The Trinity County Lumber Company’s employd, Garrison, while in tbe discharge \of bis duties as such, was injured on September 11, 1913. He declined to accept tbe compensation he would have been entitled to under tbe Texas Workmen’s Compensation Law (Acts 33d Leg. c. 179 [Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, arts. 5246b-5246zzzz]), claiming that be bad a cause of action against that company for a much larger amount as damages, because of its failure to give him the required notice of its having become a subscriber under tbe terms of that act. Tbe Lumber Company and tbe Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation, appellant and appellee here, respectively, both of whom were foreign corporations with permits to do business in Texas, under a special agreement between themselves, hereinafter more fully referred to, united in making a settlement out of court with Garrison for $11,000, of which tbe Lumber Company paid $7,400 and tbe Guarantee Corporation paid $3,600.
Tbe Lumber Company then brought this suit against tbe Guarantee Corporation, which right bad been reserved in their special agreement, to recover tbe $7,400 so paid by tbe former, and interest thereon, basing its claim therefor upon certain contracts of insurance alleged to have been issued to it by tbe appellee corporation.
By way of answer, in addition to certain exceptions, denials, pleas of limitation, and breach of warranty, the Guarantee Corporation specially charged that tbe $7,400 paid Garrison by the Lumber Company, in order to effect such compromise settlement, bad been voluntarily done upon its part, and not in response to any legal obligation, in that, being a subscriber under tbe Compensation Act, it could have rightfully refused to pay any sum whatever under the protection afforded by that statute; that its own liability (the appellee’s) was, under the insurance contracts then existing between the two companies, limited to the schedule of benefits provided by the Workmen’s Compensation Act, which aggregated the $3,600 already paid; but added, in the form of a cross-action, in event the court should find that no contract of insurance at all was in effect between the two 'companies at the date of Garrison’s injury, September 11, 1913, a further plea, seeking recovery of the $3,000, less premiums collected, as having been paid through mistake.
The case was tried before the court without a jury, resulting in a judgment denying the Lumber Company a recovery, and providing that the Guarantee Corporation take *532nothing on its cross-action. The Lumber Company appeals.
Since the appellee neither took exception thereto below nor complains here of the trial court’s adverse finding upon its alternatively pleaded cross-action, that matter passes out of the case, leaving, as we think, hut one real question presented by the appeal, and that is: Did the court err in its conclusions of law “that the policy, EC-501507, the various hinders referred to, and policy EY-44S0, witness the existence of a policy on September 11, 1913, of insurance under the Texas. Workmen’s Compensation Act, and not, in addition thereto, a general indemnitj against liability to employés not arising under said act; (2) that defendant is liable to pln'ntiff for the amount to which its injured employé was entitled under said act?”
After careful consideration of the entire record, including the helpful briefs and arguments for both litigants, the conclusion is reached that it did not, and an order affirming the judgment below has been entered. Accordingly, it is thought that what is deemed a sufficient statement of this court’s reasons for the view taken should properly conclude its opinion, without seriatim and detailed discussion of the various assignments of error presented.
In other words, if by the contracts of insurance in force and effective as of the date of September 11, 1913, between these two corporations, it may fairly be said to have been their intention that the-liability paid for by the one and assumed by the other should be such only as the Texas Workman’s Compensation Law then imposed upon insuring companies carrying such risks as materialized in Garrison’s injury, the main contention of appellant here would fall, and with it, we think, all subsidiary ones.
While from several slightly different viewpoints appellant devotes the first seven and the tenth assignments in its brief to the contention that such was neither the purpose nor effect of the contracts, but that they evidenced an undertaking to indemnify it against unlimited liability at common law in addition to that imposed by the Workmen’s Compensation Act, it yet insists under the eighth assignment that, even if the contracts did limit the liability to such only as arose under that statute, general liability would still follow from a proper construction of the express provisions of the act itself.
[1] Although unable to agree that the Compensation Law may properly be so construed, what otherwise seems to us a complete answer to this last-stated position is the fact that Garrison was not settled with according to that act, but wholly outside of its provisions, a result directly caused by appellant’s own and negligent failure, which it admitted, to bring him within its terms by giving him the required notice that it had provided for payment of the compensation thereunder, thereby leaving open to him a cause of action against it for damages at common law. The act not only made the giving of such notice obligatory upon appellant as a subscriber (Vernon’s Sayles’ Statutes, art. 5246x), but further provided that a subscriber who has complied with all the rules, regulations, and demands of the association may recover from it, or from a member of it carrying the risk, whatever damage such subscriber has been required to pay an employé by any judgment of a court of law, thus apparently denying to one who has not so complied any other recovery than the schedule of benefits prescribed in the act for employés (article 5246xxx). If'the settlement had been made in accordance with that schedule, it is not denied that the §3,600 paid by the appellee would have been all Garrison was entitled to. Moreover, the final policy formally bringing the insurance here contracted for under the terms of the Compensation Law, EY-4480, hereinafter more fully referred to, specially provided that the limit of liability thereby assumed for injury to employés should he that fixed by.the terms of the act itself.
Consequently, with the decks stripped back again, as we think, to the single issue of their purpose and meaning, return is made to an examination of the contracts themselves. The trial court’s findings of fact, after a full review of the various policies and binders, together with the dealings between the parties concerning them, was:
“I also find that it was the intention of the parties that a contract of insurance was to be had in accordance with the Texas Workmen’s Compensation Law.”
[2] Following a like examination of the statement of facts, we cannot agree with the special insistence of appellant under its 10th assignment that this finding was without support in the evidence, but, holding that it was, adopt it as the finding of this court also. The first policy issued between the parties, EC-501507, commonly known as a “manufacturer’s employés liability policy, exclusive of workmen’s compensation,” bore date of April 25, 1913, at which time there was- no Workmen’s Compensation Law in effect in Texas, and specially recited that it did not cover liability under any Workmen’s Compensation Agreement Plan or Law. It ’ covered the period from May 1, 1913, to May 1, 1914, and limited the corporation’s liability for injury to or death of one person to §5,000, and its total liability for one accident, without reference to the number of persons, to §10,000. This policy, as thus written, remained in force and effect until midnight of August 31, 1913, when, to meet the situation brought about by the fact that in the meantime a Workmen’s Compensation Act had been passed in Texas, which would become effective on September 1, 1913, following out agreements by correspondence for that purpose, a binder, No. 29210, bearing date of August 28, 1913, was delivered and *533toot effect, its term expiring on September 10, 1913, which specifically recited that—
“The Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation hereby acknowledges itself bound by a liability and workmen's compensation insurance undertaking, the subject-matter of the insurance being described in the following schedule; and during the term of this binder the actual contract of insurance shall be evidenced by such of the printed policy form blanks in use by the corporation during such term as. are indicated by the letters given in the schedule.”
In the .schedule referred to under the words “Policy Form” were typed the words' “Workmen’s Compensation” ; after the words “Limited of Liability” was the following; “One person $-one, accident — none”; under the words “Description of Risk” were typed the words, “This binder shall constitute the assured a subscriber within the meaning of the Texas Workmen’s Compensation Act.”
At the expiration of binder 29,210, it was renewed by a second one of the same wording and duration; that is, covering the period from September 10 to September 20, 1913. Then, on September 22, 1913, Workmen’s Compensation Endorsement No. 141233, made by its terms to cover the date of Garrison’s injury, September 11, 1913, was issued, containing, among lengthy recitals, these provisions:
“The said policy is hereby extended to include within its terms all obligations imposed upon or assumed by the assured under any of the provisions contained in the said, act in so far as the same shall have reference to the subject-matter of this insurance.
“The assured has elected to accept and has accepted, in the manner provided' in the Workmen's Compensation Act, hereinafter in this paragraph designated, the schedule of workmen’s compensation benefits therein contained ; and the assured further warrants that this acceptance will not be revoked during the period that this indorsement is in effect: Chapter 179, Laws of 1913,, State of Texas, commonly known as the Texas Workmen’s Compensation Law.”
Lastly, on, October 20, 1913, there was issued and delivered the final form of policy used, EY-4480, which by its terms was made retroactive so as to be effective from and aft-ter September 1, 1913. This policy also contained the identical provision relating to acceptance of the schedule of benefits appearing in the workmen’s.compensation indorsement last above quoted from, No. 141233, and the additional one:
“If any condition in this policy contained is at variance with any provision of the Workmen’s Compensation Law or Laws designated in Declaration 7, such specific statutory provision shall be substituted for such condition.”
It thus appears that not only did all binders issued between August 28 and October 20, 1913, specifically recite that the Insurance Corporation acknowledged itself bound in, accordance with the Compensation Act, such obligation to be evidenced by its printed policy form blanks in use during that period, but, after expressly providing against conflicts with that act, the final policy itself, as well as the binder immediately preceding it, correspondingly required an acceptance by the assured of the schedule of benefits therein prescribed; in other words, the plain purpose was, as we think, and the trial court found, to so change the insurance existing prior to the taking effect of the new Compensation Law, on September 1, 1913, as to substitute in such case as here arose its schedule of compensation for the pre-existing liability. Indeed, the general agent of the appellee so testified, his statement, which was not controverted, being epitomized in these excerpts:
“The binder that was attached to the first policy was issued merely until we could get the second policies. You see when that manual became effective, or the law became effective on the 1st of September, some companies went to work and canceled their policies outright and rewrote them from the 1st of September to the following 1st of September. Our office didn’t do that, because I didn’t want all our business bunched up in one month so I could not handle it, and so we conceived the idea of indorsing our policies from the date of August 31st and increase the rate or decrease it, and on all of our liability policies covering them by that in-dorsement into compensation policies, and in cases where we didn’t do that we issued a binder. The binder was intended to be the contract in force between the parties as from the date of the issuance of the binder.’?
“It says here, ‘This binder shall constitute the assured a subscriber within the meaning of the Texas Workmen’s .Compensation Act,’ so that that binder converts this policy into a compensation policy.”
The act itself provided that any insurance company should have the same right to insure the liability to pay the compensation therein prescribed as the association created under it, and, when it did so, might exercise the same powers, but should be subject to parts 1, 2, and 4, and sections, 10,17, and 21, of the Act (Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, arts. 5246u, 5246ww, 5246xxx), and must file with the Commissioner of Insurance and Banking its classification of premiums to be charged, none of which could take effect until approved by that official as being adequate to the risks assumed, nor could they be greater than those charged by the association (Vernon’s Sayles’ Statutes 1914, art. 5246yyyy).
It was further shown that at the time the act became effective neither the insurance companies nor the various state agencies charged with its administration had had opportunity of becoming familiar with its operative details, and the Industrial Accident Board had not then completed the forms of insurance contracts and the manual of rates to be used; hence, under the above-stated plan it had adopted to meet this condition, the appellee could only issue binders until at a later date in position to deliver a permanent policy, in accordance with the compensation law, and as approved by the Industrial Accident Board, at rates by it prescribed. This was all done in the policy of October 20, 1913, EY-4480, the trial court making this finding as to the rates charged:
“The amount of the premium paid for said policy was in accordiance with the schedule or manual of rates filed by the defendant company *534with the Commissioner of Banking and Insurance and with the Industrial Accident Board as the rates to be charged by them for the writing of insurance upon the plants of this character in accordance with the Texas Workmen’s Compensation Act.”
There is not only no attack made upon this finding as to the rate paid by the Humber Company for the insurance here involved, but there was no- evidence upon which a different one could have been based.
In support of its contention that the various binders attached to original policy EC-501507, together with final policy EY-4480, did not limit the insurance contracted for to workmen’s compensation liability, but merely extended it so as to cover that liability also, the Lumber Company lays much stress upon the clause in the binders that' the insurance corporation “acknowledges itself bound by a liability and workmen’s compensation insurance undertaking,” insisting that the conjunctive form of expression would not have been used if the intention had not been to provide for both a general and a workmen’s compensation liability. While that appears to be an introductory recitation, descriptive merely of the change made in the character of the insurance, if it is to be given further meaning we think it may be explained as having reference to. that section of the act permitting an unlimited recovery of exemplary damages, reading as follows:
“Nothing in this act shall be taken or held to prohibit the recovery of exemplary damages by the surviving husband, wife and heirs, or such of them as there may be, of any deceased employé, whose death is occasioned by homicide, through the willful act or omission or gross negligence of any person, firm or corporation, the employer of such employs at the time of the injury causing the death of the latter, and in all cases where exemplary damages are sought under this section, in case the injured party has already been awarded; actual damages by the board herein provided, said fact and said amount so received shall be made known to the court or jury trying said cause for exemplary damages; and on the issue for exemplary damages he shall have the same defenses as under the existing law.” Vernon’s Sayles’ Statutes 1914, art. 5246j.
Therefore, in writing insurance in accordance with this. statute, the corporation was by its express terms not only bound by the fixed schedule of compensation to be paid in particular cases for specified injuries, but for the unlimited amount recoverable as exemplary damages. It is, however, not contended here that Garrison’s injuries occurred under any such circumstances as made that provision of the statute applicable to his cause of action.
[3] Another most earnestly and ably presented argument is that, because there was a largely increased premium rate required to be paid on this new insurance, after September 1st over that charged under the previous contract and pre-existing law, it must have been intended to both continue the liability formerly carried and to add that imposed by the compensation statute.- The obvious answer to this suggestion is that, under the undisputed evidence, no part of the premiums paid after September 1st was in fact paid for any other insurance than that in strict compliance with the compensation law, but was such only as had been officially promulgated by the Industrial Accident Board as the authoritative rate for insurance in conformity therewith, neither more nor less than which could be legally charged. From this situation the necessary result would be that, if appellant did so get and retain insurance under both systems after September 1st it had the continuing benefit of the kind first carried for nothing.
Furthermore, other reasons than the one suggested by appellant for higher rates under the new system are easily supposable; indeed, the possibilities suggested, by the conditions here involved indicate at least one. Under the old policy it had protection for only $5,000 on each employs injured, in no event to exceed $10,000 for any one accident, no matter how many were injured therein; that is, the insurance company, for the rate charged on that policy, limited its maximum liability in the circumstances stated to $10,000, even though 100 employés should sustain damages of $5,000 each, totaling $100,000 for only 10 per cent, of which it would be liable, leaving the Lumber Company to pay the remaining $90,000; whereas, if the latter company had brought this supposed contingency under the operation of the Compensation Law, and had complied with the requirements thereof by so notifying its employes, the entire $90,000 might have been saved.
Such possibilities might well furnish mutual justification for far greater relative increase in rates than iSthere claimed to have obtained, to the assured in paying it because of the immunity afforded, and to the insurer in charging it in view of greatly enlarged liability.
So that, considering all the clauses, conditions, and stipulations of these contracts together, and then giving them such interpretation as reasonably appears to harmonize with the intention of the parties, we think the trial court stated a correct conclusion. 14 Ruling Case Law, Insurance, last sentence, par. 103, footnote 15; 16 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d Ed.) p. 862; Hearne v. Gillett, 62 Tex. 23; Kempner v. Advance Thresher Co., 44 Tex. Civ. App. 128, 97 S. W. 1080.
Under this view the remaining assignments raise immaterial issues. ■
It follows that all assignments should be overruled.
Affirmed.
(g^sPor other cases see same toj^ic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes