Boulter v. Commercial Standard Ins.

78 F. Supp. 895, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2582
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedJuly 26, 1948
DocketNo. 27857-R
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 78 F. Supp. 895 (Boulter v. Commercial Standard Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boulter v. Commercial Standard Ins., 78 F. Supp. 895, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2582 (N.D. Cal. 1948).

Opinion

YANKWICH, District Judge.

I.

The Reserved Motion for Directed Verdict.

The Defendant’s Alternative Motions.

The plaintiffs, by their action, sought to recover from the defendant a total of $5,118.76, with interest, alleged to he due on a judgment secured by them on September 16, 1947, in the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the City and County of San Francisco, against Allen J. Warner and Robert W. Woodrow.

Warner and Woodrow were co-partners engaged in the transportation of property for hire, as a business, over public highways in the State of California, by means of motor vehicles. They had been authorized by the Railroad Commission of California to operate such business, and obtained a permit, as required by the law of California.1 When the permit was issued, they were required by the Commission to secure a policy of public liability. The policy was issued by the defendant on April 19, 1946, and was in effect on June 22, 1946, when the accident for which the recovery had been had in the Superior Court action occurred. The defendant, having refused to pay the judgment, this action was instituted. A motion for a directed verdict, made by the defendant at the close of the plaintiffs’ case, was denied. At the conclusion of all the evidence, the defendant again moved for a directed verdict. Action on the motion was reserved.2 The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs. The defendant has moved for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or, in the alternative, for a new trial.

[897]*897ii.

The Decisive Question.

Under the interpretation which the Supreme Court has placed on Rule 50(b), we are required to rule on both motions. 3 The decision to be arrived at depends on our answer to one question:

Was the accident and the consequent injury to the plaintiffs, for which they recovered, in the Superior Court of the State of California, the judgment sued on here, within the terms of the public liability policy issued by the defendant?

And the answer is conditioned on the meaning of Declaration No. 5 in the policy, which reads:

“The automobiles described are and will be used only for transportation of merchandise purposes and will be operated as follows, and this insurance covers for no other use or operation

Compliance with the statutory insurance requirement is a condition precedent to the granting of a permit by the California Railroad Commission.4

Under the Insurance Code of California, common carrier liability insurance includes insurance against any loss “from liability of a common carrier for accident or injury, fatal or nonfatal, to any person.” 5 And, while such liability includes any loss for which the peril insured against was the proximate cause, it excludes any liability “for a loss of which the peril insured against was only a remote cause.” 6

The collision between the truck owned by the defendant and the automobile of the plaintiffs, which resulted in injury to them, occurred in Humboldt County, Calfornia, at a distance of three miles from the town of Scotia, on Public Highway 101. Warner, one of the partners in the trucking business, is our sole source of information as to the circumstance under which he found himself on June 22, 1946, with the truck, without the trailer, at the place where the accident occurred. His story is contradictory. The version he gave on the first day of the trial as to the object of his trip from San Francisco differs from that which he told at the trial in the Superior Court, and at a hearing in this court in an action for declaratory judgment, to which he was made a party, and in which a declaration of non-coverage was secured against him and his co-partner.7

[898]*898In those proceedings, he insisted that the trip from San Francisco, where his business is located, to a small lumber town and resort thirty miles south of Eureka, where his sister resides, was purely a pleasure trip. He took his mother and his wife to see his sister, and to vacation. At the trial here, he claimed that the trip combined both business and pleasure. The business feature of the trip lay in the fact that he carried some 750 feet of pipe and some furniture and stoves for his sister, for which she paid him $75. After his arrival in Humboldt County, he remained nearly a week, during which he assisted in the laying of a water line, leaving the work. to be finished by more expert mechanics. He returned to San Francisco, a distance of some 250 miles, on June 22, 1946, leaving behind the trailer, which weighs 5 tons, and has a capacity of 15 tons. There was still some pipe on it, and some of the goods which he had brought up. In fact, on his second trip to San Francisco, he took back a large stove which his sister could not use. His wife accompanied him on the return trip, the sole object was to pay a premium on the liability policy here involved, which was due June 22, 1946, and which he claims he paid with the cash into which he converted the travelers’ checks in the sum of $75, which his sister had given him in payment for transporting the pipe and the household goods.

After the motion for a directed verdict had been made at the conclusion of all the testimony, Warner was recalled for the purpose of amplifying the version given the day before, and particularly, the statement that in returning to San Francisco, he also had in mind soliciting trucking business from a contractor residing at San Jose — a Mr. Dowdell. So, on the second day of the trial, he added that he had in mind soliciting from Dowdell and another contractor for whom he had previously transported materials, but that, as a fact, he did not do so after reaching San Francisco. On the contrary, after paying the premium', he started back for Humboldt County, where he picked up the trailer returning to San Francisco once more.

We are confronted here with the inherent improbability of a story, which bears almost on the fantastic. Motivation appears in the fact, admitted by Warner on the stand, that he made no mention whatsoever of the transportation of the pipe when he reported the accident to the highway patrol officer who interviewed him at the scene, or to the agent of the defendant, to whom he gave a full statement of the accident, which was reduced to writing and signed by him. In these statements, made shortly after the accident, the aim of the trip was given as a vacation for his mother, wife, and himself. He claimed that the reason for the omission of the fact that he was carrying the pipe and the household goods was that he thought it unimportant. He admitted, however, that he began to think about the possibile significance of the transportation feature of the trip, when, in talking to other truck operators, they reminded him that this transportation might have a bearing upon the liability insurance which he carried. One fact stands out in this narrative: The claimed main purpose of the return trip was to- pay the premium. This was, in fact, its sole purpose, because we cannot consider any intention not carried into effect, such as solicitation of business.

III.

The Law Applicable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 F. Supp. 895, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boulter-v-commercial-standard-ins-cand-1948.