Adams v. Manchester Insurance & Indemnity Company

385 S.W.2d 359, 1964 Mo. App. LEXIS 546
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 17, 1964
Docket31631
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 385 S.W.2d 359 (Adams v. Manchester Insurance & Indemnity Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Manchester Insurance & Indemnity Company, 385 S.W.2d 359, 1964 Mo. App. LEXIS 546 (Mo. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

GEORGE P. ADAMS, Special Commissioner.

On May 14, 1960, plaintiff sustained injuries in an accident between her car and a 1953 Cadillac ambulance owned by defendant Atkis Boyd and driven by his employee, defendant Samuel Boyd. On January 3, 1962, in the Circuit Court of St. Louis County, plaintiff recovered a judgment against Atkis Boyd in the sum of $4500.00.

On March 15, 1963, in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, in this equitable action brought under the provisions of Section 379.200 (all statutory references are to RSMo 1959, V.A.M.S.), plaintiff recovered judgment against Atkis Boyd’s automobile liability insurance carrier, defendant Manchester Insurance & Indemnity Company. Manchester appeals.

For some time prior to December, 1959, Atkis Boyd had been operating an ambulance service and doing business as “Boyd Bros. Undertaking Company.” For “quite a number of years” one Louis J. Hannibal, an insurance broker, had been Boyd’s agent handling his insurance business. Hannibal had procured an automobile liability insurance policy with the Missouri Union Insurance Company. This company “went into receivership” and Boyd asked Hannibal to place the policy he had with the Missouri Union Insurance Company in some other company. Thereafter, Hannibal “placed” an insurance policy through an Ed. Wein-stein with the defendant Manchester Company. This policy was “placed” with Wein-stein “ * * * specifically with an en *361 dorsement indicating that there was no emergency coverage.”

Under date of December 22, 1959, an automobile liability insurance policy, No. A3577, was issued “Boyd Bros. Undertaking Co.” by Manchester, effective December 13, 1959 to June 13, 1960. The vehicles named in the policy were a “1951 Cadillac Fordor Sedan” and a “1953 Cadillac 5 Dr. Ambulance.” The latter vehicle was the one involved in the accident with plaintiff’s car. ^

Under the same date, and at the same time the policy was issued, the following endorsement was attached:

“ENDORSEMENT

This endorsement, effective 12:01 A.M. DECEMBER 13, 1959, forms a part of policy No. A3577 issued to BOYD BROS. UNDERTAKING CO. by MANCHESTER INSURANCE & INDEMNITY COMPANY

DESCRIPTION OF AUTOMOBILE: 1953 CADILLAC 5 DR. AMBULANCE

MOTOR #5386-22092

IN CONSIDERATION OF THE PREMIUM CHARGED, IT IS UNDERSTOOD AND AGREED THAT COVERAGE HEREUNDER DOES NOT APPLY IF USED AS AN EMERGENCY VEHICLE.

_ED WEINSTEIN_

Authorized Representative

END. #1 12/22/59 cp”

The exact method of the distribution or delivery of the several copies of the policy does not appear from the evidence. However, the foregoing endorsement, as well as additional endorsements numbered 2, 3 and 4, dated January 14, 1960, February 29, 1960 and March 23, 1960, were attached to the copy of the policy which Manchester retained and the copy which the broker Hannibal had. The only evidence relating to the copy of the policy in the hands of Boyd was Hannibal’s testimony that after the accident, and after Boyd had received word from Manchester that he “wasn’t covered,” he, Hannibal, saw Boyd’s copy and at that time Endorsement # 1 was not attached, but Endorsements #2, #3 and #4 were.

Hannibal testified that the premium that Boyd paid for the policy “ * * * was without emergency coverage * * An employee of Manchester testified that the company did not write “an ambulance vehicle” and if the endorsement had not been attached, Manchester would not have accepted the policy.

On May 13, 1960 one Willie Blackman was a patient at St. Louis County Hospital. An “emergency room record” contained the following: “May 13th. Increasing delusions of grandeur for past one month. Schizophrenia. * * * Treatment Dr. Lohr advised to go to jail, and then to Malcolm-Bliss in A.M. * * and, “May 14th. Patient brought back from jail. Patient has hallucinations. Impression Schizophrenia. To Mental Hospital.”

Around 9:30 A.M. on May 14th, the St. Louis County Hospital ordered an ambulance from the Boyd Ambulance Company and told them to pick up Blackman and to hurry because it was an emergency. Defendant Samuel Boyd drove the ambulance and an attendant, Bennie Williams, went with him. They got to the Hospital around 10:00 A.M. When Samuel Boyd got to the hospital, he signed an ambulance trip ticket which identified Blackman’s illness as “an observation case” and said that the illness was “serious.”

*362 Samuel Boyd and the attendant left the hospital with their patient in the ambulance. According to a police report and a state'ment taken by a claim adjuster, both of which were offered in evidence by Manchester and admitted in their entirety, without objection, the driver and the attendant stated: that about 10:30 A.M. the ambulance was being driven east on Chouteau Avenue, as it approached Spring Avenue; that the red light on the ambulance was "going all the time” and before the driver got to that intersection he started blowing his siren; that the traffic on Chouteau was stopped because of a red traffic light; that as the driver came up behind a stopped car and with the red light and siren on, he drove the ambulance into the westbound lane of Chouteau, stopped and sounded the siren; that plaintiff made a left-hand turn off of Spring from the south into the westbound lane of Chouteau and struck the stopped ambulance head-on; that the red light and siren on the ambulance were going at the time the ambulance was hit; that after the accident some lady “came back” and gave the police a statement telling them she heard the siren and then the crash and she came back; that the police took the patient on to Malcolm-Bliss Hospital.

In a statement to the police, plaintiff said she made a left turn onto Chouteau from Spring, keeping her eye on traffic, and when she looked up she saw the ambulance, applied her brakes and collided with the ambulance.

The police report also stated that plaintiff was given a summons “ * * * charged with failure to yield to emergency vehicle * * *."

At the trial below, plaintiff testified that she stopped on Spring before turning left onto Chouteau for “a complete cycle of lights” (traffic) ; that she made a left turn onto Chouteau, went “around” three lanes of traffic and “ * * * no sooner than I made the turn I saw this vehicle and hit my brakes * * that she was stopped at the time of the accident; that the windows on her Triumph sport car were "pushed forward,” were open. On direct examination, she testified she did not hear any siren and did not see a flashing red light.

On cross-examination she testified that after the accident there was a red light on the ambulance. She also testified, without objection by her counsel, that at the accident scene she heard one of the policemen say, “You can turn that siren off now, Buddy. It’s not needed.”

Plaintiff employed counsel and filed suit in the St. Louis County Circuit Court against Samuel G. Boyd and Atkis Boyd. After Manchester declined to defend the suit a “consent judgment” was taken against Atkis Boyd alone for $4,500.00 on January 3, 1962.

On January 11, 1962 the instant action was filed in the Circuit Court of St. Louis City, Missouri. While defendants Atkis Boyd and Samuel G.

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Bluebook (online)
385 S.W.2d 359, 1964 Mo. App. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-manchester-insurance-indemnity-company-moctapp-1964.