Rochon v. Preferred Accident Insurance

171 A. 429, 118 Conn. 190, 1934 Conn. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 6, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 171 A. 429 (Rochon v. Preferred Accident Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rochon v. Preferred Accident Insurance, 171 A. 429, 118 Conn. 190, 1934 Conn. LEXIS 26 (Colo. 1934).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J.

The complaint in this action alleged that the plaintiff had secured a judgment against Philip Duphiney, for injuries received by reason of his negligent operation of an automobile which was in collision with one in which she was riding; that Fred A. Spencer and his wife or one of them was owner of the car; that the defendant had issued a policy insuring the owner of the car against liability for such injuries as the plaintiff suffered; that, as appears in a copy of the policy annexed to the complaint, it included within its provisions any person operating the car of the insured with his permission; that at the time of the accident Duphiney was operating the car with the owner’s permission; and that the Spencers and Duphiney had fulfilled all the obligations resting upon them under the terms of the policy. The plaintiff sought to recover the amount of the judgment, with interests and costs, under the provisions of § 4231 of the General Statutes. The defendant filed an answer in which it admitted and denied allegations of the complaint, including among its denials the allegation that Duphiney was operating the car at the time of the accident with the owner’s permission; and it also pleaded a special defense. In this it set out the provisions of the policy defining the word “assured” as including one operating the insured’s car with his permission, and also a condition requiring the assured to give written notice to the defendant of the accident, stating the circumstances thereof, and to cooperate with the company; and it alleged that one of the issues litigated in the original action was *193 whether Duphiney was operating the car at the time of the accident, that all the issues in that action were found, for tho plaintiff, that Duphiney had represented to it that he was not operating the car at that time, that this representation was untrue and made deliberately to deceive the defendant, and that thereby Duphiney had broken the condition in the policy requiring cooperation by an insured.

The defendant by this answer assumed two wholly inconsistent positions: First, it denied that Duphiney was operating the car with the owner’s permission; second, it alleged that by deliberately misstating to it that he was not operating the car he had broken the condition of the policy to which we have referred, which -would only be true if he were an assured, that is, was operating it with the owner’s permission. The defendant has persisted even into this court in attempting to maintain these opposing contentions, Thus, one ground of appeal is the refusal of the trial court to correct the finding so that it will state that Duphiney was not operating the car at the time of the accident; although a finding of the trial court that Duphiney was an assured under the terms of the policy is not attacked, and this would only be true if he was operating the car with the owner’s permission, the defendant does seek to correct another finding of the trial court that, upon the evidence before it, a conclusion that Duphiney lied to it was not warranted. A defendant is not entitled thus to pursue two wholly inconsistent claims in his pleadings. Patchen v. Delohery Hat Co., 82 Conn. 592, 594, 74 Atl. 881. The defendant’s attempt to do this has resulted in a record so complicated as to make it difficult properly to dispose of the case, and to indicate a need of a disposition of the issues in a more orderly way than has been followed. In this situation we do *194 not feel constrained to adhere too closely to technical rules in considering this appeal.

The trial court has found the facts as to the recovery of the judgment by the plaintiff against Duphiney and also that, on the evening of the accident, Mr. Spencer had intrusted the car to Duphiney; that Duphiney gave to the representative of the defendant a statement of the accident in which he represented that he had left the car parked in the street before the accident and when he returned he found that it had been stolen and that the person operating it at the time of the accident was unknown; that on the trial of the first action, as on the trial of this, Duphiney had testified to this effect; and that the defendant had offered no evidence on this trial tending or intended to prove that any statement made by him was untrue. The trial court then stated certain “conclusions of fact,” among them, that Duphiney was an assured under the policy, that no evidence introduced in the action would warrant a finding that he lied, that he fully cooperated with the defendant and that the defendant did not prove the material allegations of its special defense; and among its conclusions of law the trial court stated that it was Duphiney’s duty as an assured under the provision in the policy requiring cooperation to tell the truth, that he did cooperate with the defendant and that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment.

An examination of the finding discloses no subordinate facts to support the “conclusion of fact” that Duphiney was an assured under the policy, that is, that at the time of the accident he was driving the car with the permission of the owner. The apparent basis of that conclusion is the judgment in the original action. As between the plaintiff and Duphiney no doubt this judgment would be res adjudicata upon the *195 issue whether or not he was then driving the car. But it would not establish the fact as between the plaintiff and the present defendant that Duphiney was an assured under the policy. Whether or not he was, would be an issue to be established by independent evidence in the trial of the present case and until it was established the judgment would be without effect. The situation in this regard is like that presented where a judgment is claimed to be binding upon certain persons as privies; before it can be given conclusive effect as to them, it is necessary to determine, if it be not conceded, whether they are in fact privies; and in any action upon the judgment that must first be determined by independent inquiry in the court where the action is brought. Waterbury v. Clark, 91 Conn. 254, 258, 99 Atl. 578; Chicago & N. W. R. Co. v. Northern Line Packet Co., 70 Ill. 217, 220; New York Title & M. Co. v. Title Guarantee & T. Co., 175 N. Y. Sup. 763; Pfarr v. Standard Oil Co., 165 Iowa, 657, 671, 146 N. W. 851; 1 Freeman, Judgments (5th Ed.) §§448, 450. Moreover, the “conclusion of fact” of the trial court, that the defendant did not prove the material allegations of its special defense, was based upon an evident misconception. It is our established practice that one suing upon an insurance policy may allege in general terms compliance with all the obligations it imposes upon him, that the defendant insurer must then allege any breach of the terms of the policy upon his part upon which it proposes to rely, but that such an allegation does not shift the burden of proof, the plaintiff being bound to prove performance as regards the breach alleged. Harty v. Eagle Indemnity Co., 108 Conn. 563, 565, 143 Atl. 847. In passing, we call' attention to the fact that the finding does not state the claims of law made by the defendant at the trial, as it should.

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Bluebook (online)
171 A. 429, 118 Conn. 190, 1934 Conn. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rochon-v-preferred-accident-insurance-conn-1934.