Lunt v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.

28 A.2d 736, 139 Me. 218, 1942 Me. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 24, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 28 A.2d 736 (Lunt v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lunt v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 28 A.2d 736, 139 Me. 218, 1942 Me. LEXIS 60 (Me. 1942).

Opinion

Murchie, J.

These two cases present appeals by the defendant from decrees of a Justice of the Superior Court, sitting in equity, awarding $5,000 to the plaintiff Lunt and $2,950 to the plaintiff Constantine. The plaintiffs are judgment creditors of one Joy C. Small, holding executions against him for the amounts of their awards, recovered in actions at law alleging personal injuries caused by his negligent operation of a motor vehicle. The defendant is the insurer of Small, under a policy of insurance issued to indemnify him against all claims originating in the operation of the particular vehicle, with certain stated exceptions. The proceedings were brought pursuant to the provisions of R. S. 1930, Chap. 60, Sec. 178, and the plaintiffs are entitled to reach and apply insurance money to the extent of their respective awards unless they were employees of Small when the negligence occurred. The policy coverage excludes bodily injury to employees of the insured sustained while engaged in his business.

Small was a dealer in potatoes, buying the goods he handled over a considerable area, accepting delivery at the farms or warehouses of his vendors, and providing all necessary handling in connection with the loading, transport and delivery thereof to merchants. The plaintiffs, at an earlier time, had regularly furnished some of the labor incident to the loading of the potatoes handled by Small, but their regular relationship [220]*220with his business, whatever it may have been, had been terminated prior to the issue of the policy of insurance which is in question, and their only connection with it, after the issue of that policy, was on January 15,1941 when, at the solicitation of Small, and because his then regular employees were not available, they traveled with him from Brewer to Lincoln or Enfield, performed there the same kind of labor which they had been wont to perform during the earlier period of relationship, and were riding back to Brewer with him in the insured vehicle when the negligence and resulting accident occurred.

While regularly engaged in the business of Small the plaintiffs had traveled to and from the places where delivery of potatoes was accepted in an automobile owned by the plaintiff Lunt. The exact basis on which their compensation during that period was computed is not clear on the record, but it definitely appears that their work was performed, as was the case on the day in question, under the direction of Small, and that they were paid for their labor weekly, on Saturday night. When the accident occurred, they had collected no compensation for the work, performed earlier in the day, nor had they asked, or been offered, any.

Decision of the cases below was based upon a finding or ruling that the plaintiffs were not employees of Small, notwithstanding that counsel for the plaintiff Lunt contended there, as in this Court, that the defendant was precluded from raising the question of insurance coverage because its counsel had assumed control of the defense of Small in the actions at law wherein the executions sought to be satisfied out of the insurance money were obtained. Counsel interprets the decision in Colby, Pro Ami et al. v. Preferred Accident Insurance Company of New York, 134 Me., 18, 181 A., 13, as establishing such a principle, not merely when there was no reservation whatsoever, but when none was assented to by the execution creditor. He relies on the statement in the opinion that “no notice was given the plaintiffs,” but the case cannot be said to enunciate [221]*221a broader principle than that defending without reservation is “entirely inconsistent with non-coverage.” The cited case is clearly distinguishable from the present ones. There, counsel for the insurer stated at the trial of the action at law that “as far as the coverage was concerned it was all right.” There, liability was contested and there was no intimation, pending determination of it, that the coverage issue would ever be raised in any proceedings. Here, prior to assuming the defense of the action at law, the insurer secured the agreement of his assured that participation therein would not waive his right to deny coverage, as plaintiffs and counsel were fully aware, and the judgments sought to be enforced were secured by agreement. The Exhibits disclose a writing subscribed by both plaintiffs in which each asserted that he would not seek to enforce his judgment “if a court of proper and final authority ... decides that there was no insurance coverage on ... Small.” More than this, counsel himself signed an undertaking that the agreement for judgment should not be used in any way “by anyone in any later proceedings on the question of the insurance coverage ... on the automobile of ... Joy C. Small.” Upon him who seeks equity are enjoined strict requirements that he do equity, and that he keep faith with his own engagements. The technical ground urged is not a tenable one for either the plaintiff Lunt or for his counsel. The Lunt case, like that of Constantine, must be determined on the merits of the issue of the legal relationship with Small at the time the injuries were suffered.

The cases were heard before the sitting Justice together and were so argued in this Court, but the only common ground on which counsel for the respective plaintiffs meet in asserting that the appeals should be dismissed is reliance upon the principle declared in Young v. Witham, 75 Me., 536, that the decision of a single justice sitting in equity should not be disturbed unless it is clearly erroneous. The principle is undoubted, and has frequently controlled decisions in this State, but it is applicable only to factual findings and not to decisions or rulings of law. To refer only to the case relied on and two of the numer[222]*222ous decisions rendered upon its authority as a precedent, Chief Justice Peters expressly declared in the Young case that the evidence “was very conflicting”; a Per Curiam opinion in Paul v. Frye et al., 80 Me., 26, 12 A., 544, recites that questions “of fact only” were presented by the appeal; and Mr. Justice Fogler in Sidelinger v. Bliss, Adm’r., 95 Me., 316, 49 A., 1094, made it clear that the issue “was purely of fact.”

In the instant cases there is no dispute about the facts. The issue is one of law as to whether the status of employer and employee was, or was not, created upon the undoubted facts. This seems to have been recognized by the Justice below at the hearing. Small replied in the negative to an inquiry (by the Court) as to whether the plaintiffs were in his “employ.” Defense counsel insisted that the question involved “a conclusion of law,” and the comment of the Court was:

“I realize that. I just wanted his contention, that is all.”

His contention, obviously, as to the relationship in law which the facts created. It seems apparent that this realization was still present with him when he wrote the memorandum on the two cases which underlies his separate decrees.

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Bluebook (online)
28 A.2d 736, 139 Me. 218, 1942 Me. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lunt-v-fidelity-casualty-co-me-1942.