Moeller v. Associated Hospital Service

Fuld, J.

(dissenting). To accept defendant’s position and say that its policy does not entitle plaintiff to recovery is to overlook the manifest design of the policy and to read it in a purely mechanical fashion. The policy excludes from its coverage, “ Hospital Service provided for under any Compensation Law,” and indisputable is the fact that the hospital services which the court is placing beyond the coverage of the policy are actually “ provided for ” by the common law of negligence and not by the Workmen’s Compensation Law. True, liability is imposed by that statute upon the employer or its carrier in the first instance. However, ultimate liability ” for the *77services is not affected by the compensation statute but is to be determined by common-law rules. (See Western Union Tel. Co. v. Cochran, 302 N. Y. 545, 550.) Thus, as the court’s opinion points out, the carrier is granted a lien upon any recovery which the employee secures from the negligent third party (Workmen’s Compensation Law, § 29, subd. 1), and, should the employee fail to proceed against the third party, the carrier is empowered to sue in his stead and to reimburse itself out of the proceeds (Workmen’s Compensation Law, § 29, subd. 2). Hence the provision made by the Compensation Law for payment of hospital services is temporary in character only, contemplating cancellation and reimbursement at such time as the liability of the third party for those services is fixed according to common-law principles. The parties to this policy did not have in mind such a provisional, cancelable liability when they excluded from the policy’s coverage “ Hospital Service provided for under any Compensation Law ”. Clearly, they intended to relieve the insurer from liability only where a Compensation Law is the ultimate source of liability for the services involved, and to construe the policy otherwise is, I suggest, to endow the phrase “ provided for ” with a meaning wholly divorced from reasonable purpose and common understanding.

This is borne out by a consideration of the facts of the case before us. On November 19, 1946, while in the employ of the Ludlow Valve Company, plaintiff was injured through the negligence of the New York Central Railroad. For some six weeks after the accident he was confined to a hospital. The State Insurance Fund, as compensation carrier for the employer, acknowledged that plaintiff had a valid claim under the Workmen’s Compensation Law and paid him benefits of $2,526.64, including $371.50, the amount of the hospital’s bill for his care and treatment. Those payments were, in the course of time reimbursed to the Fund by plaintiff under the following circumstances.

Some time after the accident, plaintiff brought a common-law action against the New York Central Railroad for his personal injuries. In October, 1948, the suit was settled by the Railroad’s paying $35,000 to plaintiff. The Fund thereafter asserted a lien against the proceeds for the compensation benefits paid *78to plaintiff, which plaintiff discharged by paying the Fund $2,526.64, including the sum of $371.50 for his hospital bill. There is nothing in the submitted facts to indicate that the latter item was included in the $35,000 settlement as an element of plaintiff’s recovery. That circumstance is of compelling significance, for, if the hospital costs were not included, plaintiff will, unless he recovers here, be out-of-pocket for what his hospitalization cost.

Even if I were to assume, however — though all basis for that assumption is here lacking — that plaintiff’s settlement with the railroad company included the $371.50 hospital bill, the exclusion clause does not insulate defendant from liability under its policy. In the common understanding of laymen, the policy was designed to impose the ultimate cost of plaintiff’s hospitalization upon defendant Hospital Service unless, as a practical matter, the Compensation Law imposed such costs on his employer or the latter’s carrier. In this case, that statute had no such effect. Even if the payment for plaintiff’s hospital bill ultimately came from the settlement proceeds, it was the railroad company and not the employer or its carrier that bore the costs; it was not the Compensation Law, but the common law that determined and directed the payment of such expenses and the party to pay them. The conclusion seems inevitable, therefore, that the' hospitalization costs defrayed by the railroad were provided for ”, not by the compensation statute, but by common-law rules. Accordingly, a construction that such expenses are not excluded from the coverage of the policy, far from calling for any rewriting of the contract, simply requires that its language be accorded a sensible meaning.

The point is highlighted by supposing that plaintiff had not been engaged in his employment when injured. No one doubts that defendant insurer in such a case would have been under an obligation to make good to plaintiff his medical expenses — whether or not the consequent settlement between plaintiff and railroad included such an item. That being so, the purely fortuitous circumstance that plaintiff was performing his employer’s work when injured should not change the result and relieve defendant insurer of its liability under the policy. Defendant’s liability cannot, and should not, be made to depend upon the *79hour that plaintiff was hurt or upon the happenstance that the employer or its compensation carrier initially paid the hospital. In other words, no valid and operative distinction may be drawn between the case supposed — where employer or carrier never paid the medical bills — and the actual case before us — where, although it did pay them in the first instance, it was reimbursed by the third party responsible for plaintiff’s injuries. In neither case was it by force of the Workmen’s Compensation Law that the bills were paid.

Every consideration points the conclusion that the parties understood the exclusion clause to relate to the usual industrial accident situation, where the employer is solely and ultimately responsible for the consequences of the employee’s injury, and not to the far less typical case, where the injuries are caused by the negligent act of a third party. It is fair to presume that the latter situation, if considered at all, was regarded as indistinguishable from the case where the identical occurrence takes place outside of the employment and the resulting hospital expenses are unquestionably within the coverage of the policy. As noted already, it is highly illogical to suppose that the parties intended to differentiate between the two eases. To my mind, the majority’s construction of the exclusion clause does damage to the discernible intention of the parties, accords a most refined and unrealistic meaning to the wording and produces an illogical result. And, beyond that, it violates the basic canon that any doubt or ambiguity in the meaning of a policy provision is to be resolved in favor of the insured and against the insurer who selected the phrase in question. (See, e.g., Muller v. Sun Ind. Co. of N. Y., 302 N. Y. 634; Tonkin v. California Ins. Co., 294 N. Y. 326, 328-329; Hartol Products Corp. v. Prudential Ins. Co., 290 N. Y. 44, 49.)

I would affirm the decision of the unanimous Appellate Division.

Lotjghran, Ch. J., Desmond and Dye, JJ., concur with Froessel, J.; Ftjld, J., dissents in opinion in which Lewis and Conway, JJ., concur. ■ !

Judgment reversed, etc.