Bonner v. United States Fire Ins. Co.
This text of 494 So. 2d 1311 (Bonner v. United States Fire Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Melba Johnnice BONNER, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
UNITED STATES FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*1312 Ferrell & Hubbard by Wayne E. Ferrell, Jr., Jackson, Miss., Lamothe & Hamilton by Frank E. Lamothe, III, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Christovich & Kearney by A.R. Christovich, Jr. and J. Warren Gardner, Jr., New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.
Before MARVIN, SEXTON and NORRIS, JJ.
MARVIN, Judge.
This action arose out of a crash, in 1980, of a private airplane owned by Bastrop Aircraft, Inc., in which the pilot who rented the aircraft and his three guest passengers were fatally injured.
The issues in this appeal concern whether the pilot, whose negligence caused the crash, was an omnibus insured under the liability coverage of the insurance policy written for Bastrop Aircraft, and whether Bastrop Aircraft was independently liable because of its own negligence or vicariously liable because of imputation of the pilot's negligence. Appellants are the widow and heirs of one of the decedent-passengers, Doyle Bonner. The trial court resolved these issues in favor of appellees, Bastrop Aircraft and its liability insurer.
We affirm.
FACTS
The pilot rented the aircraft in Bastrop on September 16 and flew to Oak Grove, a town east of Bastrop, intending to fly to Texas with friends the next day. The plane crashed about dawn on September 17 shortly after take-off from the Oak Grove airport, causing fatal injuries to its occupants. The liability insurer of the pilot compromised and settled the claims of the survivors of the other decedent-passengers during the course of litigation and before this appeal. Only the stated issues are now posed for resolution.
APPELLANTS' ARGUMENTS
Appellants urge that because no affirmative defenses were pleaded, Bastrop Aircraft and its insurer failed to meet their burden of avoiding coverage under the policy. The record emphatically supports the conclusion that this pilot rented the aircraft from Bastrop Aircraft. Appellants even alleged this fact. Evidence establishing the verbal rental agreement was elicited by all parties and without objection by appellants.
*1313 Where liability coverage under an omnibus insuring provision is at issue, it is the plaintiff who has the burden of proving that the terms of the insuring provision provide coverage. Where liability coverage is provided to a particular insured and the insurer relies on a policy exclusion in a separate section of the policy to defeat that coverage, the burden is on the insurer to plead and prove the exclusion. Compare Tison v. Fidelity and Casualty Company of New York, 181 So.2d 835 (La.App. 2d Cir.1965), and Washington v. Dixie Leasing of N.O., Inc., 352 So.2d 363 (La.App. 4th Cir.1977). Here, appellants rely on the omnibus insuring provision of the policy. This provision is contained in the first section of the policy entitled INSURING AGREEMENTS which consists of seven parts.[1] Subpart III of this section, which defines "Insured," states in pertinent part:
The ... word "insured" ... with respect to [liability] coverages a, b, c, and d, includes not only the named insured but any person while using ... the aircraft... with the permission of the named insured. * * *
[This] provision do[es] not apply: * * *
To any person operating the aircraft under the terms of any rental agreement... which provides any remuneration to the named insured for the use of the aircraft.
THE PILOT-RENTER AS AN "INSURED"
Two Louisiana cases have squarely held that similarly worded policies do not afford omnibus liability coverage to a pilot who rents the aircraft from the owner even though one of the permitted uses in the respective policy expressly contemplates that qualified pilots will rent the aircraft. In each instance, the pilot would have been an "insured" under the first part of the policy definition of an [omnibus] insured (using the aircraft with the permission of the "named insured"), but for the second part of the policy definition of insured which provides that omnibus liability coverage is not afforded to "any person, other than the named insured, while the aircraft is subject to any rental or lease agreement." Jahrman v. Valley Air Park, Inc., 333 So.2d 712 (La.App. 2d Cir.1976); Doyen v. Cessna Aircraft Co., 416 So.2d 1337 (La.App. 3d Cir.1982). The Bastrop Aircraft omnibus provision, quoted above, contains similar language in a policy which is similarly structured to the policies at issue in Jahrman and in Doyen. In Jahrman, we stated that each section of the policy serves a different function and that when the plane is rented, the owner would be covered as to its liability but the person using the aircraft under a rental agreement would not be covered.
Appellants contend that Jahrman should be distinguished because one of the uses of the aircraft permitted by this policy was "limited commercial," which is defined in the use section of the policy as including the use of the aircraft by a pilot to whom it was rented and because a specific premium was charged to Bastrop Aircraft for this contemplated use. We agree that we did not mention in Jahrman that such a premium was charged, but we discern no difference in the contention there and here which is based on the fact that the USE section of the policy recognized and permitted commercial use of the airplane.
Appellants orally argued that Doyen, supra, was "overturned by" and was settled after it was "reversed by" the Supreme Court of Louisiana in Doyen v. Cessna Aircraft Co., 425 So.2d 786 (La.App. 3d Cir.1982), hereafter called Doyen II. Doyen II was an opinion of the Third Circuit which was consolidated with and which followed Corley v. Gene Allen Air Service, Inc., 425 So.2d 781 (La.App. 3d Cir.1982).
The appeals in the above cited consolidated cases were from summary judgments *1314 and not from judgments rendered on the merits after a trial. Those appeals questioned whether summary judgment was appropriate to resolve the issues of either the independent or the vicarious liability of the owner of the airplane.
Counsel for appellants misreads not only the source but also the import of Doyen II. Jahrman and Doyen I, on the other hand, squarely addressed the issue of whether the pilot-renter of an airplane was an omnibus insured under the liability provisions of the policy of the owner of the airplane.
We are not concerned with the owner's right to recover for the loss of the aircraft. Cases such as Benton Casing Service v. Avemco, 379 So.2d 225 (La.1979), and Smith v. Ranger Insurance Company, 301 So.2d 673 (La.App. 3d Cir.1974), were concerned with that issue and, of course, are not controlling here. Furthermore, when we are considering whether the pilot-renter is an omnibus "insured" under the liability coverage, we are not concerned with either the independent or the vicarious liability of the owner as a "named insured" under the policy.
We adhere to the holdings of Jahrman and Doyen I.
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494 So. 2d 1311, 1986 La. App. LEXIS 7689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonner-v-united-states-fire-ins-co-lactapp-1986.