Fire Ass'n of Philadelphia v. Wells
This text of 90 A. 244 (Fire Ass'n of Philadelphia v. Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
It was complainant’s right and privilege to pay to defendant the amount of the insurance, and by that payment to become subrogated to defendant’s claim against the railroad company to the extent of the amount paid. No “subrogation receipt” or other receipt or agreement was necessary; subrogation arose from the act of payment and not from the convention. Monmouth County Fire Insurance Co. v. Hutchinson, 21 N. J. Eq. 107; Weber v. Morris and Essex Railroad Co., 35 N. J. Law 409, 413; Sheld. Subr. § 6. But a writing was executed. That writing was signed by defendant and formally acknowledged by him before a. notary public. It sets forth the payment of the insurance money and assigns to complainant defendant’s claim against the railroad company to the amount of the payment. The receipt does no more than state the exact conditions which would have existed by operation of law without a receipt. Defendant claims that he was induced to accept the insurance money and sign the receipt by a statement of the insurance agent that the paj'ment and receipt would not in any way interfere with defendant collecting the balance of his loss from the railroad company. The writing which was executed is silent touching any such privilege to be extended to defendant, and the agent denies that any such statement was made. But the views which I enter[142]*142tain render it wholly immaterial whether any such statement was made or not.
While defendant claims to have made settlement with the railroad company for only the balance of his claim, and claims to have fully apprised the railroad company of the circumstances that the insurance money had been theretofore paid to him, he in fact executed to the railroad company a written general release of liability from all claims resulting from the fire; in order to procure his own money he consented to formally release the railroad company from its liability to complainant, and did this without the knowledge or consent of complainant. In making that settlement and in executing that instrument defendant was not acting in ignorance of his rights and duties in the slightest degree; the settlement was made under the immediate direction of his counsel. Touching, that settlement his counsel has testified as follows:
“He [defendant] came to my office for the purpose of getting me to go with him to the railroad company. I went. It was stated on that occasion to the railroad’s agents, Mr. Brister, their general agent, being present, and one or two others, that Mr. Wells [defendant] had accepted two thousand dollars from the insurance company and that he had signed subrogation receipts. It was then stated by me to the railroad company what Mr. Wells has testified to here before this court; it was further stated by me to the railroad company that they were running some risk of a law suit in this matter, to which Mr. Brister replied he would take the responsibility of that and take care of it.”
Under -these circumstances and with, full appreciation of the fact that complainant was the equitable owner of a part of his claim against the railroad company, defendant executed a formal instrument releasing the’ railroad company from all liability for the losses occasioned by the fire, and now seeks to repudiate the terms and appropriate effect of his own deliberative written instrument, and to hold against the terms of his own declarations by the claim that he informed the railroad company that he had assigned a part of his claim to complainant and in fact made settlement of the balance only. It must be assumed that, under the circumstances narrated, some purpose existed for the execution of an instrument which in terms released complainant’s claim, for, as already stated, de[143]*143fendant knew that he had no right to release complainant’s claim without first receiving from the railroad company for complainant complainant’s money; whatever that purpose may have been, the legal effect of the act was to place in the hands of the railroad company an instrument which was operative as a bar to complainant’s recovery of its claim against the railroad company unless complainant should be able to establish •as a fact, to the satisfaction of a jury in an action against the railroad company, ihat prior to the execution of that instrument the railroad company had been apprised of complainant’s rights. It thus appears that defendant not only had no right to execute the release of complainant’s claim, but necessarily knew that he had no such right, and under .the circumstances of the settlement, as disclosed by the testimony of his counsel, necessarily knew that the release which he executed was operative as a prvma fade bar to complainant’s right of recovery against the railroad company. It may well be doubted whether a person who has sustained a loss and’who holds partial indemnity from a company entitled to be subrogated to the amount of the indemnity, is privileged, as against the indemnifying company, to malee a compromise settlement with a company who is primarily liable for the whole loss, without the knowledge or co-operation of the indemnifying company. Commercial Union Assurance Co. v. Lister, L. R. 9 Ch. App. Cas. 483. But it is entirely clear that the owner of the legal title to the two concurrent claims in making such settlement without the knowledge or co-operation of the indemnifying company, whether the settlement should be of the whole claim or only of that part in excess of the amount of the indemnity, assumes the burden of equitable duties to the indemnifying company which are at least co-extensive with all rights which the indemnifying company could assert or preserve if present and participating in the settlement. In such circumstances the execution of a release of complainant’s claim was not only a breach of the trust assumed and a substantial injury to the enforcement of complainant’s rights, but plainly imposed upon defendant a further duty to apprise complainant of his acts in the premises to the end that the prima fade bar to complain[144]*144ant’s recovery which, he had wrongfully created could be removed. That duty was not performed and the statute has now run. In executing the general release under the circumstances stated, defendant has equitably denied himself the defence that he settled for only the balance of his loss.
I am convinced that defendant’s conduct in making settlement with the railroad company without the knowledge or cooperation of complainant, and in executing a general release to the railroad company in consideration of the money by him received at that settlement without apprising complainant of the facts which he now asserts, is operative to render him presently liable to complainant in this suit for that part of the loss paid by .complainant. I will advise a decree to that! effect.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
90 A. 244, 83 N.J. Eq. 140, 1914 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fire-assn-of-philadelphia-v-wells-njch-1914.