Basore v. Allstate Insurance Company

374 S.W.2d 626, 1963 Mo. App. LEXIS 421
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1963
Docket23835-A
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 374 S.W.2d 626 (Basore v. Allstate Insurance 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
Basore v. Allstate Insurance Company, 374 S.W.2d 626, 1963 Mo. App. LEXIS 421 (Mo. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

HUNTER, Judge.

Before us is a suit on the uninsured automobile coverage clause of an automobile insurance policy issued by defendant-respondent, Allstate Insurance Company, to William M. Basore whose wife Iva E. Basore, plaintiff-appellant, sought recovery in the sum of $5,000 for injuries she allegedly suffered while riding as a passenger in her husband’s automobile which was struck by a hit-and-run motorist. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence the trial court directed a verdict for defendant and this appeal followed.

The principal issues as developed in the briefs of the parties are (1) whether Mrs. Basore was an insured within the meaning and protection- of the uninsured automobile amendatory endorsement; (2) whether she, was required to and did prove she sustained any injuries at the time of physical contact between the hit-and-run automobile and the automobile she occupied; and whether she had complied with certain conditions contained in the policy.

In her petition for damages Mrs. Basore alleged the existence of Policy No. 10 522 358 issued by the defendant and her coverage under it. She also alleged the facts upon which she relied for her recovery. Defendant in its answer admitted the issuance of the policy, that it was in effect at all pertinent times, and pleaded specifically certain portions of it including Section II as follows: “Section II — Protection Against Bodily Injury By (Un)Insured Automobiles — -Allstate will pay all sums which the insured shall be legally entitled to recover as damages from the owner or operator of an uninsured automobile because of bodily injury, sustained by the insured, caused by accident and arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of such automobile. Bodily injury benefit each person $5,000.00, each accident $10,000.00.”

At the commencement of the trial in his opening statement to the jury defendant’s counsel told the jury “there is what is written as uninsured motorist coverage, and this is the type of coverage in which the Insurance Company agrees to pay such sums as the insured may be legally entitled to recover, and I emphasize the words ‘legally entitled to recover’, from the owner or op *628 era tor of an uninsured automobile.” He added that under the policy Mrs. Basore relied on “The coverage is specifically that the Insurance Company shall pay such sums as the insured would legally be entitled to recover.”

At the close of the opening statements plaintiff’s counsel asked the court’s permission to read into evidence a portion of the defendant’s answer to show coverage under the provisions of the policy. To avoid this defendant’s counsel admitted the issuance of the policy; that it was in force on May 24, 1960, the day of the accident; and that it afforded protection against bodily injury by uninsured automobiles under Section II of the policy, “subject to the terms and conditions of the policy.” Plaintiff’s counsel then read into evidence the mentioned Section II which read the same as set out above in defendant’s answer.

The evidence disclosed that Mr. and Mrs. Basore were husband and wife and lived together in their home in Independence, Missouri. On May 24, 1960, they were traveling in their family car, a 1957 Dodge, to a lakeside cabin they owned near Warsaw, Missouri. Mr. Basore was driving and she was sitting beside him.

As they proceeded down Number 7 Highway one mile west of Creighton a car from the opposite direction approached them. This car was partly across the center of the narrow road, a foot and a half approximately. Mr. Basore endeavored to avoid a collision but it struck the side of the Basore car which then went off the highway out of control, ran through a fence and struck a tree.

Mrs. Basore was asked: “Q. If your husband had continued straight on with the other car being into your lane a little bit would the cars have hit? A. They would have.” When the other car’s bumper hit Mr. Basore’s car, “it didn’t stop us, just brushed us, * * * and when we hit the shoulder the other car was gone * * * * * “Could you tell who was driving that car? A. No.”

Mr. Basore testified the oncoming car “hit” his car. He was asked, “Q. Had it not been for the contact with this other car could you have maintained your car on the highway? A. I think so. * * * I pulled over as far as I could get without hitting the lip, trying to dodge that car. * * * He kept easing toward me. * * Was your car entirely on the pavement when it happened? A. My car was right at the edge of the lip.”

Mrs. Basore was injured by the occurrence. Several highway partolmen came to the scene, and took her and her husband directly to the hospital at Harrisonville. There she was treated for her injuries and by ambulance sent on to St. Luke’s Hospital in Kansas City. Later, she was examined by Dr. Overesch and Dr. Filger, the defendant company’s doctors, as well as by several of her own choice.

Turning to the first mentioned issue, it is defendant’s position that since Mr. Basore was the only named insured, Mrs. Basore was not an insured under the uninsured automobile portion of the policy. Part of defendant’s contention involves the failure of plaintiff’s counsel to include in the introduction into evidence as a part of the written policy document (plaintiff’s Exhibit 11) and its amendatory endorsements that part which contains the Section II which defendant pleaded in its answer, told the jury about in its opening statement, admitted the existence of and which plaintiff’s counsel read into evidence at the commencement of the trial. We find no merit in any contention that Section II was missing from plaintiff’s presented case and that plaintiff is limited to the policy as it appears in her Exhibit 11.

That part of the insurance policy contained in Exhibit 11 contains a definition of terms and in part X, paragraph 1, provides: “The unqualified word ‘insured’, wherever used with respect to the liability insurance, includes the named insured, spouse, and *629 * * *." And in paragraph 8 the provision is, “ ‘Spouse’ means the spouse of the named insured if a resident of the same household.”

It is our view of the policy that Section II thereof providing coverage to the “insured” against injury occasioned by uninsured automobiles must be read in the light of the policy definition of an insured as including his spouse residing in the same household. Or differently stated, the term “insured” by definition contained in the policy includes the named insured’s spouse residing with him. Since such a spouse is also an “insured” and Section II of the policy provides “the insured shall be legally entitled'to recover” etc., the spouse may maintain a suit as an insured under the uninsured automobile amendment to the policy. The uninsured automobile coverage is not limited to the named insured.

Defendant’s argument to the contrary,' at best, might be deemed to indicate that the policy is possibly ambiguous as to whom it covers as the insured in its uninsured automobile amendatory endorsement. If we were to find or assume such an ambiguity it would be of no aid to defendant which prepared the policy, for the rule is if the insurance policy is reasonably open to different constructions, since the insurer wrote the policy that construction which is most favorable to the insured must prevail. Utchen v. American Casualty Co.

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Bluebook (online)
374 S.W.2d 626, 1963 Mo. App. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/basore-v-allstate-insurance-company-moctapp-1963.