Cannon Manufacturing Co. v. Employers' Indemnity Co.

76 S.E. 536, 161 N.C. 19, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 362
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 4, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 76 S.E. 536 (Cannon Manufacturing Co. v. Employers' Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cannon Manufacturing Co. v. Employers' Indemnity Co., 76 S.E. 536, 161 N.C. 19, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 362 (N.C. 1912).

Opinion

Brown, J.

The defendant issued to plaintiff an employers’ indemnity policy of the usual kind, contracting that in the event one of plaintiff’s employees should bring a suit against the plaintiff for damages sustained by the alleged negligence of the plaintiff, the defendant would “at its own cost defend against such proceeding in the name of and on behalf of the assured, or settle the same,” and providing also that the defendant’s liability on account of injury to any one person should not exceed $5,000, and providing further that the assured should not settle the claim or incur any expense or interfere in any negotiations for a settlement or in any legal proceedings without the consent of the indemnity company.

At April Term, 1911, Ola Walker, administratrix of Odell M[alker, obtained judgment against plaintiff for $4,951.40 and $121.73 costs. The case was appealed to this Court by the indemnity company and no error found and a new trial refused. 157 N. C., 133.

*21 Tbe only question presented on tbis appeal is tbe liability of defendant indemnity company for interest on tbe judgment from date of its rendition by tbe Superior Court.

Tbe defendant insists it is not liable in excess of $5,000 and costs. Tbe plaintiff paid tbe final judgment after a new trial was refused by tbis Court, tbe total surq being- $5,363.62.

In tbe policy we find tbis clause:

“6. No action shall lie against tbe company respecting any loss or expense under tbis policy, unless it shall be brought by tbe assured himself to reimburse him for loss or expense actually sustained and paid in money by him in satisfaction of a final judgment against him.”

We are of opinion that under this clause tbe defendant is bound to reimburse plaintiff tbe full amount paid out on tbe final judgment in tbe Walker case, inasmuch as'the judgment when rendered did not exceed $5,000 and costs.

Tbe courts of tbis country have been divided upon tbis question.

1. One class of decisions bolds that tbe indemnity company is liable for interest, although it is in excess of tbe limit fixed in tbe policy.

2. Another class of decisions bolds that tbe indemnity company is liable for interest from tbe rendition of tbe final judgment by tbe Supreme Court.

3. Tbe third class of decisions bolds that on account of tbe express terms of tbe contract limiting tbe amount to $5,000, tbe indemnity company is not liable for any interest if it carries tbe amount in excess of tbe limit fixed by tbe policy.

. Under tbe first class of decisions are Paper Co. v. Casualty Co., 92 Me., 574, and Cudahy Packing Co. v. New Amsterdam Co., 132 Fed., 623. Both of these bold that tbe indemnity company is liable for interest from tbe time of tbe rendition of tbe judgment, although tbe interest carries tbe amount in excess of tbe limit in tbe policy.

"We candidly admit that tbe third class of decisions is largely in tbe majority. They all base their'judgments upon tbe ground that it is “so nominated in tbe bond.” We think tbe reasoning *22 supporting those cases is technical and at variance with the purpose and meaning of the bond as well as elementary principles of justice.

In effecting such insurance the plaintiff was not purchasing a lawsuit, but indemnity. While it is provided that the defendant should have control of the litigation, it clearly was not contemplated that after judgment rendered the litigation should be indefinitely jorotracted by defendant at plaintiff’s expense.

In one of the opinions of the third class we find the learned judge admits the injustice of his conclusion in these words: “While it seems inequitable to compel the plaintiff to pay the interest on the judgment accruing while the defendant was engaged in an ineffectual attempt to relieve itself from liability, the answer to it is that the parties otherwise agreed.” Trap Rock Co. v. Insurance Co., 128 N. Y. Supp., 822.

In that case we find a very strong dissenting opinion, from which we may with profit quote at length:

“We need not go into an extended discussion of the various provisions of the policy in question. We find in it a separate independent clause, providing what the rights and liabilities shall he in case the assured is sued on account of an accident. The policy provides that the assured shall not settle or litigate, but must turn the summons over to the insurer, which at its own cost will defend against the suit, or settle the same. The words 'at its own cost’ attach themselves as much to the words 'or settle the same’ as to the words 'defend against the suit,’ so that we have the absolute agreement of the company to defend against any suit at its own cost, or to settle the suit at its own cost.
“An insurer does not at its own cost defend against a suit merely by employing lawyers, procuring the attendance of witnesses, and then leaving the assured to pay the judgment which may follow and leaving it to another action against the insurer for reimbursement. When the company -agreed to defend against a suit or settle the same at its own cost, the agreement is broken if the assured is compelled to pay the judgment. The language in question casts the duty of payment upon the insurer, and after the summons is delivered to it, it assumes all *23 responsibility with reference to the suit, with the sole proviso that the limit of its liability on account of the damages to one person shall not exceed $5,000.
“The damages were liquidated in this case at just $5,000, and, therefore, as between these parties, the plaintiff was absolved from all responsibility with reference to the lawsuit or judgment. It was between them virtually a judgment against this defendant.
“When the judgment was recovered it merged the original cause of action, and the liability thereafter rested upon the judgment itself and not upon the cause of action upon which it was founded. The interest in question is awarded by law as damages for nonpayment of money when due. Steiner v. Fourth Presbyterian Church, 17 App. Div., 500, 45 N. Y. Supp., 524.
“It would, therefore, be unjust to charge upon the plaintiff the damages which the law has imposed on account of the delay and the neglect of the defendant. The interest in question does not represent any liability on account of or for the accident or the policy, but is a liability imposed by law for the delay of the defendant in paying the judgment which, as between the parties, it was legally obligated to pay. The interest, therefore, is the obligation of the defendant, and not of the plaintiff, and the plaintiff having been compelled to pay the same, is entitled to recover it without reference to the terms of the policy, other than that the judgment was to be paid by the defendant.”

We think the decisions of the second class really are in accord •with our views. They hold that the indemnity company is liable for interest from the time of the rendition of a final judgment by the appellate court.

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.E. 536, 161 N.C. 19, 1912 N.C. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cannon-manufacturing-co-v-employers-indemnity-co-nc-1912.