The plaintiff has recovered a judgment for the reasonable expenses incurred by him in prosecuting to a successful issue two actions brought against him, the defense of which the defendant undertook and assumed up to a certain point, and then abandoned and refused to proceed further with. The defendant appeals. The facts are not in dispute.
The plaintiff, a manufacturer, held an accident indemnity policy issued by the defendant by which it undertook to indemnify him for a term of three years “ against loss from common law or statutory liability” for damages for bodily injuries accidentally suffered by any employee or employees of the insured while engaged in the prosecution of his business. During the lifetime of the policy one of the plaintiff’s employees named Loughlin, a minor, was accidentally injured, and shortly afterwards he and his father began actions for damages by reason of such injury. The plaintiff duly notified defendant, as his policy required, of the happening of the accident and of the commencement of the actions, and defendant thereupon exercised the option given it by the terms of the policy, and elected to undertake the defense of the actions. To this end its attorney appeared in said actions for the plaintiff, prepared the answers and carried on the defense. It does not appear that plaintiff was offered, or that he assumed any control over or direction of the defense, except that about two weeks before the actions came on for trial, defendant’s attorney wrote a letter to plaintiff suggesting that verdicts might be recovered to an amount aggregating more than the total *817liability of defendant under its policy, and that, for that reason, it might be advisable for plaintiff to retain private counsel to protect his excess of liability, and offering to co-operate with such counsel in the defense of the actions. The plaintiff accord - ingly did retain private counsel who appeared at the trial. How much part he took therein does not appear. Prior to the trial the plaintiff received from the plaintiffs in the damage suits offers to settle the suits and satisfy the claims for the sum of $1,500. These offers he communicated to the present defendant which, however, refused to consider them or to settle the suits. The actions proceeded to trial and resulted in verdicts against plaintiff aggregating $6,500. The defendant thereupon notified plaintiff that it would not prosecute an appeal, “but holds itself ready to comply with the terms of its contract with you in case you should satisfy the judgment rendered against you.” Just what the defendant meant by its offer to “ comply with the terms of its contract ” is not explained, but we assume that it meant to say that it would pay plaintiff the sum of $1,500.when he should have satisfied the judgments for $6,500 and costs. The plaintiff was then placed in an unfortunate position. He had been mulcted in damages in upwards of $6,500 as the result of actions at law, the defense of which had been virtually taken out of his hands; the defendant, which had thus far assumed his defense, refused to proceed further and offered to pay him only the face of the policy, more than $5,000 less than his total liability, and that only after he had paid and satisfied the judgments. He vainly protested to defendant that, having gone so far, it was under a duty to prosecute appeals, but met only a refusal. There was nothing left for him to do except to procure the substitution of his own attorney and to prosecute appeals on his own behalf. This he did with such success that both judgments were reversed by the Court of Appeals and new trials ordered. These, however, were never had, because the suits were ultimately dismissed for failure to prosecute. For the expense incurred in prosecuting these appeals the plaintiff, now sues and has recovered judgment. The defendant, treating this action as one to recover the indemnity contracted for by the policy, insists that it can *818be subjected to no liability for two reasons: First, because, its only agreement was to insure plaintiff against loss arising, from common-law or statutory liability for damages, and the final outcome of the actions against plaintiff demonstrates that he was never liable to such loss; and, secondly, because, by the terms of the policy, defendant’s obligation to pay was to arise only after the insured had been actually subjected to loss by being obliged to pay damages, which, in consequence of the reversal of the judgment, he has not been obliged to do. If the action must rest upon the theory upon which the defendant supposes it to rest, its objections to the judgment are unanswerable. The contract of indemnity is only against loss from common-law or statutory liability, and if there be no such liability there can be no indemnity. (Cornell v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., 175 N. Y. 239.) The policy provides that the defendant shall not be liable to reimburse the insured except for “ loss actually sustained and paid by him in satisfaction of a judgment after trial of the" issue.” This clause undoubtedly creates a condition precedent to the recovery of indemnity that the insured shall have actually paid the loss. (White v. Maryland Casualty Co., 139 App. Div. 179.) The respondent does not combat either of these propositions, but insists that he is not suing for indemnity against the claims for damages on behalf of the Loughlins, father and son, but for damages for the breach of the obligation assumed by defendant after it had been notified of the claim made by the plaintiffs in the damage suits, and had elected to undertake the defense thereof. In our opinion the judgment may be sustained upon this theory. The policy embraced a number of conditions or stipulations defining the rights and obligations of the parties. The first required the assured, upon the occurrence of an accident,, to give immediate notice to the defendant. There is ho claim that this condition was not complied with. The second condition prescribes what shall be done by the company, as follows: “ 2. If thereafter any suit is brought against the assured to enforce, a claim for damages on account of an accident covered by this policy, immediate notice thereof shall be given to the company, and the company will defend against such proceeding in the name and on behalf of *819the assured, or settle the same at its own cost, unless it shall elect to pay the assured the indemnity provided for in clause ' A ’ of Special Agreements as limited therein. ” The third condition forbids the assured to settle any claim except at his own cost, or to interfere with any negotiations for settlement, or in any legal proceedings, without the consent of the company previously given in writing.
Of course it is open to the company, with respect to any given claim, to refuse to do either of these things, and to repudiate any liability whatever under the contract. If it adopts that course, and it be ultimately determined that the claim was one against which it did not undertake to indemnify the assured, it will be liable neither for indemnity against the claim nor for the expenses incurred by the assured in defending himself against it. (Cornell v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., supra.)
If, however, the company undertakes to abide by and fulfill the contract with the assured three courses of conduct are open to it, and it has the absolute and unqualified right to determine which it will adopt.
It may (a) defend against such proceeding in the name and on behalf of the assured, or (b) settle the claim at its own cost, or (c) pay the assured the stipulated amount of indemnity, leaving him to defend himself against the claim as best he may.
The appellant, in the case at bar, chose the first of these alternatives and elected to assume the defense of the actions brought to enforce the claims. In so doing it did not merely undertake to defend itself to the limit of its possible liability, but to defend the actions “on behalf of” the assured, and to secure to itself the absolute control and direction of such defense the assured was required to stipulate that he would not interfere with the actions unless expressly permitted so to do by the company, and then only, of course, to the extent that the company permitted interference. When the company had thus exercised its option a new contract came into existence between the company and the assured. The company no longer stood in the position of an indemnitor as to a limited class of liabilities, but it had assumed a definite obligation to defend certain actual suits “on behalf of” the plaintiff, and *820this obligation was limited not only by the amount the company had at stake, but also by the amount for which the assured might be found liable. The consideration for this contract is to be found in the premiums paid for the policy, the election by the company, and the renunciation by the assured of the right to defend himself. The three courses of action reserved to the company by the second condition above quoted were obviously inconsistent because the adoption of either necessarily implied the rejection of the others. So when the company undertook to defend the actions it elected to pursue that particular course and could not thereafter abandon such election and adopt the inconsistent course of paying the amount of the indemnity and abandoning the defense of the suits, and it certainly could not do this when the result of the election had been to cast the plaintiff in damages to the extent of $5,000 more than the agreed indemnity. It was then impossible to put the plaintiff back where he had been when the election was exercised. (Mills v. Parkhurst, 126 N. Y. 89, 92; Whalen v. Stuart, 194 id. 495, 505; Kilpatrick v. Germania Life Ins. Co., 183 id. 163, 163.) In point of fact, however, the defendant never did offer to adopt any of these courses specified in the second condition except that of defending the action. The position it took after the rendition of the judgment was utterly unreasonable. It refused to carry on an appeal, thus virtually asserting that the claim was one covered by its policy and for which it was liable, but at the same time it refused to pay the amount for which if was concededly liable unless the plaintiff should first pay the judgment against him, which virtually amounted to a prohibition against an appeal by him except at the risk of forfeiting his indemnity. In adopting this attitude the defendant clearly indicated that it had misconceived the obligation it had assumed to plaintiff, and considered that it owed no duty save to itself. It did not, in our opinion, fulfill its whole duty to plaintiff when the erroneous judgment was entered upon the trial. It had undertaken to defend the actions in plaintiff’s behalf and had thereby excluded him from the management and control of the defense. The result of its direction of the defense had been to charge the plaintiff with a. large judgment, only partly covered by insurance. It owed him a *821duty which was not satisfied by leaving him in this predicament. It is true, perhaps, that it was not bound to assume the labor and expense of an appeal which it considered hopeless, but if it refused to go on with the appeal on that ground, it ran the risk that its estimate of the merits of the appeal might prove to be erroneous, as it did prove to be in this case. The defendant undoubtedly elected to assume the defense of the actions because it deemed that it would gain some advantage by adopting that course, but it cannot take all the advantage and repudiate all the obligations. Having elected and undertaken to defend in behalf of the assured it cannot be permitted to drop the defense when it suits its own purposes, without regard to his interests, and leave him stranded with an erroneous judgment against him for a large amount, seeking later to take advantage of the outcome of the appeal which it refused to prosecute itself. The appellant lays great stress upon Cornell v. Travelers’ Ins. Co. (supra), but as already indicated there is no real resemblance between this case and that. There the insurance company insisted from the beginning that the accidents sued upon were not covered by its policy and refused to defend or pay. The result of the actions against the assured, in that case, showed that the insurance company had been right and that no liability had ever attached to it. If the insurance company had elected to defend a different question would have been presented. It is suggested that a party will not be held to an election made in ignorance of the facts upon which the elector depends. But there is nothing in the present case to indicate that the defendant was ignorant of any fact bearing upon its election.
Our conclusion is that by its election to defend the Loughlin actions the defendant incurred an obligation to plaintiff to act in his interest and behalf as well as its own, and this obligation was not fulfilled. (Creem v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 141 App. Div. 493, 497, 498; Humes Const. Co. v. Phila. Casualty Co., 19 Atl. Rep. 1.) The amount awarded by the jury was reasonable.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Miller and Dowling, JJ. concurred; Ingraham, P. J., and Laughlin, J., dissented.