Eidson v. Hardware Mut. Cas. Co.
| Decision Date | 09 December 1950 |
| Citation | Eidson v. Hardware Mut. Cas. Co., 27 Beeler 430, 191 Tenn. 430, 234 S.W.2d 836 (Tenn. 1950) |
| Parties | , 191 Tenn. 430 EIDSON v. HARDWARE MUT. CASUALTY CO. |
| Court | Tennessee Supreme Court |
Phillips & Hale, Rogersville, for complainants.
C. W. Margraves, Rogersville, Hodges & Doughty, Knoxville, for defendants.
The bill in this cause was filed in the Chancery Court of Hawkins County by the widow of a deceased employee, to recover death benefits on a policy of Workmen's Compensation Insurance from the Insurance Company of the employer. The employer is a partnership, McDonald & Sons Company, which, in a single business, operates a grain mill in Rogersville, and a 1,000-acre farm in the county nearby. The partnership is not made a party to this suit, and no relief is here sought against it.
The husband of the complainant was a farm laborer, who, in the course and within the scope of his employment, was killed in an accident on the public highway while he was riding on top of a load of hay. He was swept from the top of the load by the limb of a tree, and fell, sustaining the injuries from which he died, and for which the present action was instituted on the policy. In accordance with the terms of the policy, the employer reported the claim and the Insurance Company accepted liability and sent its first check for compensation under the Act. Being then advised by counsel, that since the deceased was a farm laborer, his employment was excepted from the Tennessee Workmen's Compensation Act, Code sec. 6856, and that so the Company might avoid liability on the policy, the Company refused to make further payments, and this bill was filed. The Chancellor, under the authority of Woods v. City of LaFollette, 185 Tenn. 655, 207 S.W.2d 572, decreed recovery for the complainant on the policy and the Insurance Company has perfected this appeal.
The policy of insurance which is the basis of this litigation, is substantially identical with that considered by the Court in Woods v. City of LaFollette, supra, and is a 'Standard Workmen's Compensation and Employer's Liability Policy.' Since the applicable provisions of the policy are quoted at length in the Woods case 185 Tenn. at pages 657 through 660, 207 S.W.2d at page 573, we find it unnecessary to recopy them here. It is sufficient to say that the Insurance Company defends on the ground that since at the time of his death, the employee was employed as a farm laborer that the liability of the Company, if any, is not under '(a)' (Woods opinion, 185 Tenn. at page 658), 207 S.W.2d at page 573, the Workmen's Compensation Law, but under '(b)' (Woods opinion, 185 Tenn. at page 658), 207 S.W.2d at page 573, 'To Indemnify this Employer against loss by reason of the liability imposed upon him by law for damages * * *.'
In the Woods case, supra, the Insurance Company unsuccessfully predicated its defense on two grounds: (1) That the deceased employee being a policeman, was an 'officer' and not an 'employee.' Cornet v. City of Chattanooga, 165 Tenn. 563, 56 S.W.2d 742. (2) That the Company was liable, if at all, under the Employer's Liability provisions of the policy, to the employer for damages recovered against it in an action at Common Law. The second defense is identical in all respects with that made by the Company here.
The policy provides that the amount of premiums shall be established and based upon the total amount of wages paid to the employees covered by the policy. In the policy as it was an exhibit to the bill, the categories of employees covered are listed in three groups, and the amount of annual premiums to be paid is estimated on the basis of the estimated total annual remuneration of these employees. The three categories of employees to be covered were:
Classification of Operations Estimated Rate per $100 Estimated
Total Annual of Premium
Remuneration Remuneration
Grain milling 2014 8,645 1.76 152.15
Chauffeurs and their helpers N. O. 2,915 .87 25.36
C. Commercial--including garage
rage employees 7380
Farms--N. O. C.--All employees 1,650 1.58 26.07
other than inservants--including
drivers, chauffeurs & their
helpers 0006
There is no indication from this schedule that employees in one of these categories were to be covered in a different manner or under a different part of the policy from the employees in the other categories. So far as the policy discloses the rate base for premiums on employees in all three categories were the same. Since the effect of the testimony was not to alter or contradict any written term of the policy, it was proper for the Chancellor to hear the evidence of the employer of the conversation had with the agent of the Company at the time the policy of insurance was taken out. His testimony in this regard is significant:
'A. I believe we carried compensation insurance on the mill. In other words, we are required to do that. As I remember, we asked the agent if we could include farm hands and he said yes, and I told him to include them.
'Q. Was this policy issued to you subsequent to that conversation? A. Yes, sir.
'Q. I will ask you if this policy as exhibited here shows an estimated premium for farms of $26.07, based on a payroll of $1650, is that true? A. Yes, sir.
'Q. I will ask you, Mr. McDonald, if this premium was changed or if it remained the same according to an audit of your policy? A. This is an estimate. If it runs over we pay more and if it runs less we pay less.
'Q. Mr. McDonald, I hand you this little slip of paper which is headed 'Report of Audit' on Policy No. 720972, and ask you if that is the report of the audit of your various payrolls and an adjustment of the premiums paid by you? A. Yes, sir.
'Q. Listed on this audit is 'Farm N. O. C.', and I will ask you what the payroll was as actually audited? A. $2,029.00.
The 'Report of Audit' to which reference is made in the foregoing excerpt from McDonald's testimony was the final and considered calculation of the Insurance Company upon which the final charge for premium was based to the employer. From that document it is clear, that no other form than Workmen's Compensation Insurance was charged for, or paid to the Insurance Company. In that document the kind of policy is described as being (Workmen's Compensation), and the total earned premium for the three categories of employees,--Grain Milling, Chauffeurs and their helpers, and Farm N. O. C., is carried under the column headed 'Workmen's Compensation.' Furthermore, the check and covering letter which were sent by the Insurance Company to the employer, upon receipt of notice of the accidental injury to Eidson, stated that the check was for 'Compensation 9/10/49 to 9/16/49.'
Finally, a representative of the Insurance Company testified as follows:
On this record, we think the evidence is conclusive that the agent of the Insurance Company agreed to add the 'Farm Employees' to the 'Mill Employees' and 'Chauffeurs,' and to give to all three categories identical coverage; that the Company ratified this agreement of its agent, charged premiums accordingly, and commenced to carry out its contract by paying compensation when it received notice from the employer under terms of the Workmen's Compensation Act. It was only when the Company was advised by counsel that it might escape liability and repudiate its contract that it denied liability on the claim.
The defense of the Company is irreconcilable with the documentary evidence of how the premiums were billed and collected, with the action of the parties, and particularly, with the limitation of coverage of 'Farm Employees' in the original policy where the limitation of coverage is defined as If, as counsel for the Company insists, it was intended by this limitation to insure the employer against common law actions by the farm employees, why were 'inservants' excepted from the coverage when their rights of action at common law against the employer, were in all respects, equal to the rights of farm employees? The word 'inservants' is an unusual one and the only explanation for its use here is, we think, the fact that such servants are coupled with farm operatives in our Workmen's Compensation Act, where at Code sec. 6856(c) it is provided that this Chapter shall not apply to 'domestic servants and employers thereof; nor to farm or agricultural laborers and employers thereof.' The only fair inference is that when the Insurance Company coupled these two categories of employees and specifically agreed to cover farm laborers, but to exclude inservants, that reference was intended to the Workmen's Compensation Act for such coverage, and not to the employers' liability to employees at common law.
The Tennessee Workmen's Compensation Act is an 'elective' statute, Scott v. Nashville Bridge Co., 143 Tenn. 86, 223 S.W. 844, and classes of employment that are excepted from the provisions of the Act by Code sec. 8659, may be brought...
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Canipe v. National Loss Control Service Corp., Civ. A. No. DC 81-192-WK-O.
...promisor and the promisee is made upon sufficient consideration for the benefit of the third party. Eidson v. Hardware Mutual Casualty Company, 191 Tenn. 430, 439, 234 S.W.2d 836, 840 (1950). However, Tennessee also recognizes the rule that "an incidental beneficiary acquires no rights agai......
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Edward M. Johnson and Associates, Inc., In re
...to the contract intend to bestow a benefit on that party. This is also the law of Tennessee. See, e.g., Eidson v. Hardware Mut. Casualty Co., 191 Tenn. 430, 234 S.W.2d 836 (1950); Willard v. Claborn, 220 Tenn. 501, 419 S.W.2d 168 (1967). See also Moore Constr. v. Clarksville Dept. of Elec.,......
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Maxwell v. Southern American Fire Ins. Co.
...Department Store, Inc., 117 Fla. 119, 157 So. 506 (1934); American Surety Co. of New York v. Smith, supra; Eidson v. Hardware Mut. Casualty Co., 191 Tenn. 430, 234 S.W.2d 836 (1950); and Severson, supra. See also Restatement of Contracts § 136, comment d at p. Similar suits have been brough......
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Willard v. Claborn
...as third party beneficiaries under this contract of insurance we find the following statement in Eidson v. Hardware Mutual Casualty Co., 191 Tenn. 430, 234 S.W.2d 836 (1950): "In Tennessee the doctrine is firmly established that the beneficiary, though not a party to the contract, may maint......