Liberty Mutual Insurance v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.

164 A. 179, 164 Md. 117, 1933 Md. LEXIS 19
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 19, 1933
Docket[No. 88, October Term, 1932.]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 164 A. 179 (Liberty Mutual Insurance v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liberty Mutual Insurance v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 164 A. 179, 164 Md. 117, 1933 Md. LEXIS 19 (Md. 1933).

Opinion

Bond, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The controversy on this appeal is between two insurers of an employer, on a question of applicability of the policy of one insurer to payment of compensation for the death of-an employee, Parks. Code, Supp. 1929, art. 101. Milford Nathan, of Cambridge, Dorchester County, and proprietor of a retail store there, maintained branch stores in Salisbury, Wicomico County, and in Seaford, in the State of Delaware. Parol testimony taken on behalf of the claimant tended to prove that the books of all three stores were kept at Cambridge, but kept separately, for the information of Nathan. Accounts in some form were kept at the branch stores, however, and Parks, who lived in Cambridge, and had his headquarters there, was employed by Nathan to go out and check up these accounts at the separate stores. His salary and expenses while working at a particular store were regularly charged up as an item of expense on the pay roll of that store. He had finished a week’s work at the Salisbury store, and was returning to his home in Cambridge, when he was struck by a railroad train at a crossing, and killed. His salary and expenses were charged against the Salisbury store for the week, and, as an item on the pay roll of that store,' entered into the basis of the premium charge under the policy covering specifically the Salisbury store.

One of Nathan’s workmen’s compensation policies, issued by the Liberty Mutual Company, by its terms covered workmen at “High Street, Cambridge, Maryland, and elsewhere in the State of Maryland in the service of the assured”; and the other, issued by the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, covered those at “Salisbury, Maryland, and elsewhere in the State of Maryland.” And it was the premium of the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company insurance that was measured in part on the basis of Parks’ inclusion on the pay roll as an employee of the Salisbury *120 store. In Nathan’s original notice to the State Industrial Accident Commission of the accident to Parks, he named only the Liberty Mutual Company as his insurer, and only a month later did he notify the commission of the insurance in -the United States Company. The commission decided that the accident was covered only by the latter insurer, that which insured specifically the Salisbury employees, and awarded compensation payable by it. That company then appealed to the Circuit Court for Dorchester County, and the court reversed the commission’s ruling, holding that both policies covered the accident, and passed an order modifying the award as to the insurers accordingly, adding that the two companies should divide and pay the compensation and the costs equally. Questions of dependency and right to compensation were decided in the trial court, but no review of the decisions on those questions is sought here.

Two of the questions how argued have been disposed of in earlier cases at this term of court. The first is one of compliance with the requirements of section 56 of article 101 of the Code, Supp. 1929, relative to the time of institution of appeals from the commission: “No such appeal shall be entertained unless notice of appeal shall have been served personally upon some member of the commission within thirty days following the rendition of the decision appealed from.” The award of the commission was made on September 24th, 1930, 'and on October 18th, 1930, the United States Company filed with the commission a paper stating that it prayed an appeal from the award to the circuit court, but the appeal was not entered in the circuit court until October 28th, 1930, and the transcript of the commission’s record was not filed in the court until May 2nd, 1931. The appellant objects that the limit of thirty days is placed by the act upon the filing of the appeal in the court, but this court has held to the contrary in the case of Monumental Printing Co. et al. v. Edell, 163 Md. 551, 164 A. 171, at this term.

After the appeal had been taken, attorneys for the Liberty Mutual Company filed a petition praying leave to take further testimony before the commission because the testimony *121 previously taken and included in the record of the commission was not so full and complete as the petitioner believed desirable for a proper review on appeal. The trial court denied the petition, and the objection to the denial presents another question disposed of in Monumental Printing Co. v. Edell, supra. There was, therefore, no error in the denial of the petition.

A third question of procedure is whether the court, preparatory to hearing the appeal without a jury, was required to adopt and declare the issues of fact to be decided by it in reviewing the decision of the commission. The parties presented somewhat conflicting forms, and did not agree on any of them, and the court then proceeded to hear and decide the case without formulated issues. In the opinion of this court the trial court is not by law required to adopt and announce such issues of fact. The Workmen’s Compensation Act requires (section 56) only that the court, in an informal summary proceeding in the nature of an appeal, shall determine whether the commission has justly considered all the facts concerning injury, whether it has exceeded the powers granted it by. the article, and whether it has misconstrued the law and facts applicable in the case decided. There seems to be nothing in this to be interpreted as requiring formulated issues of fact. This court has held that the references of questions of fact to juries, expressly provided for in section 56, can be made most effectively by formulating the questions, or issues, for the jury (Schiller v. Balto. & O. R. Co., 137 Md. 235, 112 A. 272); but it does not follow from that holding that such formulation is required when the court alone disposes of all questions. .There may be cases in which it would be convenient and desirable, but the statute does not require it. There is a separation of questions of both kinds, ordinarily, in instructions or declarations of law on prayers of the parties offered at'the conclusion of testimony, and that may often be sufficient for the purpose. No other form of separation is required.

On the main question, of the intention of the parties when *122 the Liberty Mutual insurance was taken out,, parol testimony was taken to- inform the court of the circumstances as an aid to construction. The terms of the policies are broad, yet the specification of the Salisbury store in one, while only Cambridge was specified in the other, fairly raised a question of the purpose in taking out the two, and the testimony seems to have been admitted properly. Flo objection was made to it, and the same action was taken in similar cases. Eurich v. General Casualty & Surety Co., 152 Md. 209, 136 A. 546; Leftwich v. Royal Ins. Co., 91 Md. 596, 46 A. 1010. The witness FTathan testified that his main, Cambridge, store had been opened as far back as the year 1880, and he had had a compensation policy covering employees at that store when the Salisbury store was started in 1922 or 1923; and then he took out a separate policy for the Salisbury store.

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Bluebook (online)
164 A. 179, 164 Md. 117, 1933 Md. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liberty-mutual-insurance-v-united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-md-1933.