Compton Heights Laundry Co. v. General Accident, Fire & Life Assurance Corp.

190 S.W. 382, 195 Mo. App. 313, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 153
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 22, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 190 S.W. 382 (Compton Heights Laundry Co. v. General Accident, Fire & Life Assurance Corp.) 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
Compton Heights Laundry Co. v. General Accident, Fire & Life Assurance Corp., 190 S.W. 382, 195 Mo. App. 313, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 153 (Mo. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinions

*315 ROBERTSON, P. J.

This is an action on an employers’ liability policy. The suit was brought in Iron County and by agreement the venue was changed to Butler County. By the terms of the policy defendant agreed to protect the insured for one year from May 18, 1914, against loss by reason of liability for damages on account of the injuries of its employees suffered through the assured’s negligence. On December 1, 1914, an employee in the laundry was injured, afterwards sued the plaintiff, obtained a judgment for $3750 which the plaintiff paid and then brought this suit to recover said amount, together with the costs therein and their attorney’s fees, also ten per cent as damages and attorney’s fees in this case for vexatious refusal to pay. The father of the employee made a claim against plaintiff for loss of the services of said employee and that was settled by plaintiff paying him $250 and that is included in this suit. A jury trial was had and resulted? in a verdict for plaintiff for $4225.25 and an attorney’s fee for this case at the sum of $200. The defendant has appealed.

The defenses are that the policy was not issued, or assigned with 'the consent of the defendant, to the plaintiff and that there is no liability on the part of; the defendant by reason of the following rider attached^ to and made a part of the policy:

“It is hereby understood and agreed, that all the mangling machines owned or operated by the assured shall be provided with fixed guards or safety feed tables adjusted at the point of contact of the rolls so as to prevent the fingers or hands of the employees from being drawn into the rolls, and that such guards shall be maintained during the term of this policy. Any failure on the part of the assured to provide and maintain such guards shall relieve The General Accident Fire and Life Assurance Corporation, Limited, from liability on account of personal accident due to such neglect,- and this policy is accepted by the assured accordingly.”

The .policy limited defendant’s liability to five thousand dollars for any one person injured. In the *316 suit brought by the injured party involved in this litigation damages in the sum of ten thousand dollars were sought to be recovered.

The policy was issued to John P. Winter, Louis M. Winter and Joseph N. Barthelmass doing business in St. Louis as Compton Heights Laundry. In the latter part of June, 1914, these parties, being desirous of organizing a corporation under the laws of Missouri, informed the general manager of defendant for the State of Missouri, and a portion of Illinois, that they were going to incorporate and requested him to see that the insurance properly covered the corporation and this the manager agreed to do. The corporation was perfected and the certificate issued on June 30, 1914, and thereafter the business was continued at the same place by the same individuals and under the same management, although there were no changes or notations made upon the policy. The" premium was based upon and regulated by the amount of wages paid the employees and called the payroll. An auditor for the defendant examined the payroll from the week ending May 23, 1914, to the week ending February 27, 1915. He also made an audit of the payroll up to March 1, 1915, when the policy was cancelled. So far as the record discloses the premium was paid up to the date of the cancellation. After the accident happened and after the suit was brought by the injured person against the plaintiff' here as a corporation, the defendants denied liability therefor solely upon the ground that by reason of the rider it was not liable to plaintiffs on account of any claim made by the injured- person.

The injury caused the employee, and upon which the action to recover damages therefor was based, -was caused by the failure of plaintiff to equip its machinery as required in said rider. The defendant was duly notified of the accident and upon the next day thereafter its representative was at the laundry taking statements of witnesses who were . working with the injured employee at the time of the accident. Two days later another employee of the defendant in charge of its *317 claim department in St. Lonis was at the laundry investigating the accident, examined the- machine where it occurred and stated to plaintiff’s manager that they would take care of the matter. Various employees of defendant were thereafter at the laundry at various times looking after the matter of this accident and made numerous visits to the injured employee endeavoring to effect a settlement and made an offer of compromise. The investigations and the negotiations with the injured party were continued in behalf of defendant until January 16, 1915, when a letter was written to the plaintiff quoting the contents of the rider and stating that the investigation of the case would be continued “under full reservation of rights under the terms of our policy and if it should develop that this machine was not provided with a fixed guard or safety feed table such as is required by the terms of your policy and if above injured attempts to and succeeds in predicating liability on the failure above mentioned then in such event we would not be required to indemnify you for any judgment that might be obtained by above injured against you.” This letter was written in behalf of defendant by said employee in charge of the defendant’s claim department at St. Louis who had examined the machine and negotiated with the injured employee. Under date of February 13, 1915, the same employee of defendant in its behalf wrote another letter to the plaintiff stating that they had investigated the accident and discovered that the injury occurred on a machine that was not equipped as required by said rider and denied liability under its policy on account of the injury. The defendant alleges in its answer that the injury, if any, to plaintiff’s employee was due to the absence 'of the guard referred to in the rider, and the facts and circumstances tend to prove that during all- the time its agents were investigating the accident, promising to take charge of the claim and endeavoring to settle it, they knew that there was. but one ground of negligence relied upon, and this would justify the further conclusion that what they did was not for the purpose of *318 ascertaining if the policy covered the accident but for the purpose of treating it as a liability thereunder. On March 8, 1915, the injured party commenced suit against the plaintiff and it caused a copy of the summons and petition to be sent to the defendant to which it replied, as above stated, denying any obligation to proceed with the defense solely because the accident involved was not covered by the policy. The plaintiff here, the defendant in that case, filed an answer in the case and after some negotiations a settlement was agreed upon whereby the injured person was to obtain a judgment for $3750. Testimony was introduced and a judgment entered for the amount agreed upon. The injured person was a minor and the father made a claim for loss of services which was compromised for $250 without- litigation.-

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W. 382, 195 Mo. App. 313, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/compton-heights-laundry-co-v-general-accident-fire-life-assurance-moctapp-1916.