Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Baker

1933 OK 41, 18 P.2d 894, 162 Okla. 10, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 468
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 31, 1933
Docket23684
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1933 OK 41 (Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. Baker, 1933 OK 41, 18 P.2d 894, 162 Okla. 10, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 468 (Okla. 1933).

Opinion

BAYLESS, J.

This appeal is by the Fidelity' & Casualty Company, a corporation, hereinafter called petitioner, from an order of the State Industrial Commission requiring it, as insurance carrier for the Tedray Oil Company, hereinafter called employer, to pay the compensation awarded P. D. Baker, hereinafter called employee, for an accidental injury sustained in a hazardous occupation. The evidence was ample to sustain an award in favor of the employee and against the employer, and neither of them appealed. Th§ brief of petitioner presents but one issue.

We will state so much of the facts as are necessary to make plain this issue. The employer owns or operates several oil and gas leases, one being located near Kelly-ville, Okla., and one near Skiatook, Okla., whereon the accidental injury was sustained by the employee. O. H. Sweet, an officer of the Central National Bank of Tulsa, Okla., later consolidated with the Exchange National Bank of Tulsa, was trustee for the employer for the lease near Kellyville, under a mortgage held by the banks and pursuant to an oral agreement between the employer, the banks, and creditors. It is not clear what were his powers or duties under this agreement, but it is certain his trusteeship was limited to the one lease. C. H. Sweet, trustee, procured a policy of workmen’s ■compensation insurance from the petitioner, limited by its terms to the operation of the lease near Kellyville and especially excluding drilling. It does not appear that the employer carried any workmen’s compensation insurance in its own name. The employee was injured April 7, 1931, while working with a drilling machine on the lease near Skiatook, Okla. A report of the accidental injury was filed by him with the State Industrial Commission on July 29, 1931, naming the employer as above, and the petitioner as the insurance carrier. A hearing “to determine liability and extent of disability” was scheduled at Tulsa, Qkla., January 4, 1932, which hearing was continued to February 2, 1932, at which time the employee appeared with his attorney, and the employer and petitioner appeared by their attorney. The hearing was begun and continued to and closed on February 4, 1932. In all of these proceedings the defense by the employer and petitioner was joint, but in reality was actually conducted by the petitioner’s attorney. The employer, prior to the hearing, furnished medical attention, and both petitioner and employer tendered medical attention and an operation to the employee at the close of the hearing February 4th. On February 22, 1932, petitioner filed a verified motion to dismiss the claim as to it because its contract of insurance only applied to the operations of O. H. Sweet, trustee, on the lease near Kellyville, Okla., and it had never intended to extend its protection to the operations of the employer elsewhere, nor had it received pay rolls covering any other operations or premium therefor. No pleading was filed in response to this motion. This motion was heard at Tulsa, Okla., April 12, 1932, pursuant to a notice specifying that the hearing was “continued from Tulsa docket of Feb. 2, 1931, ■ to take further testimony,” at which time the petitioner introduced testimony of witnesses and the contract of insurance. The testimony of the attorney for petitioner as to his authority to appear for petitioner at the previous hearings is somewhat contradictory. The employer introduced no evidence. The employee introduced no evidence, but cross-examined the witnesses of petitioner. We believe, after reading the record and his brief, that he relied entirely upon the previous conduct of the petitioner as an admission of its liability and submission to the jurisdiction of the court, or an estoppel to raise the issue at this period of the hearing. The only order of the Commission in connection with this whole proceeding is dated April 26, 1932. It makes no finding upon the motion to dismiss, but orders the employer, or petitioner as the insurance carrier, to pay the award made therein.

The sole complaint of the petitioner may be summed up as follows: The State Industrial Commission was without authority of law to bind it by the award in this case. It may be said here that petitioner bases its attack on both the evidence and the law.

This court has on previous occasions defined the reasons for the origin of workmen’s compensation laws, the remedial effect which they should be given by interpretation, and made plain the operation of the law in this state. The employee cites cases by this court to the effect that “A party who voluntarily acquiesces in, or ratifies, either partially or in toto, a judgment against him, cannot appeal from it.” We find no Oklahoma case exactly in point.

*12 The relationship of employer and employee is contractual. Moore & Gleason v. Taylor et al., 97 Okla. 193, 223 P. 611; El Reno Broom Co. v. Roberts, 138 Okla. 235, 281 P. 273. The relationship of employer and insurance carrier is contractual, it being said in Schneider’s Workmen’s Compensation Law (2d Ed.) vol. 1, page 3, “The law is founded upon the principle of insurance and is in no sense a pension or bounty- or gratuity.” The relationship of an employee and an insurance carrier is always established through their separate contracts with the employer. The Workmen’s Compensation Law of the state of Oklahoma does not require an employer and an employee to enter into a contract of employment, but, they having entered 'into such a contract, the law imposes upon the employer the duty of paying compensation to the employee for an injury accidentally sustained in the course of a hazardous employment. The law does not require the employer and the insurance carrier to enter into a contract of workmen’s compensation insurance, but does permit such a contract of insurance to be entered into between them as one of the means by which an employer may secure to his employee the payment of the compensation awarded. Therefore, in order for the State Industrial Commission of Oklahoma to have the authority of law to order an insurance carrier to pay an award of compensation to an injured employee upon the failure of the employer to do so, there must have been in existence at the time the employee sustained the accidental injury two contracts, one between the employee and employer, and one between the employer and the insurance carrier.

This court has repeatedly held that it will not review a record to weigh the evidence, but is satisfied when it finds some evidence reasonably tending to support the judgment. However, until this degree of evidence is found, this court’s review must cover the entire record. We have found no evidence in this record even remotely tending to prove that there was a contract of insurance between the employer and the petitioner. The only contract of insurance shown to be in existence was between G. H. Sweet, trustee, Tedray Oil Company, limited to “lease near Kellyville, Oklahoma,” and covering “oil producing — operation of oil wells — including incidental cementing and cleaning out of wells during operation, but no other drilling operations. * * *”

We are not aware of any statutory provisions which prohibit an insurance company from entering into a contract limiting its liability. Therefore, we know of no reason why the employer and insurance carrier may not enter into separate contracts of insurance, covering separate factories or operations, separate departments or even separate classes of employees, where any such distinction so attempted is reasonable and easy of ascertainment. Clearly, that is what C. H.

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Bluebook (online)
1933 OK 41, 18 P.2d 894, 162 Okla. 10, 1933 Okla. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-casualty-co-v-baker-okla-1933.