Kocher v. Kocher

150 A. 468, 300 Pa. 206, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 383
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 14, 1930
DocketAppeal, 198
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 150 A. 468 (Kocher v. Kocher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kocher v. Kocher, 150 A. 468, 300 Pa. 206, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 383 (Pa. 1930).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

The compensation authorities made an award in favor of plaintiff, and the defendant insurance carrier appealed to the court below, which reversed the award and entered judgment for defendant; hence this appeal by plaintiff.

W. R. Kocher, hereinafter sometimes called the decedent, owned and conducted a retail coal business. He died December 23, 1925, testate, bequeathing this business to his wife, Geraldine A. Kocher, for life, and the executors under his will, who were also the remaindermen, turned it over to her. At the time of the issuance of the insurance policy here involved, and of the accident in this case, the widow was conducting the business as her own. She employed her son Myron, who, on August 7, 1926, was killed in the course of his employment. Mildred H. Kocher, the son’s widow, is the plaintiff.

W. R. Kocher carried workmen’s compensation insurance with defendant company. The policy expired on March 6, 1926, after the death of the insured. A few days before the expiration of the insurance, defendant *211 company mailed to its local agent at the place where the coal business was carried on, a renewal policy for another year. This is the contract claimed on in the present case.

The policy in question was made out, like the prior one, in the name of W. R. Kocher; but the local agent had knowledge, at the time the contract came into his hands and when he delivered it to Geraldine A. Kocher, that W. R. Kocher was dead. The agent nevertheless accepted a check in payment of the premium, which he sent to the home office of the company. This check, which had printed on it, “W. R. Kocher Estate,” was collected by defendant company; the amount thus received has never been repaid. The uncontradicted testimony shows that the funds in bank out of which the check was paid belonged to the widow of decedent, and not to his estate. The cheek seems to have been put in evidence, however, for the purpose of showing that the insurance company must have known that W. R. Kocher was dead at the time it accepted the payment of the premium; but whether or not any one directly connected with the home office of defendant company had this knowledge, all the proofs indicate that the local agent, when he took the check for the premium and when he delivered the policy, knew both that the employer named therein was dead and that the business covered by the policy was still conducted in his name.

The position of the insurance carrier is that its policy named W. R. Kocher as the insured employer, and since, as a matter of fact, Geraldine A. Kocher, not W. R. Kocher, was the employer of Myron L. Kocher at the time of the latter’s injury and death, it had no liability in the premises; but the case is not so simple. Myron L. Kocher was the manager of the business here involved, the employees of which were intended to be insured by defendant company’s policy; he had occupied that position under W. R. Kocher and continued to occupy it after the death of his former employer. Of *212 course, if there was nothing in the proofs to show that the new policy, written after W. R. Kocher’s death and in his name, was, at the time of its delivery, intended as a contract with his successor in the ownership of the business, as the employer,, there could be no recovery thereon in this case.

Plaintiff’s position is that, after W. R. Kocher’s death, the business mentioned in the policy belonged to the decedent’s widow and was being conducted by her in his name, she, on occasion, using also the name -of W. R. Kocher Estate; that, when the policy was delivered to the widow, it was intended by all concerned, — including, of course, the insurance company acting through its local agent, — to cover the employees of that business, whether it was being operated by the Estate of W. R. Kocher, deceased, or by his widow, to whom the decedent had left the business. Plaintiff contends that the insurance company had knowledge of W. R. Kocher’s death when it accepted the premium and renewed the insurance ; that, knowing the business still continued and was being carried on by Geraldine A. Kocher in her husband’s name, — she having assumed that name for trade purposes, — it delivered the policy to her; therefore the contract should be read as insuring Geraldine A. Kocher, trading in the name of her deceased husband, as owner of the business and employer of plaintiff’s decedent.

The insurance carrier states, in its brief, “there can be no question......but that Geraldine Kocher, not the Estate of W. R. Kocher, was the employer, operating this coal business”; and the court below found that, after the death of W. R. Kocher, the business was conducted by his widow Geraldine A. Kocher, but it concluded that the record contained no “legal competent evidence” which warranted “the finding that Geraldine A. Kocher was......conducting this coal business under [an] assumed name.” Therefore the court held that the policy must be read as insuring W. R. Kocher, not *213 Geraldine A. Kocher trading in his name, and that defendant company was not liable to pay compensation for the accidental death of Geraldine A. Kocher’s employees ; accordingly, the award in plaintiff’s favor was set aside and judgment entered for defendant.

Under circumstances such as those in this case, the entry of judgment for defendant presents plain error. In Carville v. Bornot Co., 288 Pa. 104, 109, we held that where, on a hearing before the compensation authorities, one undertakes to prove a material fact and the evidence relied on for that purpose lacks legal competency, a decision on the point cannot be reversed on appeal without remitting the record to the board for “further hearing and determination”; or, in other words, without affording “a second opportunity to prove the fact at issue by legally competent evidence.” True, we also said in the Carville Case that, where the party bearing the burden of proof enters on no undertaking before the compensation authorities to establish the fact in question, and offers no evidence whatever for that purpose, “the courts [are] not obliged to give a further opportunity so to do.” Here, however, plaintiff not only undertook, before the compensation authorities, to prove the point she now stands upon, but did so principally by the local agent of defendant company, who testified, on her behalf, it was his understanding that, on the death of W. R. Kocher, the insured business continued under the latter’s name; further, that, at this time, the witness had received a “personal coal bill” from whoever was in charge of the coal yard, and that he paid the bill by a check drawn to W. R. Kocher. This witness makes some mention of the estate of W. R. Kocher as conducting the business, and fails to say specifically that Geraldine A. Kocher was carrying it on, but he does say plainly that, after the death of W. R. Kocher, the business was conducted in the dead man’s name. Considering the abundant testimony that, after the death of her husband, Geraldine A. Kocher did in fact carry on *214 this business, appellees’ express admission to that effect, the confusion throughout the record and in the findings as between the Estate of W. R.

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150 A. 468, 300 Pa. 206, 1930 Pa. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kocher-v-kocher-pa-1930.