209 Wis. 576 | Wis. | 1932
The plaintiff, as trustee in bankruptcy of Edward Baumgartner, is prosecuting this action to recover for a fire loss on an insurance policy issued to Edward Baum-gartner, as the insured, by the defendant La Salle Fire Insurance Company (hereinafter referred to as the La Salle Company). That defendant answered, admitting that plaintiff had sustained loss which was within the coverage of a policy which it had issued, but further alleged that the National Retailers’ Mutual Insurance Company (hereinafter referred to as the Retailers’ Company) had also issued a policy to the same insured, and covering the same property and risk; that therefore the La Salle Company was only liable to the insured for its proportionate share of the loss prorated between the policies respectively issued by the insurers; that the La Salle Company is unable to determine what its proportionate share of the liability amounts to because it is not informed as to whether the Retailers’ Company policy was in blanket form with a lump sum covering all of the property or whether the coverage was apportioned to specific items or classes of insured’s property; and that the La Salle Company is entitled to the dismissal of the complaint excepting as to the La Salle Company’s proportionate share of the loss. On motion of the La Salle Company, the Retailers’ Company was ordered to be added as a party defendant, and by way of cross-complaint for relief against the Retailers’ Company, the La Salle Company re-alleged the matters pleaded in its answer as stated above. On those allegations the La Salle Company demanded that the judg
On this appeal the La Salle Company concedes that, under the policies involved herein (which are in the form prescribed in sec. 203.01, Stats.) and under the decision in Fitzsimmons v. City Fire Ins. Co. 18 Wis. *234, 246, it is not entitled to recover a money judgment as and for contribution from the Retailers’ Company. In lines 101 to 105 of the prescribed Wisconsin standard fire insurance policy there is the provision:
“This company shall not be liable for a greater proportion of any loss or damage than the amount hereby insured shall bear to the whole insurance covering the property, whether valid or not and whether collectible or not.”
Consequently, the La Salle Company is liable to the plaintiff for its proportionate share of the loss only, and as it cannot lawfully be required to pay to plaintiff any amount in excess of such proportionate share, there will not arise any occasion for contribution by the Retailers’ Company to the La Salle Company.
However, the La Salle Company now contends that sufficient facts are alleged to entitle it on its cross-complaint against the Retailers’ Company to declaratory relief as to whether the relationship of insured and insurer existed at the time of the loss between plaintiff and the Retailers’ Company; and, if so, whether the policy, by virtue of which there existed such relationship, was for blanket insurance on all
The determination of those issues as raised merely by the answer to the complaint will be as effectively res adjudi-catei, as between plaintiff and the La Salle Company as far as any possible right or legal interest therein of the latter is concerned, as if it were permitted to also introduce those issues into this litigation by a cross-complaint to be answered
“The Declaratory Judgments Act is an effort to provide a tribunal in which controversies may be determined which could not otherwise be presented for determination to a court having jurisdiction.” Miller v. Currie, 208 Wis. 199, 205, 242 N. W. 570, 572.
In that case this court quoted with approval certain requirements of a proper case for declaratory relief as set out in Washington-Detroit Theatre Co. v. Moore, 249 Mich. 673, 678, 229 N. W. 618, 619, 68 A. L. R. 105, and among them was the proposition that—
“Ordinarily, the court will refuse a declaration which can be made only after a judicial investigation of disputed facts, especially where the disputed questions of fact will be the subject of judicial investigation in a regular action.”
The rule as thus stated is in accord with the result, in that respect, which was stated in Heller v. Shapiro, 208 Wis. 310, 242 N. W. 174, after an extended review of the authorities, viz., “that courts will not . . . entertain a declaratory relief action where ordinary remedies exist for granting the relief prayed for.” To the cases cited in support of that statement there may be added Newburger v. Lubell, 257 N. Y. 383, 178 N. E. 669, in which the court said:
“The question to be determined is whether the appellate division exercised its discretion erroneously in holding the complaint insufficient to require the court to proceed to a declaratory judgment. ... A suit for a declaratory judgment is a discretionary remedy (Civil Practice Act, sec. 473), which may be withheld if existing forms of action are reasonably adequate.”
It follows that in the case at bar, as was the situation also in Heller v. Shapiro, supra, as the pleading does not entitle
By the Court. — Order overruling demurrer to cross-complaint reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion.