the course of his employment at the scrap yard. Attorney Bai did not plead the Workmen’s Compensation Act as a defense in the initial action in what he considered to be the best interests of his clients,
In October, 1967, the plaintiff, as a judgment creditor of the insureds, brought suit against the defendant to compel it to pay the amount awarded in the initial action under the provisions of General Statutes § 38-175. 2 The jury in the latter case rendered a verdict in favor of the defendant. Several interrogatories were submitted to the jury pursuant to Practice Book § 247, the answers revealing that they had concluded from the evidence presented and recited above that (1) the insureds did not breach the cooperation clause as alleged in the defendant’s third special defense; that (2) the operation of the motor vehicle by the plaintiff arose out of and in the course of his employment thereby exposing the insureds to liability under the Workmen’s Compensation Act; and that (3) the defendant had not waived its right nor was it estopped to assert these exclusions as defenses.
On the foregoing facts and the reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom, the jury reasonably could have reached such conclusions. The conclusions and verdict reached by the jury were within a permissible view of the evidence and, therefore, the trial court did not err in refusing to set aside the verdict or in denying a motion for judgment notwith
Nor do we find, as the plaintiff contends, that the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict should have been granted on the basis that an application of the law of waiver and estoppel to the evidence compels a conclusion that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment. “Waiver is the intentional relinquishment of a known right.
National Transportation Co.
v.
Toquet,
In applying the foregoing principles to the case before us, we cannot say, as a matter of law, that the defendant had waived its right to plead policy exclusions (d) and (e) as defenses against the plaintiff. Clearly, express or actual waiver is not present. While both parties concede that at the time of the accident the insureds’ scrap yard customarily em
The plaintiff, however, does pursue the contention that a form of waiver was involved — a waiver implied by law from the defendant’s conduct on principles of equity, or a type which might be characterized as being somewhat similar to estoppel. The conduct involved in triggering the implied waiver or estoppel doctrine was the claimed failure of the defendant, by culpable negligence or other breach of duty, to gain knowledge that the scrap yard was subject to the Workmen’s Compensation Act and so to plead the act as a defense in the first suit.
“Estoppel rests on the misleading conduct of one party to the prejudice of the other. ... In the absence of prejudice, estoppel does not exist.”
Spear-Newman, Inc.
v.
Modern Floors Corporation,
“[WJhile waivers and estoppels are theoretically very different things, and the distinction between them is one easy to preserve when express waivers are under consideration, it is nevertheless true that the dividing line between waivers implied from conduct and estoppels oftentimes becomes so shadowy that . . . the two terms have come to be quite commonly used interchangeably. When the term waiver is so used, however, the elements of an estoppel almost invariably appear, and it is quite apparent that it is employed to designate, not a pure waiver but one which has come into an existence of effectiveness through the application of the principles underlying estoppels. . . . [TJhe apparent difference between certain of the cases becomes one of terms rather than of fundamental principle.”
Bernhard
v.
Rochester German Ins. Co., 79
Conn. 388, 393,
Once again, applying these principles to the present ease, we cannot say, as a matter of law, that the doctrine of implied waiver or estoppel was present, since the evidence, and reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom, amply supported the jury’s conclusion to the contrary. The evidence does not demonstrate that the insureds used due diligence in ascertaining and advising their attorney as to the true facts or were in a position whereby the means of knowledge of such facts were not equally open to them. We cannot predicate an estoppel in favor of one whose own omission or inadvertence has contributed to the problem at hand. “ ‘It is fundamental that a person who claims an estoppel must show that he exercised due diligence to know the truth and that he not only did not know the true state of things but also lacked any reasonably available means of acquiring knowledge.’
State
v.
American News Co.,
Nor do we find that the trial court improperly left to the jury the issue of whether the plaintiff was prejudiced by the defendant’s conduct, prejudice being an essential element of estoppel. “In the absence of prejudice, estoppel does not exist.
Spear-Newman, Inc.
v.
Modern Floors Corporation,
Before taking up the assignments of error directed at the charge to the jury and to a ruling on evidence, it is necessary to consider numerous errors the plaintiff has assigned in the failure of the trial court to include in its finding certain facts contained in approximately twenty-one claims of proof as set out in the plaintiff’s draft finding and in including in the finding approximately twenty-three paragraphs or portions thereof. “A finding in a ease tried to the jury is merely a narrative of the facts claimed to have been proved by each side, made for the purpose
We now turn to the errors claimed in the charge. With regard to the issues of waiver and estoppel, the plaintiff assigned as error (1) the failure of the trial court to charge as requested in several paragraphs of the finding and (2) the trial court’s instructions to the jury as contained in nine paragraphs of the finding.
Numerous paragraphs of the charge which have been attacked deal with the issue of estoppel. As noted above, the gravamen of the plaintiff’s appeal is that by the defendant’s conduct at the first trial in failing, due to culpable negligence or other breach of duty, to ascertain that the insureds’ business was within the realm of the Workmen’s Compensation Act and to plead the act as a defense, the defendant is precluded or estopped from using the defense of the act in the present case, the latter conduct being inconsistent with its position in the first case. In relation thereto, the plaintiff contends that the jury instructions concerning estoppel, although perfectly correct as drafted, were confined solely to estoppel by representation and ruled out any consideration by the jury of the theory of quasi-estoppel or estoppel by prior inconsistent conduct.
“The test of a charge is not whether it applies pertinent rules of law to every ramification of facts
Viewing the charge as a whole, as we must do;
Enlund
v.
Buske,
The plaintiff next assigns as error several portions
The plaintiff next assigns as error the failure of the trial court to charge the jury that they must find Attorney Bai acted as attorney for the insureds and that if he knew or should have known that the insureds were subject to the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, he was obligated to plead that defense. While number 15 of the Canons of Professional Ethics provides that a client “may expect his lawyer to assert every . . . remedy or defense,” the plaintiff’s request was improper in that the duty of an attorney to assert a given defense necessarily depends on considerations beyond those stated in the request. In the case before us, the defendant offered evidence to prove and claimed to have proved that Attorney Bai intentionally did not plead the act as a defense in the best interests of his clients since so to plead would have exposed the insureds to a workmen’s compensation claim by the plaintiff, for which they were not insured, and to resulting criminal sanctions. The request to charge as drafted being improper, the trial court was correct in not so charging. Nor do we find that the request to charge contained in paragraph 247 of the finding to the effect that the jury “must find that Attorney Arnold Bai was the attorney for both . . . [the de
The plaintiff next contends that the trial court erred in refusing to charge as requested that: “If you find that there was any dereliction on the part of Attorney Hornig in failing to plead the Workmen’s Compensation Act for his clients . . . [the insureds] in the former action, or to insist upon Attorney Bai pleading it, any such dereliction would not excuse Attorney Bai or the defendant for their dereliction in failing to plead it. A party may not excuse his own shortcomings by relying upon the wrong of another.” Since the claims of proof, by which the charges and requests to charge are tested, do not show that contributory negligence was an issue in the case, the trial court properly refused to charge as requested.
Hunyadi
v.
Stratfield Hotel, Inc.,
We find no merit to the plaintiff’s contention that the trial court erred in charging the jury that: “The mere fact the employee was not paid for the time spent in delivering the truck, is entirely immaterial
Of the various assignments of error directed toward rulings made during the course of trial, only one has been pursued on appeal. The plaintiff contends that it was error not to admit into evidence the plaintiff’s exhibit N for identification. During the cross-examination of Attorney Bai, who had been called as a witness by the defendant, the following transpired: “If Your Honor please, I’d like to offer into evidence at this time, plaintiff’s Exhibit N for identification, which was identified by Mr. McCormick as memorandums that he made for his file.” The court responded: “Show it to counsel,” whereupon counsel for the defense said: “Objection. I
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The relevant portions of the poliey read: “This policy does not apply: ... (d) under coverage A, to bodily injury to . . . any employee of the insured arising out of and in the course of (1) domestic employment by the insured, if benefits therefor are in whole or in part either payable or required to be provided under any workmen’s compensation law, or (2) other employment by the insured; (e) under coverage A, to any obligation for which the insured or any carrier as his insurer may be held liable under any workmen’s compensation, unemployment compensation or disability benefits law, or under any similar law.”
The pertinent portion of General Statutes § 38-175 reads as follows: “[I]f sueh judgment is not satisfied within thirty days . . . sueh judgment creditor shall be subrogated to all the rights of the defendant and shall have a right of action against the insurer to the same extent that the defendant in such action could have enforced his elaim against such insurer had such defendant paid such judgment.”
