62 Mo. 289 | Mo. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action upon a policy of insurance, brought by the plaintiffs as assignees of the party to whom the policy was issued. It appears from the petition, that in April, 1864, The United States Insurance Company, by its open policy, caused the firm of Henning & Woodruff to be insured, lost or not lost, upon all shipments made to them at and from all ports and places on the Mississippi river and its tributaries, against the perils of the seas, rivers, fires,.jettisons, and assailing thieves; that on the 9th of June, 1864, the firm of William Butler & Co., a firm identical with Henning A Wood-ruff, shipped on the steamer Progress 700 bales of cotton, of
It is further alleged, that on the first of November, 1863, the defendant, the Phoenix Insurance Company, issued to the United States Insurance Company a policy of re-insurance, whereby it caused the United States Insurance Company to be insured, lost or not lost, in respect to all cargo risks taken or to be taken of the United States Insurance Company, from any point to any point on the Mississippi river and tributaries below St. Louis, as to any excess of such risks over $60,000, and not exceeding $80,000; that the risks, against which the defendant thus re-insured the United States Insurance Company were among other things, those of the seas, rivers and fires. There was an averment of loss by which the defendant became liable for the amount of the re-insurance, and that the fact of such loss was communicated to the defendant.
The petition then contained certain allegations relating to legal proceedings in the circuit court of the United States by Henning <fc Woodruff against the U. S. Insurance Company, which allegations were as follows: “ And the said defendant 'then and there, to-wit, at St. Louis, on the 18th of July, 1864, did request aud counsel the said United States Insurance Company to resist the demand of the said Henning & Woodruff against the said United States Insurance Company in respect of the said cotton so destroyed by fire as aforesaid on board of the said steamer Progress ; and thereupon the said United States Insurance Company did resist the demand of the said Henning & Woodruff, and did defend, the same, and after a tedious litigation, to which the defendant was from first to last privy, the said Henning & Wood-ruff, by their surviving partners, Henning & Pearce, did recover against the United States Insurance Company, on the 24th of September, 1872, by the judgment of the circuit court of the United States, for the district of Missouri, at the Sep
The foregoing allegations were by the court stricken out..
After these allegations were stricken out of the petition, the defendant answered, denying all its material averments, admitting, however, the execution and delivery of their own policy of're-insurance. A certain agreement or stipulation was then introduced by the plaintiffs, signed by certain re-insuring companies, the defendant among the number, which stated that a claim was made upon the II. S. Insurance Company, under an open policy and agreement of Henning & "Woodruff with said insurance company, for the sum of one hundred and twenty thousand dollars for cotton burned on the steamer Progress, on the Mississippi river, on or about the 9th day of June, A. D., 1864; and as each of .the companies, signing the agreement, was bound and liable to the United States'Insurance Company to the amount of twenty-thousand dollars on cotton, for which .it was liable, as re-insured to it, to that amount each ; and as it was believed both bv the United States Insurance Company and the re-insuring-companies, that said claim was illegal and unjust, and that they desired that the same should be resisted and defended ; they, therefore, for that purpose, in consideration of the premises, agreed with the United States Insurance Company that it should retain and employ such counsel as it might deem .proper to consult, and manage the defense, and that, in case the United States Insurance Company was successful, and should not be made liable for the claim, then they would
• From the foregoing statement it will be seen, that the material issues in the ease involve the action of the court in' striking from the pleadings the allegations relating to the record of the suit.in the United States Court, and in excluding the same record when offered by the plaintiffs at the trial.' In the first place, the record of the judgment was set up in the petition, and after it was stricken out it was offered in evidence on the trial. The rule is well settled, that where the record is admissible for any purpose, it maybe used in either of those modes. It may be inserted in the pleadings, or it may be introduced in evidence with the same effect. .The general principle is, that parties only are concluded and bound by a judgment, but the term “parties” is not restricted so as to exclude all who do not appear upon the record; but it includes all who have a direct interest in the subject matter of the suit, and have a right, and have also had an opportunity to make a defense or control the proceedings. (State vs. Coste, 36 Mo., 438; 1 Greenl. Ev., § 523.) The rule may be succinctly stated thus.: Where one is bound to protect another from a liability, he is bound by the result of a litigagatiou to which sueh other is a party, provided he had notice of the litigation, and opportunity to control and manage it. This is the doctrine deduced from the whole current of authorities on this subject. The qualification, however, is, that where it is sought to make the judgment an estoppel,
But there is a question underlying this, and that is, to find and determine in what relation the insured stood to the re-insuring company, the defendant. Mr. Parsons says that, in all cases of re-insurance, whatever may be their ground, the re-insured stands, as to his insurers, in the same relation in which the original insured stands to him. The re-insurers may make the same defenses against him, which he conld make against the original insured. (1 Pars. Mar. Ins., 299.)
The contract of re-insurance is totally distinct from, and unconnected with, the primitive insurance; the original assured
We cannot find any case where this precise question now presented has ever been determined, but there are eases involving similar principles.
In the ease of the N. Y. St. Mar. Ins. Co. vs. Protec. Ins. Co. (1 Sto., 158), the plaintiffs in the action had insured the brig Evelina for a certain voyage, and afterwards re-insured in the defendant’s corporation. During the voyage insured, the vessel sustained damage by perils insured against, and the owners claimed of the insurers, the plaintiffs, a total loss which they refused to pay; and an action being brought, it was decided that- there was a liability for a partial loss only. The plaintiffs then claimed of their re-insurers, the defendants, the amount they were obliged to pay to the owners by reason of the judgment, and also the costs and counsel fees incurred in defending the suit. The defendants, the re-insurers, paid the judgment, but refused to pay the counsel fees and the expenses of the suit; the court held that they were liable and gave judgment for-the plaintiffs. Mr. Justice Story examined the ease with his accustomed learning and affluence of argument, and in his opinion, said: “This is a case of reassurance, and nothing is clearer upon principle and authority than that, in such a case, the re-assurers are entitled to make the same defense, and to take the same objections, which might be asserted by the original insurers, in a suit upon the
In Hastee vs. DePeyster (3 Caines, 190) it was decided, that the re-assurer was liable to the assurer for all costs, bona fide expenses, etc., incurred in defending the suit, by the original underwriters, especially when, with notice of its going-on, he stood by, and did not offer to settle; for as the reassurer was entitled to every defense against theinsurer which he might urge against the primitive assured, it became necessary for the original underwriter to show he had been obliged ;to pay on a just claim against him, and he would be entitled to interest on all he had expended and paid.
The re-ássured and the re-insurer stand in the precise relation of all other parties, where there is a liability over, and the result of one litigation binds or concludes both. There is but one matter in issue which is alike coinmon to both, and that is, whether a loss has occurred, and a debt has accrued to the original insured.
Tbs defense is the same, whether made by the primitive insurer or the re-insurer.
If the insurer fails in his defense, he has his recourse over against the re-insurer. The re-insurer is bound to protect the original insurer to the extent of his policy. Both then are equally alike interested in the determination of the suit. The re-insurer then comes precisely within the rule heretofore‘laid down, that where one is bound to protect another from a liability, he is bound by the result of a litigation to which such other is a party, provided he had notice of the ■ litigation, and an opportunity to manage and control it.
There was evidence tending to show that the defendant had notice of the suit brought by Henning & Pearce, as surviving partners of Henning & "Woodruff, and there was an allegation in the petition, which was stricken out, that they were privy to that suit, and assisted in its management. The bourt further excluded the testimony of Mr. Bodley, to show that defendants had due notice, and then ruled out the judgment.