Toebe v. EMPLOYERS MUT. OF WAUSAU

274 A.2d 820, 114 N.J. Super. 39
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMarch 11, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 274 A.2d 820 (Toebe v. EMPLOYERS MUT. OF WAUSAU) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toebe v. EMPLOYERS MUT. OF WAUSAU, 274 A.2d 820, 114 N.J. Super. 39 (N.J. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

114 N.J. Super. 39 (1971)
274 A.2d 820

ALLEN D. TOEBE, PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT CROSS-APPELLANT,
v.
EMPLOYERS MUTUAL OF WAUSAU, ET AL., DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS CROSS-RESPONDENTS.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued September 14, 1970.
Final supplemental memoranda received November 18, 1970.
Decided March 11, 1971.

*41 Before Judges GOLDMANN, LEONARD and MOUNTAIN.

Mr. Harold Friedman argued the cause for respondent-cross-appellant (Messrs. Kirsten, Solomon & Friedman, substituted attorneys).

Mr. Gerald W. Conway argued the cause for appellants-cross-respondents (Messrs. Schreiber & Lancaster, attorneys).

American Mutual Insurance Alliance filed a brief amicus curiae (Messrs. Smith, Stratton, Wise & Heher, attorneys; Mr. John H. Heher, on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by GOLDMANN, P.J.A.D.

Plaintiff, holder of a New Jersey workmen's compensation award entered against his employer, Robert Schmidt Truck Leasing, Inc., of New Brighton, *42 Minnesota (Schmidt), brought an action in the Superior Court, Law Division, to recover payment of the award against defendant Employees Mutual Liability Insurance Company of Wisconsin, which had issued a workmen's compensation insurance policy in Minnesota to Schmidt under the assigned risk law of Minnesota. On cross-motions for summary judgment the trial judge denied defendant's and granted plaintiff's motion. Plaintiff then applied for a counsel fee of $4,725.33 for services rendered by his attorney in the present action. The court awarded only $1,300. Final judgment on the entire case was thereafter entered in favor of plaintiff. Defendant appealed, and plaintiff filed a cross-appeal as to the counsel fee.

The facts are essentially uncontradicted. Plaintiff, an employee of Schmidt, suffered a work-connected injury while operating one of his employer's trucks in New Jersey. He filed a petition with the New Jersey Division of Workmen's Compensation and was awarded approximately $13,201 against Schmidt. (Defendant refused to give Schmidt a defense, claiming it had no obligation to do so under its policy.) Plaintiff docketed this award as a judgment in the Essex County Court and then in the Superior Court. Schmidt apparently never paid any part of the award; the reason for this does not appear in the record. Plaintiff eventually instituted an action against defendant insurer in the Law Division.

The "Standard Workmen's Compensation and Employers' Liability Insurance Policy" issued to Schmidt by defendant contains the following insuring agreements:

I Coverage A — Workmen's Compensation

To pay promptly when due all compensation and other benefits required of the insured by the workmen's compensation law.

Coverage B. — Employers' Liability

To pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of bodily injury by accident or disease, including death at any time resulting therefrom, sustained in the United States of America, its territories or possessions, or Canada by any employee of the insured arising out of *43 and in the course of his employment by the insured either in operations in a state designated in Item 3 of the declarations or in operations necessary or incidental thereto.

Paragraph 3 of the Declarations reads as follows:

Coverage A of this policy applies to the Workmen's compensation law and any occupational disease law of each of the following states: Minnesota.

The issue on the cross-motions for summary judgment, as stated by the trial judge and briefed by the parties, is whether defendant is liable, under its contract of insurance made and issued to the employer in Minnesota, to pay the award granted by our Workmen's Compensation Division, where the policy specifically provided that coverage was limited to benefits payable under the workmen's compensation law of Minnesota. Answering this question in the affirmative, the judge held that "since New Jersey has jurisdiction to grant the award in this case, it should also have jurisdiction to permit an injured workman all the statutory remedies to effect recovery against his employer's insurance carrier." To deny the employee this supplemental relief when he is unable to collect the award from his employer would, in the judge's view, be against public policy.

Defendant concedes that the New Jersey Division of Workmen's Compensation had jurisdiction to entertain plaintiff's petition and to enter an award against his employer for his work-connected injury. See Boyle v. G. & K. Trucking Co., 37 N.J. 104 (1962). The real issue, it says, is whether the employer's liability for that award is covered by the terms of the workmen's compensation policy which the company issued to Schmidt, by whose terms coverage is said to be limited to liability arising under Minnesota's workmen's compensation law.

I

Plaintiff argues that the compensation award he recovered comes within the provisions of Coverage B of the *44 policy, quoted above. That coverage is patently different from what is provided by Coverage A, which expressly deals with workmen's compensation. Coverage B affords protection in the case of a common law action for damages by an employee, where such action is still permitted by a state law for injuries not covered by a workmen's compensation law. See Danek v. Hommer, 28 N.J. Super. 68, 74 (App. Div. 1953), aff'd p.c. 15 N.J. 573 (1954), dealing with a similar provision. Indeed, under Exclusion (f), defendant's policy expressly provided that it did not apply, under Coverage B, "to any obligation for which the insured or any carrier as his insurer may be held liable under the workmen's compensation or occupational disease law of a state designated in Item 3 of the declarations, any other workmen's compensation or occupational disease law, any unemployment compensation or disability benefits law, or under any similar law." Coverage B clearly has no application here, for plaintiff's injuries were compensable under Minnesota's workmen's compensation law, Minn. Stat. Ann., Workmen's Compensation, § 176.041, subds. 2 and 3, as well as under the law of New Jersey.

II

Defendant contends that by reason of Item 3 of the Declarations in its policy, it provided coverage only for such benefits as its insured, Schmidt, was required to pay under the workmen's compensation law of Minnesota, and not for benefits awarded under the New Jersey act or the law of any other state. It considers that question as having been decided and now controlled by Pennsylvania Mfrs. Cas. Ins. Co. v. Schmerbeck, 128 N.J.L. 180 (Sup. Ct. 1942), aff'd 131 N.J.L. 159 (E. & A. 1944). In that case the employee a New Jersey resident, filed a workmen's compensation petition in this State under N.J.S.A. 34:15-84 for work-connected injuries suffered in Morrisville, Pa., while in the employ of a Pennsylvania sand and gravel company. After a preliminary hearing in the Workmen's Compensation *45 Bureau on the limited issue of whether the employment contract under which petitioner was hired was made in New Jersey or Pennsylvania, the deputy commissioner found that the hiring had been in this State (a conclusion concurred in by our former Supreme Court on appeal). The employee then filed an amended claim petition adding the insurance carrier as a party.

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Bluebook (online)
274 A.2d 820, 114 N.J. Super. 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toebe-v-employers-mut-of-wausau-njsuperctappdiv-1971.