Court Opinion

ID: 7278867
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-25 20:03:37.671879+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:18:58.535072
License: Public Domain

Mr. Chief Justice Smyth
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The provisions of the contract with respect to the responsibility of the ITupp company and its surety to the Chesapeake company for loss arising out of the operations of the ITupp company are quite sweeping in what they comprehend. They mean, as we understand them, that the Hupp and Casualty companies were to indemnify the Chesapeake company for any loss which it should sustain by reason of being compelled to respond in damages for injuries to third parties arising either directly or indirectly out of the operations of the Hupp company, or which should in any wise grow out of those operations. Gilmore’s presence on the track was due to them. He was there by invitation of the Hupp company to remove blocks which were placed upon the track in the course of its work. His injury befell him while he was performing a service for the ITupp' company, and it arose at least indirectly out of the operations of that company; therefore it produced one of the losses contemplated by the contract.
If we admit that an indemnitor is not liable for the negligence of the indemnitee except where it is expressly provided that it should be, that would not aid the position of the Hupp company and its surety, because as we construe the contract before us it in effect expressly provides for injuries flowing from negligence. Loss might come to the Chesapeake company through its own negligence, as well as otherwise. The presence *129031 or near the track of the IIupp company’s employees, and of others, such as Gilmore, brought there by its invitation, necessarily increased the chances of accident for which the Chesapeake company might be responsible. It was natural that the latter should desire to protect itself, against loss on this account, even where it was caused by the negligence of its own employees. If, as contended, it was the intention of the parties to the contract that it should be limited to “liability for accidents for which the Hupp company’s operations were responsible,” it would have been easy to have said so instead of using the all-embracing language which we have been considering.
In Woodbury v. Post, 158 Mass. 140, 144, 33 N. E. 86, cited by appellees, the plaintiffs sued upon a contract of indemnity which provided that the indemnitors should be liable for any injury “'occasioned to any person or property” although it should result from the negligence of certain described employees of the indemnitees. The plaintiffs, indemnitees, alleged that the injury for which they were compelled to respond in damages was the result of negligence on their part, but, the allegations disclosed, of a different character from that mentioned in the contract. The indemnitors, defendants, contended that they were not liable for any act of negligence except the negligence of the employees specifically mentioned. The court refused to take this view, saying that as it construed the contract they were liable for “any damage or expense resulting to them [the indemnitees] by reason of any injury to person or property,” and hence for the acts of negligence set out in the plaintiff’s petition. The decision was put upon the ground that, since the defendants agreed to be liable for damage resulting from any Í3ijury, they were liable for one arising out of negligence as well as from any other cause. The other cases brought to our attention, like the Massachusetts decision, turn upon the construction of the particular language of the contract in each case. In none have we found anything in conflict with the conclusion we have reached.
There is rro merit in the suggestion, presented but not argued, that if the contract is construed so as to cover acts of negligence by the Chesapeake coinpanv, then it is against public policy *130and ultra vires of the Hupp company. With respect to the first, the negligence involved does not relate to the 'Chesapeake company’s duty as a common carrier; and concerning the second, there is nothing in the record upon which to predicate it. The presumption is, nothing appearing to the contrary, that the company in making the contract acted within its power. Ohio & M. R. Co. v. McCarthy, 96 U. S. 258, 267, 24 L. ed. 693, 695; Gist v. Drakely, 2 Gill. 330, 359, 41 Am. Dec. 426.
For the purpose of proving the liability of the Chesapeake company for the injury sustained by Gilmore, that company introduced in evidence the pleadings and judgment in the Gilmore Case, and then tendered the testimony given by Gilmore in that case. The latter was refused. We think it should have been accepted because it was material for the purpose of showing what the judgment comprehended and what was concluded by it. “The elementary rule is,” says the Supreme Court of the United States, “that for the purpose of ascertaining the subject-matter of a controversy, and fixing" the scope of the thing adjudged, the entire record, including the testimony offered in the suit, may be examined.” Washington Gaslight Co. v. District of Columbia, 161 U. S. 329, 40 L. ed. 719, 16 Sup. Ct. Rep. 564, and eases there cited. But the Chesapeake company was permitted to call Gilmore and have him state what he had testified to in the former case, thus supplying in another way, but not the better one, what it had attempted to prove by the record.
.. This testimony, taken in connection with the pleadings, disclosed, without contradiction, what the judgment rested on and hence what was finally resolved by it, namely, that Gil-more came upon the track at the invitation of the Hupp company to remove blocks, and while there was injured through the negligence of the Chesapeake company. For a loss happening-under those circumstances, as we have seen, the Hupp company and its surety are liable to the Chesapeake company on their contract. If they had been parties to the suit, they would not of course be permitted to question the judgment or any of the things determined by it. But they were not parties; yet may' they not be bound by it ?
*131In the pleas of the IIupp company it is admitted that the Chesapeake company duly notified the former of the institution of the Gilmore suit, and called upon it to defend or settle the same; and that it failed to do either. The record further shows that the pleas of the Casualty company were substantially the same as those of the Hupp company. Consequently both companies admit due notice to appear in the Gilmore suit and defend or settle. It is the law that where one person who has a right to recover over “is sued, the judgment rendered against him is conclusive upon the person liable over, provided notice be given to the latter, and full opportunity be afforded him to defend the action.” Washington Gaslight Co. v. District of Columbia, supra. All these conditions were complied with in the Gilmore Case, and hence the Hupp company and its surety are bound by the judgment just as much as if they were parties thereto. It was conceded on the record, at least there was no contradiction of it, that the Chesapeake company was compelled to pay on account of the Gilmore Case $686.64. For this sum, with interest at 6 per cent from April 5, 1915, the date of the payment, the court should have instructed a verdict in favor of the Chesapeake company against the Hupp and Casualty companies.
We now come to consider the cross appeal. It arises out of the same contract. As we have seen, the last extension of this contract ran from April 18, 1914, to January 31, 1916. But it wTas provided therein that if the lease from the Potomac company under which the Chesapeake company occupied the track should be terminated on the 31st day of-January, 1915, then this contract should also terminate on that date. It was also provided that if it did not then terminate for the reason just given, either party would have the right to bring the contract to an end on the 31st day of July, 1915, by giving notice of its intention to do so.
The lease between the Chesapeake company and the Potomac company provided that it should terminate on January 31, 1915, upon the latter “giving sixty days’ notice” to the former. This notice vras not given, and the Chesapeake company con*132tinued to occupy and use tbe tracks during tbe period covered by tbis litigation.
Pursuant to its right under tbe last extension, tbe Iiupp company gave due notice tbat it would terminate its contract on July 31, 1915. No rent was paid by it for the period between February 15, 1915, and tbat date. For tbe amount of tbis rent tbe court directed a verdict in favor of tbe Chesapeake company.
Tbe Hupp company and tbe Casualty company contend tbat tbe lease between tbe Potomac company and tbe Chesapeake company terminated by its terms on January 31, 1915, and tbat, because of tbis, tbe contract between the Hupp company and tbe Chesapeake company also terminated on tbe same date. Consequently, they assert, they are not liable for rent after tbat date, albeit they used tbe property, and hence tbat tbe judgment rendered against them is erroneous.
Tbis is a misapprehension of tbe terms of tbe contract and tbe dease. Tbe contract does not say that it shall come to an end if the lease with tbe Potomac company shall terminate on January 31st, but instead declares tbat such shall be tbo result if tbe lease “shall be terminated” on tbat day. Tbis contemplates future action with respect to tbe date on which tbe lease was to end. Tbat action was not taken, and so tbe lease continued in force during tbe entire period for which tbe Chesapeake company sought to recover rent. Tbe contract then between tbe Hupp company and tbe Chesapeake company did not expire until July 31, 1915, and tbe former company was liable for rent during tbat period.
There is no analogy between tbis case and United States use of District of Columbia v. Bayly, 39 App. D. C. 105, 41 L.R.A.(N.S.) 422. In tbat case tbe indemnitor secured the performance of a contract for a period of two years, which provided tbat tbe District of Columbia should have tbe right at the end of tbat period to renew tbe contract if it desired. Tbe District sought to exercise tbis option, and asserted tbat it bad renewed tbe contract, albeit Bayly refused to recognize tbe renewal and declined to do any work under it. Proceeding upon tbe assumption tbat tbe contract bad been renewed, tbe *133District sued Bayly and the surety company for damages arising from its breach. But this court very properly held that since the default complained of did not occur during’ the period of the original contract, and because the new one constituted “a separate and distinct contract for a period of time covered by such renewal,” the surety company was not liable. While there was a renewal in the instant case, the Casualty company expressly agreed to be responsible for it. This clearly differentiates it from the Bayly Case.
It follows that so much of the judgment as is appealed from by the Chesapeake Beach Railway Company must be reversed, with costs, with instructions to the lower court to grant a new trial in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion; and that so much of the judgment as is appealed from by the Hupp Automatic Mail Exchange Company, a Corporation, and the Maryland Casualty Company, a Corporation, must be affirmed with costs.
No. 3139 reversed and new trial granted.

No. 3140 affirmed.