Western Indemnity Co. v. Indus. Acc. Com.

190 P. 27, 182 Cal. 709, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 566
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1920
DocketS. F. No. 8796.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 190 P. 27 (Western Indemnity Co. v. Indus. Acc. Com.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Indemnity Co. v. Indus. Acc. Com., 190 P. 27, 182 Cal. 709, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 566 (Cal. 1920).

Opinions

LAWLOR, J.

—This is a writ of review issued upon the application of petitioner, the Western Indemnity Company, a corporation. The Industrial Accident Commission, on April 23, 1918, made an award in the sum of $2,596.14 against the petitioner and in favor of Ethel Lamb, for the accidental death of her husband, John Lamb, an employee of Dr. Pond, of Napa County, it having been found by the commission that petitioner was the insurance carrier of Dr. Pond at the time of the injury. It appears that Dr. Pond had been engaged in operating a small farm and fruit orchard some ten or twelve miles from the city of Napa. John Lamb was employed on the place as a man of all work, and, although that kind of occupation does not fall . within the Workmen’s Compensation Act, both Dr. Pond and Lamb nevertheless elected to come under its provisions.

*711 On October 2, 1917, Lamb took a team of horses used on the place to a blacksmith-shop in the city of Napa to be shod. About noon, as he was taking the horses out of the shop, they became unmanageable and trampled upon him, inflicting injuries from which he died on October 6th.

The principal contention of petitioner is that it was not the insurance carrier of Dr. Pond when the accident occurred, and in this connection petitioner makes the claim that the following findings of the commission are without support in the evidence:

“6. That prior to the said second day of October, 1917, and on or about the twenty-fourth day of September, 1917, the defendant M. B. Pond had applied to Arthur H. Smith of Napa, the duly accredited and authorized agent of the defendant Western Indemnity Company, for a renewal of a then expiring policy of insurance covering his liability for injury to his employees, and had requested said agent to procure for him such policy, to take effect upon the expiration of his then existing policy, which would expire on September 25, 1917. That at that time it was the custom and the practice that an assured was covered by the insurance subsequently provided in the policy, from the date of his application. That after the application by said defendant Pond, and before the said second day of' October, 1917, said defendant Pond was notified by said agent Smith that the premium or rate of said insurance had increased, the exact amount of such increase being at that time not known to said agent. That thereupon said defendant Pond stated his willingness and consent to pay the increased rate and again requested that the policy be issued. That thereafter, and on or about the tenth day of October, 1917, the general agents of said Western Indemnity Company duly issued their policy of insurance dated the twenty-fifth day of September, 1917, to the said defendant Pond, insuring him against his liability for injuries to his employees, and that on the tenth day of October, 1917, _ said defendant duly paid to said agent Smith the full premium for said insurance, which premium was duly received and accepted by said agent. 7. That by reason of the facts as set forth in paragraph 6 hereof, the defendant Western Indemnity Company was the insurance carrier of said defendant employer at the time of said injury and had insured said employer *712 against liability for full compensation for said injury, and said employer is entitled to be relieved from such liability under the provisions of subdivision (e) (2) of section 30 of the Workmen’s Compensation, Insurance and Safety Act of 1917.” The evidence will sufficiently appear in the discussion.

Arthur H. Smith, doing business under the name of “Arthur H. Smith & Co.,” in the city of Napa, was engaged in placing insurance for various companies, including the Western Indemnity Company. Upon the filing by petitioner with the state insurance commissioner of “a duplicate power of attorney” on July 1, 1917, a license was issued to Smith for the term of one year in compliance with the provisions of section 633 of the Political Code. The license gave Smith authority “to solicit applications for insurance or surety bonds or to effect insurance or surety bonds in the name of said company.” This power of attorney was not introduced in evidence, but we shall assume that it corresponded with the license.

In September, 1916, Smith secured for Dr. Pond a policy of compensation insurance in “The Massachusetts Company.” That policy expired on September 25, 1917. On September 24, 1917, Dr. Pond went to the office of Smith and “verbally” requested that such policy be “renewed.” There is a dispute in =the testimony of Dr. Pond and Smith as to whether on this occasion Dr. Pond saw Smith personally or dealt with an employee in Smith’s office. Dr. Pond testified that “some time in September, I think after the 15th, I received a letter from Mr. Smith stating that my policy terminated . . . asking me ... if I wanted a renewal. I gave the letter to Mr. Smith when I went and ordered a renewal of insurance. I left it as a reminder. . . . He says: ‘The premium will be raised.’ I was informed that the last premium would be $10 for farmers, and it would be probably $15. . . . Any discussion we had was simply his statement to me that it would be probably not less than $15, and I told him to go ahead. I wanted, to be insured even if it was more. He told me right on the start it would probably be that much, ‘ possibly more, ’ is the way he put it.” Smith was asked: “At the time you took that application from Dr. Pond, was there any question about the issuance of a policy on account of the pre *713 mium—minimum premium?” And he answered: “You will have to ask the young lady in the office. She did that work that day. I was not in . . . ” Smith also testified that the general agent had informed him in a letter of June 29, 1917, that the premium rate for compensation insurance would'be $10 “at least temporarily,” and that “the first notice I had that the minimum premium on farm labor policies had been raised by petitioner was when this application was referred to in this case as being $15.”

Smith stated further that, as “The Massachusetts Company” had discontinued writing compensation insurance, on September 24th he forwarded to the general agent a written' application for coverage for Dr. Pond to begin on September 25, 1917, the application being signed by Smith alone, and in item 14 thereof, opposite the printed words “the minimum premium for this policy,” appearing the figures “$10.00.” This application was received on September 25th in the office of the general agent, Arthur G. Nason, who conducted the agency as “Arthur G. Nason & Co.” In due course Smith received an answer to the application under date of September 26th to the effect that the minimum premium on farm labor policies was $15, and stating: “We shall hold the application pending receipt of your advices as to whether or not we may write at this rate.” On September 29th Smith wrote to Dr. Pond: “We are in receipt of a letter from the company stating that the least they can write a compensation policy on farm labor is $15 minimum premium. Kindly advise us by return mail if this is satisfactory to you.”

There is a further lack of agreement in the testimony of Dr. Pond and Smith as to what occurred after September 24th. Smith testified as follows: “Q. Did you not see him between September 24th and October 2d? A. Me? No. ... Q. Do you know whether he came to your office during that interval? A. I couldn’t say. Q. Was it reported to you that he had been in there? A. No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 P. 27, 182 Cal. 709, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-indemnity-co-v-indus-acc-com-cal-1920.