195 N.E. 850 | Ohio | 1935
Lead Opinion
Since the casualty company paid the major part of the judgment rendered against its own assured and the assured of the indemnity company jointly, it invokes the equitable doctrine of contribution ordinarily applicable to co-sureties. It seeks to recover from the indemnity company, by way of contribution, the latter's proportionate share of the amount paid by the casualty company to fully satisfy the judgment. Before the casualty company can invoke the doctrine of contribution it must show that both it and the indemnity company entered into a co-surety relationship whereby each agreed to indemnify the same or common principal in respect to the same debt or obligation. Where several distinct surety companies became bound to the same principal by separate instruments, yet, if each limited its pecuniary liability in the event of default of such principal, the suretyship of each became separate and distinct transactions, and the relationship of co-suretyship would not arise; nor would the right of contribution exist. Assets Realization Co. v. American BondingCo. of Baltimore,
Applying the doctrine to the instant case, it is manifest that the constituent elements creating the relationship of co-suretyship are absent in the case at bar. The several sureties were not bound to the same person; nor for a common principal; nor for the same debt or obligation when the claimed relationship of co-sureties was entered into. In theAmerican Bonding Co. case, supra, each of the sureties limited its liability in money payable to the obligee in an amount proportionate to the total loss sustained. In the instant case, each company, by its indemnity insurance policy expressly limited its liability to its own assured only by agreeing to indemnify it against liability for wrongful death caused by the operation of its own motor vehicles. Neither agreed to assume liability for negligent operation of the vehicles of the other. If the contention of counsel for plaintiff in error be sustained, it would result in the insurance against negligence of any and all tort-feasors occasioning the accident and would so enlarge the civil liability of the indemnity company as to indemnify tort-feasors who were strangers to its surety contract. It would increase the scope of liability beyond that which its bond was intended to cover. It is manifest, therefore, that the doctrine of contribution between co-sureties cannot be applied unless the following legal contention advanced by counsel for plaintiff in error is sound. They argue that, while there may have been no co-surety relationship prior to the rendition of the joint judgment against the separate tort-feasors, since a joint judgment was thereafter actually rendered against both, the separate sureties thereby became indemnitors for the same principal (the plaintiff) and for the same civil debt or liability, viz., for the total *396 amount of the joint judgment rendered in the federal court against both tort-feasors; that the amount of the judgment became collectible against both under the provisions of Sections 9510-3 and 9510-4, General Code. They therefore argue that both indemnitors, though they may not have been co-sureties originally, became co-sureties for the same debt or obligation by virtue of said sections. This argument rests upon a legal fallacy deduced from an unwarranted construction of the statute. The co-surety relationship "is an equity which springs up at the time the relation of co-sureties is entered into", and which arises from a transaction contemplated in the indemnifying contracts where they were made.
Neither the joint judgment recovered against the separate tort-feasors nor the sections of the statute alluded to create any co-suretyship relation between the separate sureties; under no construction of the statute can such purpose be implied. The statute seeks only to safeguard the judgment creditor by applying the insurance money provided in the insurance contract between the insurance company and its particular indemnitee to the satisfaction of the judgment. Had the statute attempted to apportion liability between two or more indemnitors of tort-feasors by providing for contribution in case of a joint judgment against their indemnitees, there would have been some provision in the statute to that effect. This the statute does not do. It deals with the indemnifying insurance companies separately and not jointly. Each is made responsible for the payment of the judgment.
Had there been a common obligation between two sureties, though evidenced by separate policy contracts, whereby each assumed to indemnify the same or a common principal for the same liability or obligation, contribution from one after payment by the other might be urged with some degree of plausibility; but we have no such case presented here. *397
This case might well be disposed of under authority of the rule announced in Royal Indemnity Co. v. Becker,
Judgment affirmed.
WEYGANDT, C.J., STEPHENSON, MATTHIAS, DAY and ZIMMERMAN, JJ., concur.
Dissenting Opinion
Contribution is an equitable doctrine grounded upon the maxim, "equality is equity." It is of general application in all cases where two or more parties are liable for exactly the same debt and stand in aequali jure, provided, of course, there is no other principle applicable which would render the relief inequitable.
In B. O. Rd. Co. v. Walker,
It is stated in Thorsen v. Poe,
The same principle is sustained in Ellis v. Chicago N.W.Ry. Co.,
There are other cases holding that contribution is not based on contract but arises out of the equities of *399
the case. Case v. McKinnis,
While it would afford equality to compel contribution between wrongdoers, it is a general rule that contribution will not be allowed in the case of joint tort-feasors for the reason that chancery will leave wrongdoers where it finds them in accordance with the equitable maxim: "He who comes into equity must come with clean hands."
However, in some cases it has been held that there may be contribution between tort-feasors where the parties seeking relief have not committed wanton or intentional wrong.Acheson v. Miller,
While the doctrine of contribution has been most frequently applied to co-sureties it is not limited to that relationship. 5 Pomeroy Equity Jurisprudence (2nd Ed.), 5170, Section 2339.
In the instant case the liability of the insurance companies was not in the nature of suretyship, for the surety when compelled to pay the debt may recover over from the principal. The obligation of the insurance companies to protect their insured arose out of the separate contracts of insurance and by statute each was liable directly to the judgment creditor for the amount of the judgment. It is the statutory obligation which is involved here and if the one insurance company which paid more than the other to the judgment creditor stood in the shoes of anyone, it was in those *400 of the judgment creditor. However, the authorities are to the effect that contribution is not based on subrogation. Obviously this is true because the underlying principles of the two remedies are different. In the case of the subrogated debtor he may recover the full amount of the debt to which he is subrogated. In contribution equity restores equality. The insurance companies were in no sense wrongdoers but were bound by lawful contract each to his insured and by statute both to the judgment creditor. Contribution in the instant case would make them bear the statutory burden equally.
It would seem that both insurance companies stand in equal right and are liable exactly for the same debt and that the plaintiff in the trial court came in with clean hands. To the writer there seems to be no good reason why the rule that prevents contribution between two joint tort-feasors should be carried to such an extent as to prevent the insurer of one tort-feasor from enforcing contribution against the insurer of the other tort-feasor, after a joint judgment has been rendered as in this case. Wrongdoers are tainted; the insurance company here has clean hands. Where the reason for the rule fails, the rule also should fail.
In Royal Indemnity Co. v. Becker,
For these reasons it is the judgment of the writer that the contribution should lie. *401