delivered the opinion of the Conrt.
The hill was filed in this case to recover of the defendant the snm of $5,000, with interest and costs, money which the complainant was compelled to pay at the snit of one Landon Tipton, one of its employees.
It appears from the hill that the defendant executed to the complainant an indemnity policy, whereby the former agreed to pay the latter the snm of $5,000, and costs of litigation, in case any employee of the latter should he injured in course of his employment, hut made it a condition precedent of such liability that the former should “upon the occurrence of any accident covered by this policy give immediate written notice thereof to the company.”
It further appears from the hill that on the 28th day of November, 1914, complainant’s employee, the
The bill contained other allegations to the effect that prior to the trial of the damage suit an attorney and representative of the defendant visited the plant at Covington, and there made investigations, inter
It was further alleged that at no time could the case have been compromised for less that the amount which would have been acceptable to Landon Tipton after the first trial of the ease, which occurred on May 25 and 26, 1916, at which time the present complainant expressly- notified the present defendant that Tipton was willing to accept a reasonable amount in settlement, and suggested that the present defendant attempt to settle it.
The bill was demurred to on the • ground, in substance, that it showed no cause of action, since it appeared therefrom that the condition in respect of giving immediate notice had not been complied with.
We think the learned chancellor was in error. The failure to give the required notice defeated the policy. By its express terms the giving of immediate notice was made a condition precedent to the right of recovery. The case falls directly within the authority of Blackman v. Casualty Co.,
The court does not encourage the citing of the unpublished opinions of its members, and never refers to them unless compelled to do so by a reference of counsel thereto.
The case of Blackman v. Casualty Co. is, we believe, sound in reason, and it is in full accord with the great weight of authority in other jurisdictions. In addition to the authorities cited in that opinion we may add the following: Caldwell v. Insurance Co.,
The complainant insists that, inasmuch as there was no technical forfeiture provided for in the policy, relief should not be denied it. The refusal to grant relief for failure to comply with a condition precedent does not depend on a right of forfeiture, although sometimes inaccurate expressions occur in opinions of the courts that seem to blend the two principles.
It is true that in the policy under examination in Blackman v. Casualty Co., supra, there was an express provision for forfeiture on failure to comply with the condition precedent, and this was commented on, and made a point in the decision; but it is not' essential that there should he any provision for forfeiture in order to give effect to a condition precedent. ' This is apparent from the Massachusetts case, and other cases cited, and from the very nature of a condition precedent. As said in Hatch v. United States Casualty Co., supra:
. “It is to be premised that the giving of this notice is not a condition subsequent, as it has been sometimes called. It is not simply a part of the rule of procedure for the enforcement of the liability ’ of the defendant, as are the provisions of the fifth paragraph in this same policy providing for proofs of loss:' The promise to insure is not absolute but conditional. The condition is that the notice, whatever it may be and by whomsoever and whenever given, shall be given. It is a condition precedent to the creation of liability or to the life of the promise; or, to put it perhaps in a better way, the giving of the notice is one of the essentials of the cause of action. ’ ’
It is true the notice in the case before us was given as soon as complainant received information
Nor is complainant relieved of the legal effect of the failure to give notice by the allegations of the bill to the effect that the Royal Indemnity Company was not injured by the delay. At most, it is a matter about which opinions may differ, as to whether any injury was really caused by the delay under the facts stated; but the inquiry is irrelevant; for if the giving of notice was a condition precedent to the right of recovery, the failure to give it prevented any liability from attaching.
It results that complainant • can recover nothing, and the demurrer must be sustained, and the bill dismissed.
