Almeida v. Liberty Mutual Insurance, No. 114431 (Mar. 10, 1994)
This text of 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 2516 (Almeida v. Liberty Mutual Insurance, No. 114431 (Mar. 10, 1994)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The plaintiff believed that he did not have adequate time to enter his vehicle while avoiding Vernon's truck. Therefore, he turned and moved away from his vehicle in an attempt to avoid being hit by the Vernon vehicle. Nevertheless, the plaintiff was struck by the Vernon auto and landed approximately fifty feet from the point of impact.
Mr. Almeida received the policy limits of $20,000.00 from Mr. Vernon's insurer, Allstate Insurance Company, and made this claim against Liberty Mutual who insured the claimant's stepmother and owner of the Blazer, Georgette Almeida, under a policy providing uninsured/underinsured limits of $100,000.00 for each of four vehicles.
"When reviewing an arbitration panel's factual findings considering underinsured motorist coverage our courts' standard of review is whether the arbitrators' findings are supported by CT Page 2517 substantial evidence." Allstate Ins. Co. v. Howe,
The plaintiff in this matter is an insured person under the policy only if he was "occupying" his stepmother's Blazer at the time of the accident. "Occupying" is defined in the policy as "in, upon, getting in, on, out or off" the insured vehicle. The arbitration panel decided that the plaintiff was not "occupying" the vehicle at the time of the accident under the terms of the policy.
The arbitration panel based its decision on Testone v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
However, it is important to recognize that the Testone court noted that physical contact may not be required to satisfy a policy's definition of "occupying" in "certain emergencies." Id. citing Katz v. Ocean Accident and Guarantee Corporation,
Under the construction placed by the defendant upon the clause issue, it would follow that it would be necessary for plaintiff's wife to stand where she was at the time she first observed the hit and run vehicle and permit herself to be struck by it while continuing her efforts to lock the door of the car. Certainly this cannot be the construction by this court of the terms used by the defendant in writing this policy. Such a determination would be repugnant to every principle of common decency.
Id. at 742.
Such reasoning by the Katz court is persuasive when applied to the facts of the instant case and coupled with the Supreme Court's acknowledgement that physical contact may not be required to satisfy a policy's definition of "occupying" in "certain emergencies." Testone,
Similarly, in the context of a coverage question where a driver was injured after being cut off another motorist, the Connecticut Supreme Court reasoned that "an insistence on physical contact would lead to the bizarre result of providing uninsured motorist coverage for the less vigilant driver who does not avoid a collision but denying such coverage to the more adroit driver who manages to escape this greater hazard." Streitweiser v. Middlesex Mutual Assurance Co.,
For the reasons stated, the application to vacate the arbitration award is granted.
/s/ Sylvester, J. SYLVESTER CT Page 2519
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