Alexander v. Home Insurance

27 Haw. 326, 1923 Haw. LEXIS 48
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 6, 1923
DocketNo. 1451
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 27 Haw. 326 (Alexander v. Home Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Home Insurance, 27 Haw. 326, 1923 Haw. LEXIS 48 (haw 1923).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

PETERS, C. J.

The sole question involved upon this submission is the liability of the insurer under the “collision clause” of its [327]*327policy for damages occasioned an automobile insured by it which accidently capsized or tipped over on to the road over which it was being operated.

The accident to the automobile is admitted by the parties to have occurred under the following circumstances: “That on the 24th day of July, 1922, while said automobile was being operated by the said Lester Y. Alexander” (one of the insured) “ * * * along the government road * * * a horse suddenly dashed into the road in front of the car and in order to avoid a collision with the horse, the said Lester Y. Alexander applied the brakes of the car which caused the car to capsize or tip over and thereafter came in violent contact with the ground at the side of the road sustaining damage to its body, machinery and equipment * * * .” We take it, in the absence of any statement to the contrary, that the “side of the road” refers to the traveled road or the side immediately adjoining the traveled road of the same general level as the traveled road.

The collision clause in the insurer’s policy covered “accidental collision * * * with any other automobile, vehicle or object * * * ”.

The insured contend that when the automobile came in violent contact with the ground at the side of the road a “collision” occurred between the automobile and the side of the road within the definition of that term as employed in the policy. On the other hand, the insurer contends that the facts do not come within the generally accepted meaning of the term “collision” as employed in automobile insurance and that the accident was a “tip-over”, which is not covered by the “collision clause” contained in the policy. Webster’s New International Dictionary defines “collision” as follows: “Act or instance of colliding; state of having collided; a violent meeting, as of railroad trains”. The Century Dictionary gives the following definition of the word “collision”: “The act of [328]*328striking or dashing together; a striking together of two bodies; the meeting and mutual striking or clashing of two or more moving bodies, or of a moving body with a stationary one; specifically, in recent use, the dashing together of two railroad-trains, or of two boats or ships.”

Measured by a precise literal application of either of the definitions quoted to the facts involved it might be said from a lexicographical standpoint that when the automobile overturned and came in contact with the side of the road, the automobile came in “collision” with the side of the road. But the generally accepted meaning of the word “collision” and not. the technical lexicographical definition controls.

A policy of insurance is a contract. While in case of doubt or ambiguity its terms must be construed strictly against the insurer, in construing the meaning of words employed therein, such words, similarly as in the case of ordinary contracts, should be given their ordinary and popularly accepted meaning in the absence of anything to show that they were used in a different sense. 13 C. J., title “Contracts”, Sec. 489, p. 531; 26 C. J., title “Fire Insurance”, Secs. 69 et seq., pp. 70 et seq.; 14 R. C. L., title “Insurance”, Sec. 102, p. 925.

One describing the accident in the instant case would not refer to it as a “collision.” The term “capsize” or “tip-over” as employed in the submission would be more reasonably descriptive of the accident. Were one to refer to an automobile as being “in collision” without giving further details, the mind of the auditor would naturally visualize an automobile coming in contact with some other vehicle or some perpendicular object obstructing the course of its progress. This thought is best illustrated, perhaps by the not uncommon accident to á pedestrian slipping and falling to the pavement. One would not say [329]*329that he collided with the pavement. A fall is not spoken of as a collision.

Indemnity against collision is common to marine insurance. The dictionary definitions quoted could readily be applied to the case of a ship in course of navigation coming in contact with a sunken abandoned hulk, wreckage, sand-bars or docks. And yet contact under such circumstances would not be a collision as that term is employed in marine insurance. The ordinarily accepted meaning of the word “collision” in connection with that branch of insurance contemplates the contact of two navigable vessels. In other words, the ordinarily accepted meaning of the word as used in connection with navigation controls. See Burnham v. China Mutual Ins. Co., 189 Mass. 100.

Lord Coleridge is reported to have said in the unreported case of Richardson v. Burroughs decided by the court of Queen’s Bench in 1880 and referred to in a note found in Vol. 32 of the A. & E. Ann. Cas., 1914 B, at page 849: “It means collision with another ship, and does not mean either dock, or sand bank, or floating wreck, or anything but the ordinary meaning in- my judgment of collision”. Likewise, in Hough v. Head, 54 L. J. Q. B. (Eng.) 294, set out in Cline v. Western Assur. Co., 44 S. E. (Va.) 700, Grove, J., is quoted as saying: “I think that what happened did not amount to a collision. The vessel probably ran on to a bank, and this was not, as it seems to me, a collision within the ordinary acceptation of that term such as would be the case if a vessel struck another vessel or other navigable matter * * * ”. The American authorities similarly attach to the term “collision” its ordinarily accepted meaning. See Newtown Creek Towing Co. v. Aetna Ins. Co., 57 N. E. (N. Y.) 302; Cline v. Western Assur. Co., supra; Burnham v. China Mutual Ins. Co., supra; London Assurance v. Companhia [330]*330De Moagens, 167 U. S. 149; Western Trdnsit Co. v. Brown, 152 Fed. 476.

The case upon which the insured most strongly rely is that of Harris v. Am. Casualty Co., 83 N. J. L. 641. It was there held by a divided court that indemnity against “loss or damage resulting solely from collision with any moving or stationary object” covered the case of an automobile which crashed through the guard-rails of a bridge into the stream below, upon the theory that the words of the policy did not limit the meaning of the object with which the automobile should come into contact to a perpendicular one; that the word collision meant “colliding by striking together, violent contact”; that the stream was a “stationary” object; that the automobile and the stream came in contact and in the absence of any limitations in the policy, such contact constituted a collision. We can see no difference between the collision clause quoted in the Harris case and that involved in the instant case. Perhaps the word “stationary” influenced that court in coming to the conclusion to which it did. But to the extent that it holds that the dictionary definition and not the ordinarily accepted meaning of the word “collision” controls, we are unable to follow it as a guide in this case. We are inclined to the reasoning employed by the Wisconsin supreme court in the case of Bell v. American Ins. Co., 181 N. W. 733, where it said:

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Bluebook (online)
27 Haw. 326, 1923 Haw. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-home-insurance-haw-1923.