Great American Indemnity Co. v. Smith

24 So. 2d 42, 156 Fla. 662, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 961
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 11, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 So. 2d 42 (Great American Indemnity Co. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Great American Indemnity Co. v. Smith, 24 So. 2d 42, 156 Fla. 662, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 961 (Fla. 1945).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.:

This appeal was brought by the insurance carrier against the Industrial Commission, the employer, R. V. Barden, and the employee, Hansel B. Smith,, in an effort to reverse an order of the circuit judge affirming a decision of the commission that the policy under the circumstances we shall recount,. and because of the provisions and conditions it contained, covered damages suffered by the employee.

For many years R. V. Barden had operated at 503 Fairmont Street in Clearwater a business known as Pinellas Music Company, on which he carried no workmen’s compensation insurance. The company leased and repaired music machines, juke organs, and the like. After Hansel B. Smith had been an employee' for many months and while he was servicing a coin-operated machine leased by his employer he suffered the loss of ah eye, 4 October 1944.

Meanwhile Park Inn, Inc., conducted at 100 Causeway Street in the same city a “Bar, Grill, Restaurant and Liquor Package Store.” On 29 October 1943 the appellant had issued *664 its policy of insurance containing this condition: “A — The premium is based upon the entire remuneration earned, during the Policy Period, by all employees of this Employer [Park Inn, Inc.] engaged in the business operations described in said Declarations together with all operations necessary, incident or appurtenant thereto, or connected therewith whether conducted at such work places or elsewhere in connection therewith or in relation thereto ...” Attached was an endorsement as follows: “It is hereby understood and agreed, subject otherwise to all the terms, limits and conditions of this Policy, that: (1) The obligations of Paragraph One (a) of the Policy are intended to apply to all business operations of the Employer covéred by the Workmen’s Compensation Act referred to in the Florida Compensation Endorsement attached to the Policy, and carried on at any time during the term of the Policy, whether such operations are stated in the Declarations of the Policy or not ...”

The insurance company’s agent was notified by Park Inn, Inc., that it had sold its business to R. V. Barden and wished the policy transferred, whereupon this was done 17 February 1944. It is a fair construction of the testimony that the agent did not know the transferee or that he was operating Pinellas Music Company.

We must decide whether the employee’s injury was covered by the insurance policy, that is, whether the policy originally protecting employees of Park Inn, Inc., and transferred to the purchaser, Barden, extended to a business then operated by him on which no insurance was carried. There is no question about the right of the injured employee to receive compensation from the employer.

Under the workmen’s Compensation Law (Section 440.38, Florida Statutes, 1941, and F.S.A.) an employer must secure the payment of compensation by (1) (a) insuring with an authorized company or (1) (b) qualifying as a “self-insurer.” Barden, trading as Pinellas Music Company, ignored both, not knowing, so he testified, that he was violating the law by not having “compensation coverage.” In any event, he had not resorted to the former. When he purchased Park Inn, Inc., it had obtained insurance, and he became assignee of the in *665 surance contract as successor owner of the assets of that corporation.

At the outset we referred to a “condition” of the policy and an “endorsement” titled “Florida Underscribed Operations Endorsement.” We are told that the latter was inspired by the ruling of this court in Maryland Casualty Co. v. Jinks, 144 Fla. 373, 198 So. 17. There a policy was. under consideration bearing the identical condition we have quoted. The declarations classified the operations as “Lumber Yard and Building Material Dealer . . . Code 8232” and “Clerical Office Employees — N. O. C. Code 8810.” Premiums on other businesses of the employer, namely, a sawmill and planer mill, were disallowed by the trial court, and on appeal we affirmed the judgment.

Reading farther the “condition” in the present contract, there are found provisions relative to the computation of the ultimate premium and adjustments after taking into account rates and the advanced premium. We have quoted the first paragraph of. the endorsement, which, incidentally, refers to the condition lettered A as “obligations.” The second paragraph follows: • “The Employer agrees to pay the premium on all operations not specifically listed in the Declarations at the time of the final adjustment of the premium, in accordance with Condition C of the policy, at the rates, and in compliance with the rules, of the Manual of Rates in use by the Company on the date of issue of the Policy.”

This sends us on the “condition C” where we discover a provision that the insurer may inspect the employer’s books, plants, etc., to determine the remuneration of employees.

From our examination of the conditions A and C, the endorsement, and the. cited cases which is said to have prompted adoption of the endorsement we find that the subject with which they deal is money to be paid the insurer for the protection provided employees. Of course there is a relationship between the protection and the premium, but we are inclined to the view that the provisions for the latter do not necessarily determine the extent of the former.

In other words, it may well be that because of this endorsement premiums would be collectible from operations of *666 Park Inn, Inc., other than its grill, restaurant, and package store, and that there would be a corresponding obligation to protect employees of Park Inn, Inc., working in places other than those named. But still we are confronted with the prime question of the obligation under the contract to an employee who was and had been for some time engaged in a business of the purchaser and who, because of that purchaser’s neglect, indifference, or ignorance, was not secured.

It seems to this writer that so far as the insurance contract and the fundamental obligations of the insurer are concerned, Barden merely took the place of Park Inn, Inc. The provision we quoted at the outset was that the premium would be based upon remuneration of all employees in the business described (Grill, restaurant, and liquor package store), “together with all operations necessary, incident or appurtenant thereto,” conducted at the place described or elsewhere. The so-called Florida Endorsement stipulation that these “obligations . . . are intended to apply to all business operations of the Employer . .. and carried on at any time during the term of the Policy, whether such operations are stated in the Declarations of the Policy or not” must, we think, be construed to mean the activities of the insured with whom the company was then dealing.

Apparently it was meant to insure not only the grill, restaurant, and store, but all other business operations of Park Inn, Inc., but it could not have been contemplated that there would also be insured all employees of any person or corporation who at some time in the future would become the purchaser of all or part of the. assets of the insured.

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 2d 42, 156 Fla. 662, 1945 Fla. LEXIS 961, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-american-indemnity-co-v-smith-fla-1945.