Hurt v. Employers' Liability Assur. Corp.

122 F. 828, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4858
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Kentucky
DecidedMay 18, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 122 F. 828 (Hurt v. Employers' Liability Assur. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurt v. Employers' Liability Assur. Corp., 122 F. 828, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4858 (circtwdky 1903).

Opinion

EVANS, District Judge.

The defendant, under date of October 10, 1900, issued to the plaintiff’s intestate a policy of insurance, which, very long and elaborate, is not set out in full, although those characteristics might serve to illustrate the important questions to be determined. It provides that:

“The Employers’ Liability Assurance Corporation, Limited, of London, England, in consideration of the warranties hereinafter set forth, and of Twenty ° 0/100 Dollars, does hereby insure S. W. Francis of Iron Bridge engaged in the business or occupation of a Tobacco Buyer under classification Pfd for the term of 12 months from noon of the 10th day of October 1900 against bodily injuries within the meaning of this Policy caused by external, violent and accidental means during the period covered by this Policy, subject and according to the agreements and conditions herein contained -which are to be considered as conditions precedent, in the principal sum of Five Thousand Dollars.”

Then follow 13 clauses or conditions, designated by letters of the alphabet from A to M, inclusive. These clauses have no direct bearing upon any question now involved. They all appear to have reference alone to the obligations of the defendant. They carefully and in great detail limit its liability but in no sense impose any such duty upon the assured as to create as, against him any “condition precedent.”

The clauses designated by the letters N and O are as follows:

N. In the event of any accident within the meaning of this Policy happening to the Assured, written notice, containing full name and address of the Assured, with full particulars of the accident, shall be given within thirty days of its occurrence, to the Corporation’s Managers for the United States at Boston, Massachusetts, or the agent of the Corporation whose name is endorsed hereon and on demand such certificates, by medical practitioners qualified by law, and other papers of proof of claim, shall be furnished by the Assured or his representatives, at his or their own cost, as this Corporation may reasonably require. Unless affirmative proof of claim is furnished within thirteen months from the happening of. accident, no payment shall be made hereunder. No legal proceeding for recovery hereunder shall be brought within three months after receipt of proof by said Managers or said Agent, nor at all unless begun within a period of eighteen months after the happening of the accident.
O. If required by the Corporation, the medical or other agent of the Corporation, shall in ease of any accident to the Assured, be admitted at all reasonable times to see and examine the nature of the injuries sustained, or in case of death to examine the body of the Assured.

Mainly upon those provisions, and particularly those of clause N, the present controversy must turn. One year had expired and the renewal premium had been paid for another year, when the injury occurred. As appears from the plaintiff’s petition, as amended, the [830]*830insured, S. W. Francis, on November 27, 1901, while holding his dog (described as an affectionate and docile animal) for the purpose of having what was supposed to be a bone in his throat removed by another person, was scratched on the hand by the dog. It is averred that the dog in fact had hydrophobia, and that on January 6, 1902, the insured died as the direct result of the scratch thus accidentally inflicted, both the accident and the death happening while the policy, as renewed, was in full force. Notice of the accident was not given within 30 days after it happened, and this fact, and the consequences claimed to follow therefrom, are the basis of the contentions most urged at this hearing. The defendant, while not claiming that the injury was not such as the policy covers, has demurred to the petition as amended, and the questions thus raised are nor without difficulty; but after a very careful investigation it seems to the court that the demurrer, at least, may be satisfactorily disposed of upon grounds now to be stated.

The learned counsel for the defendant in their argument lay much stress upon the words found near the beginning of the policy that the instrument is issued “subject and according to the agreements and conditions herein contained, which are to be considered as conditions precedent.” It will be observed that this phrase, stopping short, does not particularly specify to what the conditions are precedent, and that it is exceedingly remote from almost every clause in the policy to which it can have any logical or sensible reference; so remote, indeed, that it may well be supposed that the average person, in reading the policy, may have forgotten the phrase before he reached anything in the contract to which it could have any legitimate or intelligible application. It may, indeed, be assumed to be true that every written contract is made “subject and according to the agreements and conditions” contained in it, and every ordinary man would so understand, but what the words', “which are to be considered as conditions precedent,” used in the policy sued on, mean, may well admit of doubt when we give them a more than superficial consideration in connection with the entire writing. Many of the stipulations cannot, in the accurate sense, be “conditions precedent” to anything when viewed in connection with any of the lettered clauses of the policy from A to M, inclusive. The character of the contract is such that little could be a condition precedent, so far, at least, as the completion of the agreement is concerned, except the payment of the premium. When that was done for the second year, the contract was put in full force for that year, and, unless the words “conditions precedent” can fairly be held to refer to some remotely subsequent clause in the writing, they are meaningless.

Coming to clause N, the difficulties do not disappear, for, when we go back to ascertain what the words “conditions precedent” mean in connection with that clause, the subject is not entirely free .from doubt, at least so far as respects the consequences to result from a failure to give notice of the accident within 30 days after it happened. These doubts grow out of the fact that no penalty is annexed bv the stipulations of clause N to the mere failure to give the notice, while by the terms of the clause the company is altogether released if af[831]*831firmative proof of the claim is not furnished within 13 months from the time of death, and with a like result if suit is not brought within 18 months from that event. The fact that the penalty of loss of the insurance is stipulated to be.the result of failing to furnish affirmative proof within 13 months, and also of a failure to sue within 18 months after the death of the insured, while no prescribed penalty follows the failure to give the required notice, is a very strong ground for supposing that the use of the words “conditions precedent” did not, of itself, show that the parties intended that there should be a forfeiture for a failure merely to give notice as distinguished from furnishing “affirmative proof of the claim,” and that, whatever the words “conditions precedent” meant, or whatever other consequences were intended, the parties, in making their contract, did not intend that it should mean that a forfeiture should result from a failure merely to give the notice of the accident if the other proofs were furnished in due season. If so, they would have expressly said so, as they do in regard to a failure to furnish proofs or to bring suit.

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Bluebook (online)
122 F. 828, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurt-v-employers-liability-assur-corp-circtwdky-1903.