Renner v. Model Laundry, Cleaning & Dyeing Co.

191 Iowa 1288
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 30, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 191 Iowa 1288 (Renner v. Model Laundry, Cleaning & Dyeing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Renner v. Model Laundry, Cleaning & Dyeing Co., 191 Iowa 1288 (iowa 1921).

Opinion

WeaveR, J.

servant: workmen’s Compensation Act: right agafnít °tMrdn paiiy. On July 25, 1917, A. B. Bodine, since deceased, was an employee in the service of the defendant laundry company, and in pursuance of such employment was driving a laundry wagon in the streets of the city of Waterloo. While he was thus engaged, a col- ,. n , , n ^ . . lision occurred between the wagon and a street ear operated by the Waterloo, Cedar Falls & Northern Railway Company. In this collision, Bodine was severely injured. Soon after the injury, the insurance carrier, the Fidelity and Casualty Company, undertook to pay the injured employee compensation at the rate of $7.61 per week, and did pay him at that rate for a period of about three months. Thereafter, said company refused to make further payments, alleging as grounds for such refusal that Bodine had made a settlement with the street railway company for the same injuries, and received payment therefor to the amount of $750, [1290]*1290being1 a sum in excess of the amount which the employee could recover, as compensation under the statute; and that, because of such settlement with the railway company, the employer and his insurer are both released from further liability.

Upon defendant’s refusal to make further payment, Bodine applied to the state industrial commissioner for the appointment of a committee of arbitration to consider his claim. After hearing the evidence, two of the committee of three united in finding and reporting that:

“Were it not for the connection of the Waterloo, Cedar Palls & Northern Railway Company with the case, and the payment by it to claimant on account of his injury, the claimant would be entitled to receive from defendant compensation at the rate of $8.38 per week, beginning with the date of the accident and continuing 105 weeks.”

In addition to such statement, the majority of the committee further found that, because of the payment by the railway company to the claimant, the compensation which would otherwise be his due from the defendants should be reduced or diminished by the sum of $750. The third member of the committee, Judge Williams, filed a minority report, dissenting from the conclusion so announced. The claimant having filed a petition for review, the matter was reheard by the industrial commissioner, who sustained the majority report of the committee. It should also here be said that, pending this appeal to the commissioner, the claimant, Bodine, died, and the administrator of his estate, W. C. Renner, was substituted as plaintiff. Further appeal was prosecuted by the administrator to the district court, which, upon consideration of the record, reversed the ruling of the commissioner, and entered judgment for the plaintiff for the full amount of unpaid statutory compensation which had accrued up to the date of Bodine’s death, without any deduction on account of the money received by the deceased from the railway company.

Prom that judgment, defendants have appealed to this court.

The evidence, as disclosed by the record, is very brief. It is conceded that Bodine was one of the employees of the laundry company, and that, while engaged in its service, he suffered an [1291]*1291injury in a collision which occurred between the wagon-driven by him and a street car. It is also conceded that, after the collision, the injured man was visited by a representative of the railway company, with whom he entered into a written agreement, which, after a formal preamble, provides as follows:

“The railway company in consideration of the said Bodine covenanting not to sue the said railway company -or any of its officers, servants or employees for or on account of injuries sustained by him in the collision referred to in the preamble hereof, hereby agreés to pay to the said Bodine the sum of seven hundred and fifty ($750.00) dollars and the said Bodine in consideration of the payment to him by the said railway company of the said sum of seven hundred and fifty ($750.00) dollars hereby covenants and agrees not to sue the said railway company or any of its officers, servants or employees for or on account of the injuries or damages sustained by him in the aforesaid collision, and the said Bodine hereby acknowledges receipt of the said sum of seven hundred and fifty ($750.00) dollars from the railway company. It is hereby expressly understood and agreed that this instrument is not a release of the said railway company nor to said Bodine’s employer or the insurer of said employer under the Workmen’s Compensation Act of the State of Iowa, nor to any other corporation, firm, or person, but is simply a covenant not to sue the said railway company, its officers, servants or employees, on account of the injuries above mentioned. ’ ’

The consideration of $750 mentioned in the writing was received and retained by Bodine. Prior to this transaction, the laundry company’s insurer, the defendant Fidelity & Casualty Company, as we have already said, had undertaken to pay Bodine compensation at the rate of $7.61 per week, and did make such payments for a period of three months, when it refused further payment on the ground that it had been relieved of further liability, to the extent at least of the sum which Bodine had received from the railway company. Aside from the bare fact that there was a collision between the wagon and the car, and that Bodine sustained an injury therein, there is no testimony as to the attending facts and circumstances; and if either party to such collision was chargeable with negligence or [1292]*1292wrong, we are without any evidence of it. There is no evidence that Bodine made or presented any claim against the railway company on account of his injury,- and as to the intention of the parties in making the agreement there is no showing, except as it is revealed in the writing itself and the testimony of the railway’s representative, who says: “The purpose of the covenant not to sue was not to settle the question of liability.” The industrial commissioner adopted the finding of the majority of the arbitration committee, that the claimant was entitled to receive compensation under the statute, but that, since he had received $750 from the railway company, the compensation so payable should be reduced by that amount. In reaching this conclusion, the commissioner held that the burden was upon the claimant to establish the fact that the money received from the railway company was not a recovery of damages, within the meaning of the statute, and laid down the proposition that the payment of the money by the railway company was a “definite recognition of liability.”

With the foregoing statement of the substance of the record and the attitude of the parties, we turn to the questions of law so presented.

I. The authority for reducing the compensation diie to Bodine, as was done by the arbitration committee and industrial commissioner, is to be found, if at all, in that part of the Compensation Statute which provides as follows:

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191 Iowa 1288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/renner-v-model-laundry-cleaning-dyeing-co-iowa-1921.