State Compensation Ins. Fund v. Industrial Accident Commission

132 P.2d 890, 56 Cal. App. 2d 443, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 225
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 31, 1942
DocketCiv. No. 12264
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 132 P.2d 890 (State Compensation Ins. Fund v. Industrial Accident Commission) 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
State Compensation Ins. Fund v. Industrial Accident Commission, 132 P.2d 890, 56 Cal. App. 2d 443, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 225 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

STURTEVANT, J.

This is an application for a writ of review. The petitioner seeks to obtain an order annulling an award made in favor of A. T. Morris & Sons, Inc., the employer, and against the petitioner as the insurance carrier of said employer. No question of fact is involved. The sole question presented is whether the policy issued by the petitioner is a valid contract.

A. T. Morris & Sons, Inc., is a member of Associated Home Builders of San Francisco, an industrial association and corporation which was organized and is operated for sundry purposes, one of which is to purchase “group” workmen’s compensation insurance. The petitioner issued several certificates of workmen’s compensation insurance to employer members of said Associated Home Builders of San Fran[445]*445cisco, including one to the respondent A. T. Morris & Sons, Inc., purporting to insure each of them in full against liability under the workmen’s compensation provisions of the Labor Code of the State of California. The certificate of workmen’s compensation insurance to respondent A. T. Morris & Sons, Inc., was for the period January 1, 1942, to January 1, 1943. On February 6, 1942, Allan Anderson, while employed as a mechanic at San Francisco, California, by A. T. Morris & ..Sons, Inc., sustained an injury arising out of and occurring in the course of his employment, when a foreign body lodged in his left eye. On February 27, 1942, said employer filed with the respondent Industrial Accident Commission, an application directed against said Allan Anderson, employee, and State Compensation Insurance Fund, requesting reimbursement of certain expenditures for medical treatment given to said employee, Allan Anderson, on account of said injury. A hearing was held before the respondent commission and there was placed in issue the validity of the insurance coverage and the right of the insured respondent, A. T. Morris & Sons, Inc., to enforce the same. On June 29, 1942, the Industrial Accident Commission issued its findings and award in favor of said application and against the petitioner. Later the latter applied for a rehearing. On July 6, 1942, the Industrial Accident Commission issued its order denying a rehearing. Thereafter this application was made.

As stated above, the petitioner claims that the policy issued to the insured was not a valid contract. We think it is mistaken. In paragraph 2 of the award made by the respondent commission the latter made findings as follows:

“2. On or before January 1, 1942, the defendant State Compensation Insurance Fund issued to applicant, A. T. Morris & Sons, Inc., a policy of workmen’s compensation insurance effective from January 1, 1942, to January 1, 1943, under an agreement or arrangement between State Compensation Insurance Fund on the one hand and A. T. Morris & Sons, Inc., and other insureds on the other hand, by the terms of which the insurer was and is to receive full standard premium rates from each of the insureds and is to combine the premiums and losses of the several insureds and, after conclusion of the policy year, is to declare a dividend for distribution among the several insureds, provided all premiums are paid and a surplus is available, and provided that the [446]*446combined loss experience justifies, and the financial position of the insurer is deemed by the Industrial Accident Commission to warrant such a payment. The dividend, if any, which the assured will receive may reasonably be expected to be greater, but may in some cases be less, than the dividend' which such assured would receive if its workmen’s compensation insurance were treated individually rather than in combination with the premiums and loss experience of the several other insureds; and the dividend received by such assured for the policy year just concluded was in fact less than such assured would have received if insured under an individual policy. Bach of the insureds is required to be, and is, a member of a bona fide association of building contractors, to wit, the Associated Home Builders of San Francisco, a corporation organized to promote many common interests of its members in the building industry, which interests were later enlarged to include the purchase of workmen’s compensation insurance upon a ‘group’ plan. The agreement in its operation tends to reduce the costs of payroll auditing and claims adjustment, to reduce the incidence of non-insurance of employers as to coverage of their employees for workmen’s compensation liability and to promote accident prevention. The form of this agreement and the procedures followed thereunder do not affect the validity of the insurance issued by the State Compensation Insurance Fund to the applicant herein, and are in all respects lawful. No question of equitable liability or of estoppel is presented, and this decision does not rest upon any claim thereof. ” The facts therein recited are a concise statement of the testimony given by B. N. Shoreen, assistant superintendent of underwriting for the State Compensation Insurance Fund, Milton W. Morris, executive secretary of the Associated Home Builders of San Francisco, A. T. Morris, Jr., secretary of A. T. Morris & Sons, Inc., C. L.' Barr, superintendent of safety engineering of the State Compensation Insurance Fund, B. C. Kuhn, formerly assistant executive secretary of the Associated Home Builders of San Francisco, and George Bush, cashier and credit manager of the State Compensation Insurance Fund. Said facts are not controverted by the testimony of any witnesses. Other “group” policies of workmen’s compensation insurance have been written since 1923 with the knowledge and acquiescence of the administrative officers of the several departments of the state interested in such [447]*447matters. The annual premiums received from such policies now amount to $1,500,000, and the interests of many thousands of employees are given protection under them.

Except as will hereinafter be noted, it is not even claimed by the petitioner that the said policy or any of its provisions contravene any of the provisions of section 1667 of the Civil Code, or any express prohibition or penal statute.

We do not understand the petitioner to contend that if the issuance of said policy was an act within petitioner’s corporate objects, purposes and powers, but the powers have been exercised in an improper manner, that then and in that event the insured may not recover. Of course, he may recover. (California C. P. Growers v. Harkey, 11 Cal.2d 188, 210 [78 P.2d 1137]; Dunne v. Independent Order of Foresters, 185 Cal. 211 [196 P. 41, 18 A.L.R. 639].) However, we do understand the petitioner to claim that the said policy was beyond the scope of the powers of the petitioner, express or implied, and that it cannot be ratified by either party because it could not have been authorized by either, and no performance on either side can give the contract any validity or be the foundation of any right of action upon it. (6a Cal. Jur. 1279; Stevens v. Boyes Hot Springs, 113 Cal.App. 479, 482 [298 P. 508].) So contending petitioner claims the policy was in violation of sections 11730-11742 of the Insurance Code. That contention rests solely in argument. The petitioner does not cite any passage contained in any one of those sections which it claims the policy violated. Assuming, solely for the purpose of this opinion, that some such passage could be cited, it must be conceded at once that such passage is ambiguous.

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Bluebook (online)
132 P.2d 890, 56 Cal. App. 2d 443, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-compensation-ins-fund-v-industrial-accident-commission-calctapp-1942.