Lucy E. Dodson v. Travelers Insurance Company

266 F.2d 52, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 4007
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 21, 1959
Docket16124_1
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 266 F.2d 52 (Lucy E. Dodson v. Travelers Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lucy E. Dodson v. Travelers Insurance Company, 266 F.2d 52, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 4007 (8th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

*53 WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

Lucy E. Dodson brought this action against The Travelers Insurance Company in the Circuit Court of Laclede County, Missouri, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused her by the negligence of the Memorial Hospital located at Siloam ■Springs, Benton County, Arkansas, on or about August 9, 1957, while she was there as a patient. The hospital is a nonprofit corporation, a subdivision of the municipality of Siloam Springs, Benton County, Arkansas, and is not subject to suit for tort. But a law of Arkansas, to-wit, sections 66-517, 66-518, 66-519, and 66-520, of the Arkansas Statutes 1947, provides that when liability insurance is carried by such a corporation not subject to suit for tort and any person suffers injury or damage on account of its negligence, such person shall have a direct cause of action against the insurance company with which the liability insurance is carried and such insurer shall be directly liable to the injured person for such damages to the extent of the coverage of the liability policy and the plaintiff may proceed directly against said insurer regardless of the fact that the actual tort feasor may not be sued. It is provided that suits under the Act shall be brought either in the county where the injury and damage occurs or where the plaintiff may reside at the time of the injury. §§ 66-517 to 66-520.

The Travelers Insurance Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Connecticut, issued its policy of liability insurance to the Memorial Hospital in Arkansas, insuring the hospital against loss due to injuries sustained by any person resulting from the negligence of its agents or employees for the sum of $25,-000 (each person) which was in force at the time of plaintiff’s injury. Plaintiff was a citizen and resident of Laclede County, Missouri, at the time of her injury and at all times since. She undertook to commence this action in the Circuit Court of that county by substituted service of process under Section 375.210, subd. 2, R.S.Mo.1949, V.A. M.S. That is to say, she caused summons in the case to be served upon the Superintendent of the Division of Insurance, Department of Business and Administration of the State of Missouri, who was duly appointed and authorized by the defendant to receive service of process in behalf of defendant issued by any court of record in all proceedings instituted against it in any court of the state, subject to the limitations prescribed in the section.

The defendant insurance company caused the case to be removed to the federal court on account of the diversity of citizenship and there appearing specially it filed its motion to quash return of the service of summons and to dismiss. It alleged in the motion that the service of process herein sought to be made under the Section 375.210, subd. 2, and directed to it as a non-resident defendant insurance company licensed to do business in Missouri was unauthorized and invalid. As stated, the suit is upon a liability policy in which the beneficiaries are such persons as are injured by the hospital’s negligence and the only actions in which service of process is authorized by the section are “actions brought by residents of this state upon any policy issued or matured, or upon any liability accrued in this state, or on any policy issued in any other state in which such resident is named as beneficiary * * ”. A copy of the policy sued on was attached to the motion. It shows that it was issued to the Arkansas hospital and insures the hospital “ * * * against loss due to injuries or damages sustained by any person * * * ” through negligence of its servants, but the plaintiff is not named in it as beneficiary and was therefore not authorized to obtain service of process under it in her action on the policy.

As grounds for dismissal it was further stated in the motion that Section 375.210, subd. 2, constitutes the sole and exclusive means of obtaining service of process upon defendant in Missouri and as it does not authorize the service in this case, the court in Laclede County *54 before the removal and the federal court afterwards were without “jurisdiction over the person of this defendant, * * the subject matter or * * * venue * *

After full hearing the District Court sustained the motion to quash the service of summons and also ordered the action dismissed for want of jurisdiction. The plaintiff appeals.

Opinion

1. As to the service of summons.

It appeared to the District Court that the legal issue presented in respect to the service of process on the insurance company was identical with that decided in favor of the insurance company defendant by Mr. Justice Whittaker, then District Judge, in Cowley v. Auto Transport, Inc., D.C., 122 F.Supp. 689, and we agree. In that case Transport Insurance Company was made a party defendant with a trucking company in an action on a liability policy brought by a Missouri citizen and resident in a Missouri court for damages from tort of the trucking company committed in Kansas. The insurance company was a Texas corporation licensed to do business in Kansas and Missouri and had issued the liability policy to the trucking company in Kansas where the statute made the insurer directly liable to persons injured by torts of the trucking company. There was substituted service on the insurance company under section 375.210, subd. 2, as in this case, and the court held that because the plaintiff was not named in the policy sued on, the action was not an action in which service of process on the Superintendent of Insurance was binding on the insurance company and that the attempted service on the insurance company was bad. The court found support for the conclusion in the opinion and citations of Missouri decisions therein of the late Judge Collett, subsequently a Judge of this Court, then sitting as District Judge in Missouri, in Hulett v. Rock Island Motor Transit Co., D.C., 40 F.Supp. 213. In that case a motion to quash substituted service on an insurance company incorporated in Pennsylvania was sustained in view of a Missouri statute which contained the same provision as the controlling part of Section 375.210, subd. 2, here. The policy sued on was a liability policy like the policy here in suit, and did not name the plaintiff as beneficiary. In consequence the substituted service on the insurance company was not authorized. Judge Collett found the historical background of the relevant statutory provision in State ex rel. American Central Life Insurance Company v. Landwehr, 318 Mo. 181, 300 S.W. 294; State ex rel. Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Company v. Harris, 343 Mo. 252, 121 S.W.2d 141, 119 A.L.R. 862; Fogle v. Equitable Life Assurance Society, Mo.App., 123 S.W.2d 595, and other cases to which those decisions refer.

An argument is presented for appellant that her cause of action in this case may be said to have accrued in Missouri within the meaning of section 375.210, subd. 2, because of the provision of section 66-520 of the Arkansas statute:

“Venue of actions. — Suits under this Act shall be brought either in the county where the injury and damage occurs or where plaintiff or plaintiffs may reside at the time of such injury or damage.”

But we find the contention without merit.

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266 F.2d 52, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 4007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucy-e-dodson-v-travelers-insurance-company-ca8-1959.