Maryland Casualty Co. v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.

236 P. 210, 71 Cal. App. 492
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 1925
DocketDocket No. 4893.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 236 P. 210 (Maryland Casualty Co. v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 236 P. 210, 71 Cal. App. 492 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

TYLER, P. J.

Action to recover money paid out by plaintiff at the instance and request of defendant.

The material facts disclose the following situation: Plaintiff was the insurance carrier of a certain company under *494 a workmen’s compensation policy. While this indemnity policy was in full force and effect one of the company’s laborers suffered an injury, arising wholly by accidental means and in the course of his employment, by which he was ruptured, and he was thereupon conveyed at plaintiff’s expense to a hospital for the purpose of having his injuries treated. During that process an employee of the hospital, in the performance of his duties, delivered to a surgeon attending the injured man a certain chemical preparation to be hypodermically injected into the patient’s body. Through the negligence or carelessness of this attendant a different substance was substituted for this preparation, the injection of which caused pain and suffering to the-patient and aggravated his injury, resulting in delay in his eventual recovery and an additional expense of one thousand dollars, the amount here sued for. The hospital carried an indemnity policy of insurance against liability for negligence of its employees with defendant. Both plaintiff and defendant knew of the mistake which had been made, and that in consequence thereof delay would result in the injured man’s recovery. The latter knew nothing whatever concerning the matter. Defendant thereupon represented and stated to plaintiff that if it would not inform the patient of the injurious effects of the injection of the wrong preparation, and would pay the sum by which the expenses of the treatment had been increased in the hospital, defendant would reimburse plaintiff for such additional outlay. Plaintiff agreed to this arrangement, and after it had made payment to the injured employee of all moneys due from it as the insurance carrier of the employer, it paid the further sum of one thousand dollars in settlement of the additional expense arising in the manner above stated. It was upon this promise of reimbursement by defendant that the complaint is predicated.

A demurrer to the complaint was sustained upon the ground that the contract was against public policy and good morals and, therefore, unenforceable.

In rendering its decision upon this point the learned trial court expressed its views in writing, and respondent has favored us with a transcript thereof. It relies for an af *495 firmance of the judgment upon the reasons therein given, namely, that the contract upon which the action is based is so mischievous in its tendency as to merit judicial proscription.

Before entering into a discussion of this subject it is perhaps as well to dispose of a preliminary objection which plaintiff interposes to the right of defendant to invoke the defense that the agreement is against public policy. It is contended by it that it would be a reproach to the law if respondent should be permitted by its trick and device to evade an obligation which it incurred to appellant by procuring from it the very favor which it now seeks to disavow under the pretext of the illegality of its promise.

It has not seemed satisfactory to some able and just minds that courts should hold that where parties to a contract are in pari delicto they will leave the delinquents where they find them, because such a rule permits one to plead his own wrong or infamy, as the case may be, and thereby obtain an unconscionable advantage over his adversary through being relieved of an obligation for the assumption of which he has received a valuable consideration. Courts, however, are not called upon to settle any question of conscience between the parties, but are interested, only in the higher duty of protecting society from the effect of contracts made in disregard of its interests. While, therefore, the defense advanced may be one which ill lies in the mouth of defendant to assert, nevertheless, if public policy requires it, the plea will be permitted even if it allows one to retain an advantage without rendering the stipulated return. Estoppel does not apply in such a case. A contract void as against public policy cannot be treated as valid by invoking such principle, nor can a party thereto waive his right to set up the defense of illegality in an action thereon brought by the other party (Millett v. Aetna Trust Co., 70 Ind. App. 451 [122 N. E. 344]). In a suit brought upon such a contract relief will be denied and the parties left where they are found (Napa Valley etc. Co. v. Calistoga etc. Co., 38 Cal. App. 477 [176 Pac. 699]).

The sole question, therefore, with which we are concerned is the validity or invalidity of the agreement as it is presented to us. As above indicated, the trial court was of *496 the opinion that the agreement was void as being against public policy in that it tended to violate a trust. It was further of the opinion that it might be classed with those agreements made for the purpose of hindering or defeating the collection of an indebtedness by a creditor of one of the parties, and, therefore, void.

In support of the trust theory it is argued that ordinarily an injured man places himself unquestionably and trustingly under the care of those whom his employer or the employer’s insurance carrier selects; and that this being so, the employer owes to his injured employee the duty of providing, directly or through the insurance carrier, reasonably good medical care and attention; that he becomes for the time being a sort of trustee of the injured employee’s body for the purpose of restoring his health and vigor, and the hospital and attending physicians are agents for that purpose; and that if through the negligence of such agents the injuries are aggravated or restoration retarded, then not only is there a grievance sustained by the employee himself, but there results also an impairment in some degree of the state industrial energy, as the agreement leads to a lessening of the care and watchfulness due to an injured employee, .contrary to the interests of society.

It may be that an agreement which is calculated to induce dereliction or laxity in the performance of a public or private duty is hostile to the interests of society, but the facts of this case do not in our opinion present such a situation. Plaintiff had paid out, and without question, a sum of money that it was bound to pay under its indemnity policy. It had further agreed at the request of the defendant to advance an additional sum for which the latter was solely responsible for the reason heretofore stated, upon the understanding that the injured employee should be kept in ignorance of the arrangement. This understanding, however, in no manner affected the patient’s rights, and we fail to see how vice was imported into the transaction by reason thereof, or how the arrangement was in any manner controlled or affected by public policy.

An exact definition of public policy would be difficult to formulate. One that has been frequently approved *497 is that adopted by Lord Brougham, namely, that no one can lawfully do anything which has a tendency to be injurious to the public welfare.

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Bluebook (online)
236 P. 210, 71 Cal. App. 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-co-v-fidelity-casualty-co-calctapp-1925.