Mossuto v. United States Casualty Co.

40 P.2d 170, 180 Wash. 481, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 476
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1935
DocketNo. 24921. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 P.2d 170 (Mossuto v. United States Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mossuto v. United States Casualty Co., 40 P.2d 170, 180 Wash. 481, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 476 (Wash. 1935).

Opinion

*482 Geraghty, J.

This action was brought by Mossuto and wife to recover upon an insurance binder written by the defendant United States Casualty Company, and alleged by the plaintiffs to be a contract indemnifying them against any public liability and property damage suffered in the course of their operations in excavating a certain lot in the city of Spokane.

Mossuto entered into a contract with W. ft. Matthews for excavating lot 3, block 37, Railroad Addition to Spokane. The lot was of rocky formation, and the use of explosives would be required in the operation. Mossuto was acquainted with Rosswell S. Matthews (sometimes referred to in the record as Ross Matthews), who was in the insurance business and had authority to solicit business as agent for the defendant. Matthews consulted the general agents of the defendant in Spokane, Hahn & Daly, about the policy. Dotson, a special agent of the defendant then in the city, was also consulted. As a result, a combination office binder was written covering Mossuto’s operations for the period of fifteen days, beginning with noon of the fifth of May, 1930. This binder referred to lot 3, upon which the work was to be done, described the character of work as building construction, identified the amount of insurance as “limits 10/20,” and recited that the company

“. . . by these presents has authorized its agent to bind insurance subject to the provisions and conditions of its policy form (excepting only cancellation wherein the terms of this binder are substituted) applicable to the risk described, for a period of fifteen (15) calendar days (including the unexpired part of the day this binder becomes effective) subject, however, to cancellation, by the Company or its agent, by written notice or telegram delivered at the Assured’s address herein given or to him personally, and to become effective at twelve o’clock midnight of the second business day following the date of such notice. *483 Assured accepts this binder on such terms and subject to the provisions herein stated.”

The binder was countersigned by Hahn & Daly, the company’s general agents in Spokane.

On May 9th, Hahn & Daly received a telegram from the defendant’s office in New York requesting them to replace “public liability and property damage risks William it. Matthews and John Mossuto covered by and under binders.” On May 12th, Mr. Daly, of Hahn & Daly, showed this telegram to Ross Matthews, and on May 14th, Daly advised Matthews that arrangements had been made with the agents of another company to carry the insurance on the Mossuto contract. The binder written by the defendant had been given to William R. Matthews, the owner of the lot, and it was in a file in his desk, accessible to Ross Matthews, whose desk was in the same office. Ross Matthews took the binder out of this file and brought it to Hahn & Daly in the forenoon of May 14th, for the purpose, as he testified, of furnishing the necessary information for writing the new insurance in the other company.

A new binder was written by McCrea & Company, insurance agents for the Ocean Accident and Guarantee Corporation, and brought to the office of Hahn & Daly. Hahn & Daly were advised, however, that this binder would require confirmation from the company’s head office in San Francisco before it would be effective to cover blasting, and that it would take at least a day to get this confirmation either by wire or air mail.

Up to this time, no notice had been given to Mossuto of the defendant’s objection to the binder or its wish to have it replaced. Ross Matthews returned to the office of Hahn & Daly about two-thirty in the afternoon, and was given the new form of binder in the *484 Ocean Accident and Guarantee Corporation. Matthews put the new binder, incomplete for lack of confirming authority, in his pocket, and went to the office of Attorney Mack, where he was to meet Mossuto in relation to another contract which Mossuto was negotiating. Under the direction of Daly, a clerk in his office stamped the defendant’s binder cancelled.

At Mr. Mack’s office, Boss Matthews told Mossuto for the first time that the company requested a replacement, and that a new binder had been written, but was not complete. Matthews had the new binder in his pocket, but did not deliver it to Mossuto. At four o’clock that afternoon, a premature blast occurred at the work, causing damage to a number of automobiles owned by the Thompson-Cadillac Company and stored on an adjacent lot.

The Thompson-Cadillac Company subsequently sued Mossuto and wife for this damage, and recovered a judgment against them in the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars. After the institution of this suit, the Mossutos tendered its defense to the defendant casualty company, claiming it was its duty to do so under the terms of the binder written on May 5th. The defendant declined to defend, and denied liability on the binder. This suit is brought by the Mossutos against the defendant to recover upon its binder for the damage suffered by them by reason of the judgment recovered by the Thompson-Cadillac Company. The judgment has not been paid by the Mossutos.

At the close of plaintiffs’ case, the defendant’s motion to dismiss was denied; a like motion was denied at the close of all the testimony, and the motion of plaintiffs for a directed verdict was granted. Motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, for a new trial were made by the defendant and denied.

*485 After the verdict and before the entry of judgment, the Thompson-Cadillac Company appeared in the action by petition, and prayed to be substituted as plaintiff in place of the Mossutos, in accordance with Eule of Practice II of this court (Eem. Eev. Stat., § 308-2 [P. C. §8676-5]). This petition alleged the recovery of the judgment against the Mossutos; that the judgment had not been paid, and that the Mossutos were insolvent; the execution by the defendant of a contract with John Mossuto, by the terms of which it agreed to insure him against liability imposed by law for damages sustained by any person or corporation through or during the operation of removing rock in performance of his contract with Matthews; that, under the terms of the contract, it was agreed that, in the event of the bankruptcy or insolvency of Mos-suto, the casualty company would not be released from the payment of any judgment recovered against Mos-suto, by reason of any damage sustained through the operation of removing such rock; and that, if, because of such bankruptcy or insolvency, an execution against Mossuto or enforcement of any such judgment was returned unsatisfied, an action might be maintained by such injured person or corporation against the defendant for the amount of such judgment so obtained.

Notice of the filing of this petition was served upon the plaintiffs Mossuto and the defendant. The plaintiffs contested the substitution, and filed an answer to the petition. The defendant appeared by its attorneys, and filed an answer. The issues raised by the petition and the answers were heard by the court, and an order made substituting the Thompson-Cadillac Company as plaintiff in place of the Mossutos.

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Bluebook (online)
40 P.2d 170, 180 Wash. 481, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mossuto-v-united-states-casualty-co-wash-1935.