Frankfort Marine Accident and Plate Glass Insurance Co. v. California Artistic Metal and Wire Co.

151 P. 176, 28 Cal. App. 74, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 490
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 13, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1342.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 151 P. 176 (Frankfort Marine Accident and Plate Glass Insurance Co. v. California Artistic Metal and Wire Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frankfort Marine Accident and Plate Glass Insurance Co. v. California Artistic Metal and Wire Co., 151 P. 176, 28 Cal. App. 74, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 490 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

*76 HART, J.

This is a suit for an accounting or, more properly, for discovery and for judgment for the amount so found to be due the plaintiff from the defendant.

An interlocutory decree compelling an accounting was made and the same had and thereupon judgment rendered and entered in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of two thousand six hundred dollars.

The defendant moved for a new trial and the same ordered denied, and it presents these appeals from the judgment and said order.

On the seventeenth day of September, 1907, the plaintiff, a corporation, organized and existing under the laws of Germany, and doing business in the state of California under and by virtue of the laws of said state, and the defendant, a corporation, organized and existing under the laws of this state, entered into two certain contracts, which are declared upon in two separate counts. By the terms of the contract constituting the first cause of action set out in the complaint, the plaintiff agreed to insure the defendant ‘ ‘ against loss from common law or statutory liability for damages on account of bodily injuries, fatal or nonfatal, accidentally suffered by any employee or employees of defendant while on duty at the places and in the occupations specified in said contract during the period of one year from and after September 17th, 1907.” The' compensation to be paid by the defendant ivas to be a sum equal to two per cent upon an estimated compensation of two thousand five hundred dollars, and the estimated premium, on said contract, amounted, therefore, to the sum of fifty dollars, which was paid by the defendant.

By the contract declared upon in the second count of the complaint, the defendant promised to pay the plaintiff a sum equal to one per cent upon an estimated compensation of two thousand five hundred dollars as indemnity against loss from “common law or statutory liability on account of bodily injuries, fatal or nonfatal, accidentally suffered, within the period of said policy or contract of insurance, by any person or persons not employed by the defendant at or about any of the work of the defendant described in the schedule given on the back of this policy, in and during the continuance of the work described in the said schedule. ’ ’ The amount of the premium on said contract was, obviously, twenty-five dollars, thq defendant having paid the same,

*77 Both policies cover the estimated pay-roll for all employees inclusive of officers and office employees.

Each of said contracts contains the following provision: “If the compensation actually paid exceeds the sum stated in the schedule given on the back of this policy, the assured shall pay the additional premium earned; if less than the sum stated, the company (meaning the plaintiff) will return to the assured the unearned premium pro rata,” the “company,” however, being authorized to retain in any event, as the fixed minimum earned premium on the two per cent policy, the sum of $33.35 and on the one per cent policy the sum of $16.65.

In the schedule of warranties on the backs of the policies it is provided that the work covered by the indemnity was that which was to be performed by the employees of the defendant “anywhere in California, excepting at 349-365 Seventh Street, inclusive, extending through to Sherman Street, San Francisco, ’ ’ and the character of said work is in said schedule described as follows: “All work connected with the erection of railings, gates, elevator inclosures, cabs, stairs, show windows, store fronts, fixtures, folding gates, patented suspended ceilings, wire lath, grill work, floors and partitions, gas fixtures and fire escapes.”

The complaint alleges that, since September 17, 1908, the “plaintiff has frequently demanded from defendant an opportunity to examine its books so far as they relate to said compensation paid as aforesaid, but that defendant has ever since refused and does still refuse to allow such examination of its said books.”

It is further alleged that nothing has been paid by or on behalf of the defendant on account of said contracts, excepting only the sums of fifty dollars and twenty-five dollars, respectively; that the “plaintiff is informed and verily believes, and therefore alleges, that, during the year aforesaid, defendant paid to his said employees as compensation, sums far in excess of twenty-five hundred dollars; that plaintiff does not know the extent of this excess and has no means of ascertaining the same except through the intervention of this honorable court”; that the plaintiff “has no plain speedy and adequate remedy, or plain or speedy or adequate remedy, at law.”

The prayer does not specifically ask for an accounting, but petitions the court that the defendant be compelled “to at *78 tend before it, bringing all such books and documents as will enable this court to determine the total sum paid by it as compensation to its employees during said year . . . and by such other means as may be adequate and proper this court to determine that sum, and that it do render a judgment in favor of plaintiff . . . for a sum equal to three per cent of ■said sum, less only the sum of $75,” etc.

The court found, among other facts, that the two policies declared upon called for two and one per cent, respectively, of the total of all moneys paid by the defendant to its employees, including officers and office employees, as compensation during the year from and after September, 1907. It is further found that the defendant paid to its employees “in and about the business” covered by the said policies during the year mentioned the sum of seventy-four thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine dollars and that the plaintiff is entitled to a sum equal to two per cent of this amount upon the policy counted upon in the first count of the complaint, less the sum of fifty dollars, paid on account thereof, and one per cent of said amount on the policy declared upon in the second count of the complaint, less the sum of twenty-five dollars paid thereon.

The court further found that the said contracts of insurance provided that the plaintiff should have the right at all reasonable times to examine the defendant’s books so far as they related to the compensation paid by it to its employees during said year, and that, since September, 1908, ‘ ‘ at numerous reasonable times, plaintiff has demanded from defendant an opportunity to examine its books in so far as they relate to the compensation paid,” but that the defendant has on all such occasions refused to allow such examination or any examination.”

The defendant first contends that the complaint .does not disclose a case for an accounting, and that the plaintiff is afforded a complete and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.

Professor Pomeroy cites three instances in which the legal remedies are held inadequate, and, therefore, a suit in equity proper. They are as follows: 1. Where there are mutual accounts between the plaintiff and the defendant—that is, where each of two parties has received and paid on account of the other; 2. Where the accounts are all on one side, but *79 there are circumstances of great complication, or difficulties in the way of adequate relief at law; 3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 P. 176, 28 Cal. App. 74, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frankfort-marine-accident-and-plate-glass-insurance-co-v-california-calctapp-1915.