Berry v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance

221 S.W. 748, 203 Mo. App. 459, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 193
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 221 S.W. 748 (Berry v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berry v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance, 221 S.W. 748, 203 Mo. App. 459, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 193 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

TRIMBLE, J.

This is an • unusual suit. It is ag’ainst an Employer’s Liability Insurance Company to compel it to reimburse plaintiff for centain sums which he claims defendant should pay by way of indemnity or liability insurance, though it is freefy admitted plaintiff has no contract of insurance with defendant and never did have. The trial court found for defendant and plaintiff has appealed. Finding of fact, together with conclusions of law, were filed, and from the former, together with that is concededly shown in the record, we collate the following:

On and prior to February 21, 1913, T. J. Berry owned a foundry in St. Joseph, the business of which he conducted under the trade name of “Berry Iron & Steel *461 Company,” and the plaintiff herein, O. D. Berry, was his general manager. On that date, the defendant issued to T. J. Berry a policy of Employer’s Liability Insurance to run for one year, expiring on February 21, 1914. In said policy the assured was described as £<an individual” named ££ Thomas J. Berry, doing business as Berry Iron & Steel Company.” Therein defendant agreed to indemnify said T. J. Berry against loss imposed by law upon him for damages on account of bodily injuries suffered by any employee of his by reason of his business. The policy provided that upon the occurrence of an accident to any employee of assured he would give immediate written notice thereof to defendant and would give notice in the event a claim was made; and if any suit was brought, against assured to enforce a claim for damages on account of an accident covered by the policy, assured should immediately forward the summons to defendant, whereupon the company would, at its own cost, subject to the limitations in the policy, defend or, at its option, settle such suit in the name and in behalf of assured. The policy also provided that assured should not voluntarily assume any liability nor without the written consent of the Company previously given incur any expense or settle any claim except at his own cost. It was also provided therein that no action should lie against the Company to recover for any loss or expense under the policy unless it should be brought by the assured for loss or expense incurred and paid in money by assured after trial of the issue. It was furthermore provided therein that notice to or knowledge by any agent or other person should not be held to waive any of the terms, conditions or warranties in the policy. It also provided that the premium should be based on the eutire compensation paid the employees (with certain exceptions), during the period of the policy, and called for the initial payment, of an estimated premium of $209, and if an additional amount became due as shown by the entire compensation paid, the assured was to pay it when determined; and the Company had the right to examine the *462 books to determine the amount of premium due, upon request, at any time within one year after the policy’s expiration.

The policy was delivered to assured’s general manager, G. D. Berry, and remained in his possession at least until after June 1, 1914, and presumably until the present suit was brought which was on December 9,1916.

The home office of the defendant was in Boston, Massachusetts. L. O. Weakley was its soliciting agent at St. Joseph, and he solicited and obtained the application for the policy to T. J. Berry. He had no power to and never did write policies. Applications therefor were sent by Weakley to defendant’s branch office in Kansas City, Missouri, where B. L. Guthrie was head of the lia-' bility department and S. A. Shockey was at the head of the claim department. All policies were written and issued at this branch office.

D. A. Murphy, an attorney of Kansas City, was defendant’s General Attorney in Western Missouri and elsewhere and had general supervisory powers over claims. An attorney at St. Joseph was defendant’s local attorney there but he had charge only of those cases that were specially referred to him.

From time to time after the issuance of the policy above mentioned, reports of accidents were sent to the defendant. They were made on blanks supplied by defendant at delivery of the policy, and whenever a report of an accident was sent in, it was signed “Berry Iron & Steel Company.”

On July 13, 19131, the assured, T. J. Berry, died, but a few weeks before his death he conveyed the foundry business to C. R. Berry. Neither the Company nor its branch office at Kansas City, including Guthrie, Shockey and Murphy, had any knowledge of T. J. Berry’s death at the time or thereafter until as hereinafter showu, sometime in 1914. Weakley and the local attorney knew it when it occurred, being residents of St. Joseph. As to the fact that T. J. Berry had conveyed the business to G. R. Berry, no one connected in any way with the com *463 pany had any notice of that until the latter part of March, .1914, of which mention will be hereinafter made.

After the death of T. J. Berry, the foundry business continued on as before without interruption and under the name of the “Berry Iron & Steel Company,” and there was nothing in the office or files of Shockey, the claim adjuster, or Murphy the general attorney, to show who constituted “Berry Iron & Steel Company;” while the policy itself and the information based thereon in the files of Guthrie, head of the branch office, showed that Thomas J. Berry an individual composed it.

After T. J. Berry’s death as aforesaid on July 13, 1913, accidents occurred to various employees in said business, amounting to eight in number, reports of which were made out on blanks, as before, and signed “Berry Iron & Steel Company,” thus not indicating either a change of ownership nor the death of assured, T. J. Berry. These reports were mailed to Weakley in St. Joseph and by him forwarded to the Kansas City Branch Office. The trial court found that in receiving and forwarding these reports Weakley “acted by way of accommodation to the assured and not as authorized agent of defendant.”

Among these eight employees injured at various times as above stated, was one, James.Welch, injured on September 25, 1913 (after the Berry Iron & Steel Company had been conveyed to C. R. Berry and after T. J. Berry, the assured named in the policy, had died), and a report of this was one of those signed “Berry Iron & Steel Company” and sent to Weakley, who sent it to the branch office in Kansas City, which in turn sent it to the local attorney that he might investigate it. He investigated the facts of the accident but had no knowledge who was the owner of the business or who was the assured iu the policy.

On December 20, 1913, said James Welch brought suit for $3000 against G. D. Berry as executor and administrator of the estate of T. J. Berry, deceased, and against G. D. Berry individually. The petition and summons were sent by plaintiff to Shockey,- the claim agent *464 at Kansas City, -who in turn sent them to the local attorney at St. Joseph for attention. He took charge of the litigation, filed pleadings in the name of the defendants therein named, took depositions and had charge of said litigation until June 1, 1914.

On January 28, 1914, one James T.

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.W. 748, 203 Mo. App. 459, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-massachusetts-bonding-insurance-moctapp-1920.