Aglione v. American Automobile Insurance Company

143 A.2d 148, 87 R.I. 473, 1958 R.I. LEXIS 83
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 25, 1958
DocketEx. No. 9808
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 143 A.2d 148 (Aglione v. American Automobile Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aglione v. American Automobile Insurance Company, 143 A.2d 148, 87 R.I. 473, 1958 R.I. LEXIS 83 (R.I. 1958).

Opinion

*474 Roberts, J.

This action in assumpsit was brought by the plaintiff to recover for a loss sustained by him under an automobile garage liability insurance policy issued to him by the defendant. The case was heard on an agreed statement of facts by a justice of the superior court sitting without a jury. The trial justice rendered a decision for the plaintiff in the amount of $656 which includes interest. The case is before us on the defendant’s exception to that decision.

■Summarizing the agreed statement of facts, it appears that plaintiff was the owner and operator of a service station located on Federal street in the city of Providence. On April 9, 1952, about 3 p.m., a panel truck owned by the Commercial Laundry was driven into plaintiff’s service station by an employee of the laundry for the purpose of having the truck greased. The truck was placed on a lift and *475 raised into the air while the driver thereof remained nearby. Among other things plaintiff sprayed the rear springs of the truck for the purpose of eliminating a squeak. He thereafter went to the rear of the truck and, taking hold of the rear bumper, shook the truck up and down to determine whether the squeak had been eliminated. As he did so “the truck started slipping from the lift and fell off the lift on its side * * *.”

It is specifically set out in the agreed statement of facts: “Vincent Boragine, the driver, agent and servant of Commercial Laundry, from the moment he drove the truck to the service station, remained adjacent to the truck during the time when the truck was hoisted, while on the lift, and including the time when it fell from the lift.”

It was agreed that the damage to the truck amounted to $543.71. The decision of the trial justice was for $656 including interest. The plaintiff made a demand upon defendant for payment of the damage done to the truck, making his claim under the policy issued to him by defendant. The defendant refused to pay the claim on the ground that the damage sustained did not come within the insuring agreements set out in the policy. The plaintiff thereupon paid the amount to the Commercial Laundry and brought this action to recover it from defendant on the ground that it had breached its insuring agreement.

The insurance policy upon which plaintiff bases his claim was admitted in evidence, and the coverage provisions which are pertinent to the issue here are as follows:

“Coverage B — Property Damage Liability.
To pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of injury to or destruction of property, including the loss of use thereof, caused by accident and arising out of the hazards hereinafter defined.”

The hazard here is Division 2 — Premises—Operations—Automobiles Not Owned or Hired, which reads:

*476 “The ownership, maintenance or use of the premises for the purpose of an automobile repair shop, service station, storage garage or public parking place, and all operations necessary or incidental thereto; and the use in connection with the above defined operations' of any automobile not owned or hired by the named insured, a partner therein or a member of the household of any such person.”

The policy provides for exclusions as follows:

“(f) under coverage B, to injury to or destruction of (1) property owned by or rented to the insured, or (2) except under division 3 of the Definitions of Hazards, property in charge of or transported by the insured, or (3) any goods or products manufactured, sold, handled or distributed or [on] premises alienated by the named insured, or work completed by or for the named insured, out of which the accident arises.”

The defendant concedes that the trial justice correctly framed the controlling issues in the case when he said: “The question involved is therefore whether at the time of the accident the automobile was fin charge of * * * the insured’ ” so that the accident was excluded from the coverage of the policy by reason of the exclusion clause. Therefore, it is incumbent upon us to first decide the meaning to be given the phrase “in charge of” as it appears in the exclusion clause above quoted. We do not perceive that there is any ambiguity in the use of the words “in charge of” which would require us to construe them most strongly against the insurer. It is our opinion that the words as they are used here are to be given their natural meaning, which is that property is “in charge of” an insured within the meaning of the exclusion clause when such property is in the possession and control of the insured.

It has been generally held that when the owner of a motor vehicle leaves it with a repairman for the purpose of having it serviced or repaired, the repairman is “in charge of” the vehicle within the meaning of those words as they are used in these contracts of insurance. Haenal v. United *477 States Fidelity and Guaranty Co., Fla., 88 So.2d 888; State Automobile Mutual Ins. Co. v. Connable-Joest, Inc., 174 Tenn. 377.

In Lyon v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 140 Conn. 304, the court, in deciding that vehicles left with a serviceman were in his charge within the meaning of the exclusion clause, stated at page 308: “The plaintiff had the possession and custody of the cars. They were in his charge within the meaning of the exclusion.” In Sky v. Keystone Mutual Casualty Co., 150 Pa. Super. 613, 618, the court said that when reference is made to property of others in charge of an insured it does not mean property which is merely in possession of the insured. It means property which is in its possession and over which the insured has a right to exercise dominion or control. In Cohen & Powell, Inc. v. Great American Indemnity Co., 127 Conn. 257, 259, the court said: “* * * a person or thing is not ‘in charge of’ an insured within the meaning of the policy unless he has the right to exercise dominion or control over it.”

In the light of the reasoning stated by the courts in the cases above cited, it is our opinion that an insured is “in charge of” property within the meaning of the exclusion clause contained in the policy under consideration when the insured has the property in his possession and has a right to exercise control over it. Generally it would be a fact question as to whether the owner of property had delivered it into the possession and control of an insured. In such cases the fact that the owner of the property did not depart from the premises of the insured after delivery thereof would be evidence bearing on the question of whether the owner had relinquished possession and control of the property.

However, the instant case was submitted to the trial justice on an agreed statement of facts. Considering the case on that agreed statement, he concluded that “as a finding of fact * * * the truck was not ‘in charge of’ the assured at *478

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Bluebook (online)
143 A.2d 148, 87 R.I. 473, 1958 R.I. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aglione-v-american-automobile-insurance-company-ri-1958.