163 Mo. App. 504 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
This action was instituted in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis by respondent, to collect a premium alleged by it to be due from appellant upon a policy of insurance, commonly called an employer’s liability policy. The policy involved is claimed to have been issued on July 21, 1905, to the' Bambriek-Bates Construction Company, and covered a period of one year from that date. It is claimed that it was afterwards, on September 25, T905, assigned by the Bambriek-Bates Construction Company to the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company, and the action was originally brought against the two companies but was subsequently dismissed by plaintiff as to the Bambrick Bates Company.
The fourth amended petition, filed after the dismissal as to the Bambriek-Bates Construction Company, and upon which the ease was tried, contained two counts. The first count, after setting out the fact of the issue and delivery of the policy to the BambriekBates Construction Company, on the date and covering the period above stated, sets out that in applying for the policy and accepting it, the Bambriek-Bates Construction Company represented that the fines of business in which it was engaged and which were to be covered by the policy were those of operating a quarry or quarries and of stone crushing, including all occupations incident to those lines of business, and for the hazard of operating the quarry or quarries the Bambriek-Bates Construction Company agreed to pay to plaintiff a premium at the rate of one dollar and seventy-five cents for each $100' of wages paid to per
It is further set out in this first count of the petition that on the basis estimated by the BambrickBates Construction Company, the amount of premium due and which was paid by that company to plaintiff was $160.40. It is further charged that on the 25th of September, 1905, the policy was duly assigned by the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company to the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company, which assignment was accepted by plaintiff, and that by the terms of the assignment the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company promised and agreed to keep and perform all and every the obligations to be kept and performed under the policy by the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company. It is then charged in this first count that in the period from July 21, 1905, to September 25, 1905, the date of this alleged assignment, the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company had actually expended in wages to its employees engaged in
The second count of the petition, repeating the averments as to the issue of the policy and the fact of its assignment on the 25th of September by the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company to the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company, and averring that prior to, or cotemporaneouslv with, the making of the assignment of tbe policy, the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company had sold and delivered to the Bambrick Brothers Construction. Company, the business covered by and under the policy, and from that date, namely, the 25th of September, 1905, until the expiry of the policy on the 21st of July, 1906, the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company had conducted both the quarry and stone crushing operations covered by the policy, avers that during the period between the 25th of September, 1905, and ending on the 21st of July, 1906, the defendant Bambrick Brothers Construction Company actually expended in wages to its employees in its business of operating its quarries, the sum of $30,000’, on which sum it is claimed" there is due plaintiff as premium on the policy at the rate heretofore specified, namely, one dollar and seventy-five
The reply was a general denial.
The cause was sent to a referee and the testimony taken before him.
The assignment referred to, which was introduced ■and read in evidence, is as follows:
“Having sold and delivered to Bambrick Brothers Construction Company the business covered under the policy below .referred to we hereby transfer and •assign to the said Bambrick Brothers Construction Company, policy No. 43845 of the Standard Life and Accident Insurance Company, of. Detroit, Michigan, dated July 21st, 1905. We and the said Bambrick Brothers Construction Company in accepting this assignment and as a condition of the said Standard Life and Accident Insurance Company’s assenting hereto, promise and agree to keep and perform all and every the obligations on the part of the assured to be kept ■and performed as provided in the agreements and conditions under which 'said policy was issued.
Executed in duplicate this 25th day of September, 1905.
(Signed) Bambbick-Bates Const. Co.
By John Bambrick, President.
Assignor.
Bambrick Bros. Const. Co.
By John Bambrick, Pres.
Assignee.
Standard Life and Accident Insurance Company,
By E. A. Leonard, Secretary.
Atwood & Johnson, Managing Agents.
H. 0. No. 29910.”
It was in evidence that the auditor of plaintiff, exercising the right of examination which the policy conferred, had, with the assent of the officers of defendant, made an examination of the pay-roll and hooks of the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company, which appear to have been in the office of the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company, and had also examined those of the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company, and from this examination, he testified, that commencing with July 21, 1905, and ending with September 25, 1905, the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company had expended for wages of employees in its quarry operations $6657.32, and for the same period that company had expended in wages for men employed as stone crushers $10,319.15'. For the period from September 25, 1905, to July 21, 1906, this witness testified that his examination showed that defendant Bambrick Brothers Construction Company had expended as wages for its employees in the quarrying operations $27,467.37, and for the same period it had expended as wages for employees in its stone crushing operations $36,379.90. The policy was offered and admitted in evidence, the clause pertinent to this controversy being read in evidence and being as pleaded in the petition.
The defendant introduced no evidence but objected to the authority of the firm which had issued the policy and countersigned it to issue the policy, and also objected to the introduction in evidence of the assignment, on the ground that there was no proof of the acceptance o,r approval of that assignment by
The referee reported as his finding and conclusion, that the policy had been duly issued and delivered and was of the terms stated and that at the time of the issue of it, the Bambriek Brothers Construction Company had paid to plaintiff $169.40, this amount based upon the estimated amount of wages paid as shown by the estimate furnished by BambrickBates Construction Company. He further finds that on the 25th of September, 1905', the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company assigned, in writing, the policy to the defendant Bambriek Brothers Construction Company, and that plaintiff company assented to this assignment. He also finds as a fact that the plaintiff had never questioned the validity of the execution of the policy and that plaintiff and both Construction Companies had treated it as having been properly executed, that the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company had paid the premium on the estimated amount and had later assigned the policy to the Bambriek Brothers Construction Company; that after the expiration of the policy the Bambriek Brothers Construction Company had acknowledged its existence and the ácceptance of the assignment to it, and by and under the terms of that policy, gave a representative of plaintiff company access to its books and pay-rolls for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of wages paid by both companies. Objection having been made to the introduction of the policy on the ground that the contract was illegal and void as against public policy, the referee reported that he had overruled this contention on the authority of the decision of the Supreme Court of this state in the case of Breeden v. Frankford Marine Accident & Plate Glass Ins. Co., 220 Mo. 327, 119 S. W. 576. He further finds and reports that prior to the assignment of the policy the BambrickBates Construction Company had paid to the em
Exceptions were filed. by the defendant to this report. These were overruled and the report confirmed, judgment being entered by the court in accordance therewith in favor of plaintiff and against defendant Bambrick Brothers Construction Company, for $623.92, with interest from September 29, 1907, at six per cent, a total of $738. From this judgment, after proper steps, defendant Bambrick Brothers Construction Company has duly appealed to this court.
Two points only are made, by the learned counsel for appellant for a reversal. First, that the assignment of the policy was null and void because no officer of the plaintiff company assented to it. Second, “If the assignment is valid, the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company did not agree to pay a premium
Taking up these points in their order, we say as to the first, that the referee found as a matter of fact that the policy had been duly assigned and that that assignment had been assented to by the plaintiff company prior to the institution of this action. We have read all the evidence in the ease and are satisfied that this point is not well taken. The testimony was ample to sustain the finding of the referee on this. It may he further said that the very act of this plaintiff in suing upon this assignment is in itself a recognition of its validity.
The second point is also untenable. These contracts to indemnify an employer against liability for personal injuries suffered by his employees are regarded as contracts of insurance. [1 Cooley’s Briefs on Insurance, pp. 8 and 88.] As in other contracts of insurance, “the doctrine of the necessity of an insurable interest to support the contract of insurance is applicable to policies of the classes named to the same extent as it.-4s in the case of ordinary insurance of property or lives. Furthermore, the interest necessary to support such contracts is of the same nature as the interest necessary to support the ordinary contract of insurance. Contracts not founded on such an interest would be void as wager contracts.” [1 Cooley, supra, pp. 243, 782, 784.] We will call attention to this latter, proposition again when we consider another phase of this case. “An assignment of a pol
The same principle is announced in Wilson v. Hill, 3 Metc. (Mass.) 66; Bullman v. North British, etc. Ins. Co., 159 Mass. 13 8, l. c. 122; Steen v. Niagara Fire Ins. Co., 89 N. Y. 315, l. c. 327; New v. The German Ins. Co. of Freeport, Ill., 5 Ind. App. 82, l. c. 85; Manchester Fire Assurance Co. v. Glenn, 13 Ind. App. 365, l. c. 368; The Continental Ins. Co. v. Munns, 120 Ind. 30, l. c. 33; City Fire Ins. Co. of Hartford v. Mark, 45 Ill. 482, l. c. 484; Ellis v. The Council Bluffs Insurance Co., 64 Iowa, 507, l. c. 511; Home Mutual Ins.
That this was a new contract and that such was the distinct understanding of the parties in the case at bar is evident by an examination of the assignment. We have quoted it in full. A consideration of it effectively disposes of the point made against it by the learned counsel for appellant. The paper distinctly sets out that the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company, having sold and delivered to the Bamhrick Brothers Construction Company the business covered by the policy, it transfers and assigns to the latter company the policy. It further says in so many words, that the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company, “in accepting this assignment and as a condition of the said Standard Life & Accident Insurance Company’s assenting hereto, promise and agree to keep and perform all and every the obligations on the part of the assured to be kept and performed as provided in the agreement and conditions under which said policy was issued.” This is no agreement on the part of the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company to insure itself against injuries sustained by the Bambriek-Bates Construction Company’s employees. Any such stipulation would have been void, it not appearing that the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company had any insurable interest in the employees of the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company. To put any such construction on it as within the intention of the parties or the ordinary terms of the instrument, would be an absurdity. The whole effect and meaning of this assignment is that the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company, from the date of the assignment to the expiry of the policy, stepped in and took the place of the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company with the insurer, not as to that company’s employees but as to its
We are, however, compelled to reverse that judgment on another proposition in the case, a proposition not raised by either counsel, further than by general exceptions to the report of the referee, but which we cannot afford to overlook. This goes to the amount of the judgment.
Both the referee and the learned trial court appear to have fallen into the error of charging the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company, defendant here, not only with the amount of premiums due on that company’s pay rolls, but with the amount of premium due on the pay rolls of employees of the BambrickBates Construction Company prior to the date of the assignment. This is clearly an error. All that the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company is liable for is the percentage on the pay roll of laborers employed by it in the occupations specified in the policy on and after the date of the assignment. In no event can thé Bambrick Brothers Construction Company be held for the default of the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company for underpayment of the amount of premium due on the basis of the pay rolls of the latter company. That was a default on the part of the Bambrick-Bates Construction Company and not on the part of this defendant, and the latter did not contract
We are also compelled, as following this, to hold that the report and finding of the referee, affirmed by the trial court, is erroneous in offsetting against the amount of premium due by-the defendant, the whole of the original premium paid by the Bambrick-Bates ' Construction Company. That finding might be 'correct if the Bambrick Brothers Construction Company could be held liable for the premium on the wages of the employees of its company as well as of the other company. But, as we have seen, that could not be. Hence the premium due on the Bambrick-Bates pay roll before the assignment is not within the terms of the as
It will be noticed that in the first count of the petition, plaintiff offsets the total premium paid by Bambrick-Bates Construction Company against the amount actually due from that company on its pay rolls down to the date of the assignment. For the reasons here stated that is an error. That premium was to cover the whole term of the policy.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the circuit court, having ascertained the exact amount and adding interest, to enter up judgment in accordance with this opinion. In view of the clearness of the report of the referee and his accurate statement of amounts, we do not think a new reference is necessary.