103 S.W. 1098 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *107 Percy Werner for respondent; F.L. Forlow and H.W. Currey of counsel. *108 Action on a policy of insurance. At the conclusion of the evidence introduced by plaintiff, the court peremptorily instructed the jury to return a verdict for defendant, and plaintiff, compelled thereto took a nonsuit with leave, and after ineffectually moving that it be set aside and a new trial granted, brought the case here by appeal. It appears from the evidence that defendant, on December 15, 1902, issued to plaintiff a policy to indemnify it "against loss from common law or statutory liability for damages on account of bodily injuries fatal or non-fatal accidentally suffered within the period of this policy by any employee or employees of the assured while on duty at the places and in the occupations mentioned in the schedule hereinafter given, in and during the continuance of the work described in the said schedule." The foregoing quotation embodies the obligation of the insurer as expressed on the face of the policy. "Special agreements" follow, among which is one providing that "this policy does not cover loss from liability . . . for injuries occasioned by reason of the failure of the assured to observe any statute affecting the safety of persons." The policy concludes with a number of "general agreements," among them the following: "If, thereafter, any suit is brought *109 against the assured to enforce a claim for damages on account of an accident covered by this policy, the assured shall immediately forward to the home office of the company every summons or other process as soon as the same shall have been served on him and the company will at its own cost defend against such proceeding in the name and on behalf of the assured and pay the indemnity, or settle the same, unless it shall elect to pay to the assured the indemnity provided for in clause "A" of special agreements as limited therein." (The clause referred to limits the insurer's liability to fifteen-hundred dollars for an accident resulting in the death of one person.)
"The assured shall not settle any claims except at his own cost, nor incur any expense nor interfere in any negotiation for settlement or in any legal proceedings without the consent of the company previously given in writing. . . . The assured, when requested by the company shall aid in securing information, evidence and the attendance of witnesses and in effecting settlements and in prosecuting appeals."
A zinc mine operated by plaintiff in Jasper county was the business covered by the policy. On March 5, 1903, while the policy was in force, a miner named Marvin McDaniels, employed by plaintiff in the mine, was killed in one of the drifts by falling material. He was unmarried and childless. Shortly after his death, his mother brought an action against plaintiff for damages sustained by her on account of his death. The cause of action pleaded in the petition is based on negligence and the specific act of negligence averred appears in this excerpt from the petition: "That the falling of said earth and rock was due directly to the failure of defendant to furnish sufficient supply of timbers when required to be used as props so that the workmen in said drift might at all times be able properly to secure the said workings from caving in and to the failure of *110 defendant to send such prop timber down into the ground when required to be used as aforesaid, and that the death of said Marvin McDaniels was due directly to the failure of defendants to furnish such prop timbers when they were required as aforesaid."
The trial of that action resulted in favor of the plaintiff therein, who recovered a judgment against plaintiff here (defendant there) in the sum of one thousand dollars. An appeal was prosecuted to this court where the judgment was affirmed. [McDaniels v. Mining Co.,
"Prop Timbers. — The owner, agent or operator of any mine shall keep a sufficient supply of timbers, when required to be used as props, so that the workmen may at all times be able to properly secure the said workings from caving in, and it shall be the duty of the owner, agent or operator to send down all such props when required."
It is conceded by plaintiff that the judgment recovered against it in the McDaniel case was founded on *111 [BAD TEXT] negligent failure to comply with the requirements of [BAD TEXT] just quoted, but it endeavors to sustain its [BAD TEXT] to a recovery under the policy on two principal [BAD TEXT] First, that the special agreement on which defendant relies is repugnant to the undertaking of the [BAD TEXT] expressed on the face of the instrument to indemnify the insured against statutory liability, and second, that defendant waived the benefit of the exception provided in the special agreement by taking charge of the defense of the McDaniel suit and conducting it until the final determination of that action in the appellate court. For a time during the trial, defendant vigorously resisted the efforts of plaintiff to establish the fact that defendant assumed from the first, and exercised to the end, control of the defense to that action, but finally, plaintiff succeeded in showing that fact by what appears to be incontrovertible evidence, and further made it appear beyond dispute that defendant in no manner signified its purpose to repudiate its obligation under the policy to indemnify plaintiff until after the latter was confronted by an execution.
That the liability enforced against plaintiff sprung from its failure to comply with the provisions of the prop statute and, therefore, fell within the scope of the special agreement under consideration, is a fact about which there can be no controversy, and our first concern is with the question of whether or not the special agreement is enforcible at all. If it can be harmonized with the other agreements in the contract, the exemption from liability it provided was of avail to defendant when the question of its liability under the policy first arose, but on the other hand, should we find that its terms are repugnant to those embraced in a preceding part of the contract to which greater weight must be attached in the interpretation of that instrument as a whole, then the proviso under consideration should be rejected in toto and the defense founded upon it must *112
fall for lack of support. The main purpose of the contract as expressed on its face was to indemnify plaintiff "against loss from common law or statutory liability." That purpose must be given effect and if the limits attempted to be imposed on it in the subsequent proviso under consideration are so closely drawn that they destroy the expressed purpose of the parties, the prior clause must override the subsequent restrictive clause. The rule announced by Blackstone (2 Blackstone 381) "that in a deed if there be two clauses so totally repugnant to each other that they cannot stand together, the first should be received and the latter rejected," has been generally followed in the construction of simple contracts. [Bean v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
But in order to justify a court in holding for naught an agreement which the parties themselves have chosen to insert in their contract, the conflicting clauses must be so irreconcilable that each evidences an entirely different purpose from that expressed in the other. Courts have no right to make contracts, and wherever it may be done without violence to reason, effect must be given to all parts of the instrument executed by the parties. Where a clause of a contract merely limits the scope of a previous clause without destroying it, such restrictive clause must be considered as incorporated into and forming a part of the clause which it limits, and the purpose and intention of the parties is to be gleaned from the two when read together. As was said by Jessel, M.R., in Williams v. Hathaway, L.R. 6 Ch. Div. 544: "The distinction has always been taken between *113
proviso which is repugnant to the covenant and, therefore, void, and a proviso which can be incorporated into the covenant and be consistent with it." [Bean v. Ins. Co., supra; Chase v. Bradley,
In the application of these principles to the present case, we give sanction to the conclusion reached in Coal Company v. Insurance Co., 130 Fed. 957, where Judge PHILLIPS, speaking of a proviso similar to that before us, observed that "The general clause against loss from common law or statutory liability was neither nullified nor emasculated by the exception, as there were left many subjects-matter upon which it could operate. For instance, but for the statute law of the State, in case of death from accidental injury giving a right of action to the designated survivors, there would be no liability on the part of the employer. If the injury was the result of the negligence of a fellow-servant there would be no liability of the master but for the fellow-servant statute of the State." We are of opinion that the exception before us should not be considered as repugnant to one of the main purposes of the contract, but as merely limiting the scope of the obligation assumed by defendant to indemnify plaintiff against loss from statutory liability. We do not deem this conclusion to be at variance with that of the Supreme Court of Tennessee in Bean v. Insurance Co., supra. In that case, the first clause of the contract purported to insure the complainant for a period of twelve months. The objectionable clause attempted to cut down the term by fifteen days. The two provisions could not be harmonized, as one was destructive of the other, and the court properly rejected the subsequent clause on the ground of repugnancy. But *114 here, the undertaking to indemnify against statutory liability is entirely consistent with the agreement to except certain statutes from the operation of that agreement, and as the two agreements can be harmonized, it necessarily follows one is not repugnant to the other.
The second ground for reversal urged by plaintiff meets our approval. Recently in the case of Myton v. Fidelity Casualty Co.,
But it is argued by defendant that the liability of plaintiff could not be made the subject of a contract of indemnity for the reason that the agreement to insure a person against the consequences of a violation of law is against public policy and such agreement cannot be enforced. It is true that a contract made to protect a person against a willful or intentional violation of law, or against a willful or intentional commission of any future wrong, is contra bonos mores and, therefore, void. [Russell v. DeGrand,
It follows from what has been said that the learned trial judge erred in sustaining the demurrer to the evidence. *116 Accordingly the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded. All concur.
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