Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance v. San Francisco-Oakland Terminal Railways

178 P. 974, 39 Cal. App. 388, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 200
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 17, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2489.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 178 P. 974 (Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance v. San Francisco-Oakland Terminal Railways) 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
Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance v. San Francisco-Oakland Terminal Railways, 178 P. 974, 39 Cal. App. 388, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 200 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $212.82 and costs of suit. The facts of the case, so far as pertinent to the determination of the main question presented upon this appeal, are these: On October 1, 1914, one Manuel Silva was an employee of one A. H. Kopperud, and was engaged in work for his employer on Fourteenth Avenue in the city of Oakland, when a streetcar, operated by or for the defendant, coming along said Fourteenth Avenue came in contact with an auto truck which was standing near where said Silva was at work, and caused said auto truck to strike the latter and severely injure him. At the time of said injury Silva’s employer, Kopperud, was carrying insurance for his employee pursuant to the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1913, the plaintiff herein being his insurer. Immediately after said injury the plaintiff caused said Silva to be removed to a hospital and there provided with medical and surgical treatment and medicines, amounting in all to the sum of $212.82. Thereafter, and on the sixteenth day of January, 1915, Silva undertook to make a settlement of his claim for damages for its alleged negligent acts and his consequent injuries with the defendant herein, in the course of which the defendant paid to him the sum of three hundred dollars, receiving therefor from said Silva a full receipt and discharge of all claims and demands on account of said injury. Thereafter said Silva filed *390 an application for an award against his employer, Kopperud, and the latter’s insurer, said plaintiff, before the Industrial Accident Commission, which came on for decision in the month of July, 1915. From the decision of the commissioner then rendered it appears that a showing was made as to the acceptance by said Silva of the sum of three hundred dollars from the defendant herein, and of the execution by him of the receipt purporting to be a full release of said defendant from all liability on account of his said injury. The commission thereupon made an award in favor of said applicant in the sum of $103.07, which the plaintiff herein paid, and which, with certain sums which it had already expended for medicines, etc., made up the aggregate of $212.82, for which it brings this action.

The complaint herein is denominated a complaint in equity, and in it the plaintiff avers substantially the foregoing facts, and further avers that the defendant herein, in making the aforesaid settlement with said Silva, did so with knowledge that said Silva had a lawful claim for compensation against his employer and the latter’s insurer which was presentable before the Industrial Accident Commission, and that the intent of the defendant in making such settlement and in taking said full receipt and release thereon was to destroy any right which the plaintiff, as the insurance carrier of said Silva’s employer, had or might have to commence and prosecute this action against said defendant, pursuant to the provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act. The plaintiff also included in its complaint a demand for the sum of one hundred dollars as attorney’s fees.

The defendant appeared in this action and demurred upon the ground of a want of jurisdiction in the superior court over the subject matter of the action, and this demurrer being overruled it answered, again urging the objection as to the court’s want of jurisdiction. It also pleaded the making of the settlement with .Silva, above referred to, and set forth in its answer the receipt in terms.

The trial court gave judgment for the plaintiff for the amount claimed in accordance with the award of the Industrial Accident Commission, but denied the plaintiff’s right to recover any sum as attorneys’ fees.

The first and main question raised by appellant on this appeal is that of the jurisdiction of the trial court over the *391 subject matter of this action. The appellant contends that the plaintiff’s claim, if it exists at all, is for the total sum of $212.82, and that its cause of action therefor is purely a legal as distinguished from an equitable claim, and hence that its action should have been commenced in the justice’s court. The determination of this question depends upon the construction to be placed upon section 31 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act of 1913. [Stats. 1913, p. 279.] That section reads as follows:

“The making of a lawful claim against an employer for compensation under this act for the injury or death of his employee shall operate as an assignment to the employer of any right to recover damages which the injured employee, or his personal representative, or other person, may have against any other party for such injury or death, and such employer shall be subrogated to any such right and may enforce in his own name the legal liability of such other party. The amount of compensation paid by the employer, or the amount of compensation to which the injured employee or his dependents is entitled, shall not be admissible as evidence in any action brought to recover damages, but any amount collected by the employer, under the provisions of this section, in excess of the amount paid by the employer, or for which he is liable, shall be held by him for the benefit of the injured employee or other person entitled.”

The foregoing section is, in respect to its application to the instant case, to be read in connection with subdivision “f ” of section 34 of the same act, which reads as follows:

“Where any employer is insured against liability for compensation with any insurance carrier and such insurance carrier shall have paid any compensation for which the employer was liable, or shall have assumed the liability of the employer therefor, it shall be subrogated to all the rights and duties of the employer and may enforce any such rights in its own name.”

A proper construction of these provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act in our judgment is that they were intended to permit what has not heretofore been sanctioned by law, viz., an assignment of an injured person’s right of action against his tort-feasor, and to provide that the making by him of a lawful claim for compensation under the terms of the Workmen’s Compensation Act against his employer, and the latter’s *392 insurer, should operate as a transfer of the legal title to his claim for damages against his said tort-feasor to his employer, or to the latter’s insurer, paying such claim. This has in effect been so held by this court in the recent case of Bassot v. United Railroads, ante, p. 60, [177 Pac. 884].

The respondent insists, however, that the use of the word “subrogated” in the foregoing provisions of the Workmen’s Compensation Act rendered the right of action acquired by the plaintiff thereunder an equitable cause of action as against the defendant herein.

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Bluebook (online)
178 P. 974, 39 Cal. App. 388, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massachusetts-bonding-insurance-v-san-francisco-oakland-terminal-calctapp-1919.