Consolidated Underwriters v. Richards' Adm'r

124 S.W.2d 54, 276 Ky. 275, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 511
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJanuary 10, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 124 S.W.2d 54 (Consolidated Underwriters v. Richards' Adm'r) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Underwriters v. Richards' Adm'r, 124 S.W.2d 54, 276 Ky. 275, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 511 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

Affirming.

On April 11, 1936, a taxicab, owned by L. M. Rush, and driven by his son, Elvis Rush, and an autombile owned by Joe Greer, driven by Robert Kendall, met and came into collision on highway No. 60 in Breckinridge county, a short distance west of the Sinking creek bridge.

As a result of the collision accident, Isabel Bowman and Louise Hesler, occupants of the taxicab, sustained injuries and Earl Richards, who was riding on its left running board, was killed.

In actions against the owner and driver of each of *277 the colliding cars (based on the alleged concurrent negligence of both drivers) the administrator of Earl Eich-ards recovered judgment in the sum of $5,000 and Misses Bowman and Hesler recovered judgments in the respective sums of $5,000 and $500, from which all of the defendants appealed.

No supersedeas bonds were executed when prosecuting appeals from those judgments.

At the time of the accident, L. M. Eush, the owner of the taxicab, and Elvis Eush, its driver, were protected by an insurance policy of the type required to be carried by the owners of taxicabs, which was written by the appellant, Franklin Mutual Insurance Company. By its policy, the company indemnified the owner and driver against loss by reason of liability imposed by law for injuries caused by negligent operation of the car, and further indemnified the people of the commonwealth against loss in not collecting a judgment based upon negligent operation of a taxicab. The maximum liability of the company under this policy, arising out of anv one accident, was expressly limited to the sum of $5,000.

At the same time, Joe Greer and Eobert Kendall were also protected by a policy written by the appellant, the Consolidated Underwriters, indemnifying them against loss by reason of the liability imposed bv law because of the negligent operation of Joe Greer’s automobile that Kendall was driving at the time of the accident. This policy protected the insured Greer and his agents to the extent of $5,000 if one person was injured or killed, and to a limited maximum of $10,000 if more than one person was injured or killed on account of any one accident.

Since these judgments obtained in the Breckinridge circuit court against the four thus insured defendants were not superseded, executions were forthwith issued thereon against the insured defendants and returned endorsed “no property found.”

Thereupon, because of these “nulla bona” returns made upon the executions issued on these several judgments recovered against the defendants, evidencing their insolvency, the appellees, J. T. Walls, administrator of Earl Bichards, Isabel Bowman, by her father, Win Bowman, as next friend, and Louise Hesler, by E. *278 H. Shelman, as next friend, instituted these present suits, by filing their separate petitions in equity against the same four respective insured taxicab and car operators and owners, against whom they had recovered the judgments stated supra in their prior actions, and also against their insurance carriers, the Consolidated Underwriters and the Franklin Mutual Insurance Company.

The appellees, by their petitions in these new equity suits, all of which were substantially the same, alleged and set out that the Greer car (involved in the collision and driven by Kendall) was, as stated, insured by the appellant, Consolidated Underwriters, and the L. M. Rush taxicab, driven by Elvis Rush, was insured by the Franklin Mutual Insurance Company, at. the time of the collision of the cars, with resulting injuries to the plaintiffs, Misses Bowman and Hesler and the death of Richards.

The petitions further alleged and set out the terms of these policies issued by each of the two appellant companies to the defendant car owners, whereby they agreed to pay any judgment for damages sustained by any person as the result of the negligent operation of the Rush taxicab and the Greer car, not to exceed the respective maximum amounts of $5,000 and $10,000.

The petitions also pleaded the institution of the actions against the insured, as stated supra, the recovery therein of judgments in the Breckinridge circuit court and that executions were issued on said judgments and placed in the hands of the sheriff of Breckinridge county, which were returned endorsed “no property found.”

Plaintiffs further pleaded that the defendant insur-, anee companies employed counsel who defended the1 original actions in which verdicts and judgments were rendered against the insured.

The insurance companies filed motions to elect, which were overruled, whereupon they filed answers, pleading that appeals were then pending in this court from the original judgments, but admitting that no su-persedeas bond had been executed, and further pleading that these actions against the insurance companies could not be maintained until a final decision of the appellate court or “court of last resort,” fixing and determining the liability of their insured car owners and drivers *279 under the judgments returned in the lower court against them.

Thereafter, on April 2, 1937, these cases coming on to be heard upon the demurrers filed thereto and the pending motions having been argued and submitted, and the three actions having by consent of parties been ordered consolidated, the court sustained the plaintiff’s demurrers to each of the three answers and to the answers as amended, to which the defendants excepted, when, the consolidated causes being submitted on the motion of plaintiffs for a judgment on the face of the pleadings, judgment was accordingly entered in each of the suits in favor of plaintiffs.

Thereupon the defendant insurance companies executed supersedeas bonds and prosecuted this appeal therefrom.

It is obvious, from the above given recitation of the pleadings, that the question here presented for our review and determination is the propriety of the construction given by the lower court of the provisions of the two insurance policies here issued the owners of the car and taxicab.

The Franklin Mutual Insurance Company, while an appellant here, has not favored us with a brief setting out or arguing the grounds upon which it asks a reversal of the judgment against it, and, therefore, we are warranted in assuming that it has abandoned its insistence, evidenced by this appeal, that the lower court’s judgment construing the provisions of its policy issued the assured, L. M. Rush and Elvis Rush, owner and driver of the taxicab, was erroneous.

However, the other of the appellants, the Consolidated Underwriters, has by counsel submitted a very comprehensive and able brief, wherein the following two grounds for reversal of the judgment against it are argued: that the court’s construction of the provisions of the policy ignore the two conditions contained therein, providing (1) that no action would lie against the company until the rights of the parties had been finally settled and (2) 'the maximum limit of the company’s liability, as fixed by the policy in the sum of $10,000, for injuries inflicted in any one accident.

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.W.2d 54, 276 Ky. 275, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-underwriters-v-richards-admr-kyctapphigh-1939.