Matlock ex rel. Matlock v. Hollis

109 P.2d 119, 153 Kan. 227, 132 A.L.R. 1316, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1941
DocketNo. 35,049
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 109 P.2d 119 (Matlock ex rel. Matlock v. Hollis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matlock ex rel. Matlock v. Hollis, 109 P.2d 119, 153 Kan. 227, 132 A.L.R. 1316, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 119 (kan 1941).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hooh, J.:

This is a workmen’s compensation case. Claimant, an injured workman, secured a default judgment in the district court against the employer, but was denied relief from the defendant insurance company. From the latter adverse judgment he appeals.

The questions presented are whether the trial court’s findings, as to the material facts, are supported by the evidence, and whether, if so supported, the court erred in its conclusion of law that the claimant had no right of recovery as against the insurance company. More specifically, the main law question is whether an employee can [228]*228recover compensation from an insurance company, for serious injury received prior to the application or issuance of an antedated compensation insurance policy, but within the term therein fixed, the fact of such injury having been fraudulently concealed by the employers when the application was made.

This case has been here before on another question. At the initial hearing before the commissioner, counsel for the insurance company made a statement which by admission became a stipulation as to certain facts, and outlined the company’s contention that on account of fraudulent representations and concealment, there was no coverage. Counsel and commissioner believing that the commissioner was without jurisdiction to consider the company’s equitable defense, no testimony was introduced by the company. The commissioner made an award from which thfe company appealed to the district court. Pending the hearing of this appeal in the district court, the insurance company instituted an independent action in equity seeking reformation or cancellation of the policy and an injunction against enforcement of the policy. Claimant, the employers, and the compensation commissioner were made defendants in the equity action, and pending the outcome of that action, the compensation proceedings were stayed in the district court. In Employers’ Liability Assurance Corp. v. Matlock, 151 Kan. 293, 98 P. 2d 456, this court considered an appeal from an order of the district court sustaining a demurrer to the petition in the equity action and held, in an opinion filed January 27,1940, that the jurisdiction of the compensation commissioner is complete, with a procedure that is exclusive for determining liability under the workmen’s compensation act, and that incidental thereto is the power to hear and determine equitable defenses. Accordingly, the order sustaining the demurrer was affirmed on the ground that the district court had no jurisdiction to entertain the separate action in equity until the remedies provided by the compensation act were exhausted. The appeal from the award by the commissioner thereupon proceeded in the district court.

The trial court made rather extended and detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law. It will suffice to summarize the findings of fact pertinent to the issue presented. The court found:

That J. P. and B. P. Hollis were drilling an oil well in Greenwood county in October, 1937;
That Ott Hollis, their father, was personally interested with his sons in the [229]*229oil drilling business, employed help, paid bills, paid this claimant for his work on the well, gave directions to the workers, and was in fact a partner;
That in November, after the accident in October, Ott Hollis wrote to the claimant advising him he was sending him some money and would have something for him to do as soon as he could drive a truck, and that “then we will take care of the hospital bill and Doctor”;
That in the forenoon of October 22, 1937, claimant received a severe injury while working on the well for Hollis brothers, B. P. Hollis being present at the time;
That in September, 1937, Mr. Corrigan, a solicitor for the Wheeler-Kelly-Hagney Company of Wichita wrote Hollis a letter asking about their compensation insurance, but received no reply at the time;
That in the afternoon of October 22, about four hours after the accident, Ott Hollis called upon Corrigan at his office in Wichita, “and representing the partnership, made application for compensation insurance with the Employers’ Liability Insurance Corporation”;
That, the application was received by Corrigan, together with a check for about 1112 in payment of the premium, and Hollis requested that the check be held until he could get back to Eureka and send a draft for it;
That a policy was thereupon issued, dated October 22, and the term fixed to begin at 12:01 a. m. of the same day — this provision of the policy being printed thereon in harmony with what appeared to be the customary practice of the company in'making such policies run from 12:01 a. m. of the date of issue;
That it does not appear from the record as to what date the policy was actually issued;
That when Hollis made the application he advised the agent that “they had carried compensation for about a five-year period; that they had only had two minor accidents prior to that period of time, and that they had never had any insurance canceled”;
That the statements so made to the agent were false for the reason that they had had compensation insurance previously which had been canceled and that they had had losses;
That Hollis did not disclose to the company the fact that the employee, Matlock, had beeen injured about four hours previous to the making of the application;
That the company, having discovered later upon investigation that the employee had been injured as above stated, that Hollis brothers had had compensation insurance previously which had been canceled, that they had had losses, that they were not financially reliable, returned the check and canceled the policy as of the date of issue;
That “representations made by Hollis as above were untrue and were fraudulently made for the purpose of securing said insurance, and such representations and the withholding of information of fact that an injury had already occurred to one of their employees, claimant herein, worked a fraud upon the insurance company”;
That prior to the instant application “these people had carried other liability insurance,” that Joe Matlock, father of the claimant, testified: “Well, of [230]*230course John Hollis, I was pretty well acquainted with Bart, I was talking to him on Wednesday, I believe, I was in Wichita when it happened, on Wednesday after it happened I was talking to Bart down at the well, and he said the boy is insured, he can chaw a thousand dollars and his doctor bill, but we would just rather pay him $16 a week and his doctor bill and not cash in on his insurance, that was what Bart told me”;
That “from the foregoing it is found that Hollis brothers at the time they made application for the insurance knew that the policy, if issued, would run from 12:01 a.m. of that date.”

Following were the court’s conclusions of law:

“1. The contract of insurance having been secured from the company through fraud perpetrated upon it by said Hollis brothers, created no protection to them or right of recovery by them, thereunder.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 P.2d 119, 153 Kan. 227, 132 A.L.R. 1316, 1941 Kan. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matlock-ex-rel-matlock-v-hollis-kan-1941.