Chavers v. St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company

188 F. Supp. 39, 14 Ohio Op. 2d 231, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4195
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedOctober 21, 1960
DocketCiv. 35107
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 188 F. Supp. 39 (Chavers v. St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chavers v. St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company, 188 F. Supp. 39, 14 Ohio Op. 2d 231, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4195 (N.D. Ohio 1960).

Opinion

CONNELL, District Judge.

Plaintiff instituted this action under the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201, petitioning this Court to adjudge that (1) the plaintiff is an insured under the policy of automobile insurance issued to one Norman V. Grund by the defendant, and is entitled to all the protection afforded by that policy; (2) defendant is obliged to defend plaintiff against any claim arising oijt of the accident described below, and to pay all sums which plaintiff may become legally obligated to pay as a result of this same accident; (3) defendant wrongfully breached its contract of insurance by failing to defend against the above-mentioned claims; and (4) the defendant should pay such reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses as may be incurred by the plaintiff as a result of defendant’s breach of contract.

Through the expedient of well-planned discovery devices, namely depositions and requests for admissions, both parties have concluded, and this Court agrees, that there is no dispute as to the material facts involved in this litigation, consequently both parties have moved the court for summary judgment.

Although the salient facts are not in issue, a brief résumé of them is appropriate so that the legal issues confronting us can be better understood. The plaintiff, Nick Chavers, was employed by the Stouffer Corporation to assist patrons of its Shaker Square restaurant in the parking of their cars in a lot located directly at the rear of the restauarant, and to render other services to them consistent with the establishment and maintenance *40 of good public relations between the patrons and the restaurant. Although he received his monthly compensation from his brother, John Chavers, and was apparently of the belief that he was answerable in his employment activities Only to John, it is manifest from the supplementary briefs of both parties, and from the deposition of Gordon Forbes, the manager of the Shaker Square restaurant, that Stouffer’s was plaintiff’s actual and only employer. From plaintiff’s deposition we determine that his duties as lot attendant varied, depending on the number of cars using the lot on any particular night. On slow nights he might merely direct the patrons of the restaurant to a particular parking spot, but when the lot was crowded he would often suggest that the patron leave the car in the driveway and he would park it, thus saving both the patron’s time and the lot’s space. He would reverse the operation on the patron’s departure. In addition to his parking difties, plaintiff and other similarly-employed attendants were instructed by Mr. Forbes to wipe the windshields of patrons’ cars on rainy days, to remove snow and ice from windshields, to address the patrons politely, to help patrons with packages when necessary, to furnish umbrellas for the patrons in assisting them to their cars in inclement weather, and to altogether act in a courteous manner to encourage patronage of the restaurant rather than to discourage it.

Until early 1957, plaintiff, along with the other lot attendants, used punchcards to record their working hours, and were paid directly by a paycheck from Stouf-fer’s. At that time however, a question arose as to whether the attendants were spending all of their working hours on the job, and Forbes, to obviate this problem, instituted a new system of paying the attendants. It was decided to vest supervision of the attendants in one person (John Chavers), and payment to the other attendants would be made by him out of a single monthly check of $250 given him by Stouffer’s. The amount of the check was arrived at by averaging the amount of pay received by each of the attendants over a period of months immediately preceding the change. But the method of payment did not affect the employment relationship of the attendants with Stouffer’s, and the manager of the Shaker Square restaurant retained the authority to hire and fire the attendants, and to supervise their employment activities.

The accident upon which the present action is predicated occurred on the evening of November 16, 1957. Norman Y. Grund, a regular patron of the restaurant, drove his car into the lot and left it for plaintiff to park. It is admitted by both parties that the plaintiff, in parking the car, was doing so with the express permission of Grund, and thus, absent additional circumstances, was an insured within the provisions of Grund’s liability insurance policy. As Grund was walking towards the back entrance of the restaurant, plaintiff unaccountably lost control of Grund’s car and ran into him, causing him physical injury. Grund subsequently instituted two law suits in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court to recover damages for the injuries suffered. One law suit named plaintiff as the defendant, and the other named the Stouffer Corporation as defendant, and was based upon the doctrine of respondeat superior, imputing the alleged negligence of Nick Chavers to Stouffer’s, his alleged employer. Stouffer’s then notified plaintiff that it looks to him for a complete indemnification of any loss or expense it might incur by reason of the lawsuit instituted against it.

As a result of the above sequence of legal proceedings, plaintiff instituted this action for declaratory judgment. The object of the action is to secure a judicial declaration that the defendant extends coverage to the plaintiff under a policy of automobile liability insurance issued by the defendant to Norman V. Grund, as named insured, affording liability insurance both to him and to other persons using and operating, with *41 Grund’s permission, a 1953 Jaguar sedan identified in the policy.

The policy of Grund’s that was in effect on November 16, 1957, contained an exclusion clause which provided that the policy does not apply “(e) to an owned automobile while used in the automobile business, * * * ” Automobile business was defined in the policy as meaning “the business of selling, repairing, servicing, storing or parking of automobiles”.

The question, then, which confronts us on this motion for summary judgment is this: At the time of the accident in which Norman V. Grund was injured, and upon which this motion emanates, was Grund’s automobile being used in the business of storing or parking of automobiles so as to exclude Nick Chavers from the coverage he would otherwise be entitled to under the omnibus provision of the policy? The briefs of both parties, submitted in support of their cross motions for summary judgment, although recognizing the issue in the case is as stated above, reach their opposite conclusions from diverse approaches. The plaintiff claims that Stouffer Corporation is not in the automobile business as that term is intended in the policy, and that consequently the plaintiff, an employee of Stouffer’s and clearly acting within the scope of his employment, could not have been using the ear in the automobile business at the time of the accident. Defendant supports its motion by contending it is immaterial whether Stouffer’s is in the automobile business within the meaning of that term as used in the exclusion clause, for it is not the party claiming coverage. The real question, it argues, is whether Nick Chavers, at the time he injured Grund, was in the “automobile business”, and concludes that he was since he was receiving compensation for performing services which include, among other things, the parking of cars for the patrons of the restaurant.

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Bluebook (online)
188 F. Supp. 39, 14 Ohio Op. 2d 231, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chavers-v-st-paul-fire-and-marine-insurance-company-ohnd-1960.