Childress v. Continental Casualty Co.

461 F. Supp. 704, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19440
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 22, 1978
DocketCiv. A. 76-2977
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 461 F. Supp. 704 (Childress v. Continental Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Childress v. Continental Casualty Co., 461 F. Supp. 704, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19440 (E.D. La. 1978).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

EDWARD J. BOYLE, Sr., District Judge:

Plaintiff is the named beneficiary on a life insurance policy purchased by her husband, Robert Childress, and issued by defendant, Continental Casualty Company. On April 25,1976, Childress was killed while engaged in sport parachuting when his parachute failed to open. Defendant has refused to pay the policy proceeds because it contends that the parachuting accident comes' within an exclusion from coverage contained in the policy. Plaintiff brings this suit to enforce payment of the stipulated death benefit of $12,500, and for penalties and attorney fees for failure to pay, which plaintiff alleges are authorized by LSA-R.S. 22:65s. 1 The diversity jurisdiction of this court being properly invoked, the case has been submitted for adjudication on the record, the evidence adduced at trial (the policy and the testimony of a single witness), and memoranda of counsel.

The relevant exclusionary clause relied on by defendant reads as follows:

The policy does not cover any loss caused by or resulting from . . . injury sustained in consequence of riding, except as a passenger, and not as a pilot or crew member, in any vehicle or device for aerial navigation.

See Exhibit A, attached to plaintiff’s complaint. It is not contended that Childress was a pilot or crew member of the plane that carried him to the desired altitude for the jump which ended in his death. The only issues are whether the parachute which he was wearing and was to use on that jump was a “device for aerial navigation” and if so, whether decedent could be said to have been “riding in” such a device as its pilot at the time of his death. If the answers to both of these questions are affirmative, the exclusion is effective and there can be no recovery by plaintiff on the policy.

The only witness at trial was J. Michael Brown, the jumpmaster and most experienced jumper and skydiver on board the airplane which lifted Childress, along with some ten or eleven other jumpers, for what proved to be Childress’ fatal jump. He testified that the type of parachute being used by decedent was designed so that its wearer could control his descent with a great deal of precision. He described the maneuvers it could be used to effect, and stated that it could be landed “on a dime” if its wearer decided .to make a jump for accuracy. On this particular jump, however, Mr. Childress did not intend to use the parachute for intricate maneuvers or for an accurate landing, but rather the whole jump group had determined to form a “star” or a link-up wherein the free-falling skydivers were to have held hands in a circle for a time during descent prior to releasing their parachutes. The parachutes *706 were to be opened at a fixed altitude and only for the purpose of slowing the jumpers’ descent for a safe landing. Childress’ parachute failed to open properly, however, and he fell to his death.

Defendant argues that decedent’s parachute was not merely a device to safely slow his descent, but that it was also a “device for aerial navigation” because it could, by means of controls, be turned, braked, stalled and directed by its user, and its rate of descent could be regulated. Defendant reasons that since Childress was riding in this “device” when he met his death, his wife cannot recover under the policy because of the aforementioned exclusion. To support this argument, defendant cites Fielder v. Farmers New World Life Insurance Co., 435 F.Supp. 912 (C.D.Cal. 1977), and the case of Willingham v. Life and Casualty Insurance Co. of Tennessee, 216 F.2d 226 (5 Cir. 1954). 2

In Fielder the court held that an insurer was not liable for payment of benefits under a life insurance policy when the insured died in an accident while hang gliding. The case is factually inapposite here. At his request Fielder’s policy was endorsed to exclude death resulting from descent from any kind of aircraft or from travel or flight in any kind of aircraft in which the insured was acting as a pilot or member of the crew. (Emphasis ours). The court found that Fielder was the pilot of a hang glider which crashed causing injuries which resulted in death and, therefore, his operation of the glider constituted travel or flight in an aircraft in which he was acting as pilot within the provisions of the exclusion. The court apparently found it unnecessary to consider the “descent from any kind of aircraft” exclusion under the facts presented.

The insured in Willingham died when he fell or was thrown from an airplane. The policy in question had two relevant exclusion clauses, one regarding ordinary life insurance and the other pertaining to an accidental death benefit. The former excluded coverage for death resulting from “operating, or riding in, any kind of aircraft,” and the latter excluded coverage for “death resulting from operating, riding in, or descending from any hind of aircraft.” Plaintiff argued that coverage should not have been excluded under the first clause because it did not mention “descending from” as did the second, and the deletion of this phrase indicated that it was not intended to exclude death caused by a fall, as the second clearly did. The court held that “riding in” included “falling out of,” and therefore the exclusion in either clause was effective to bar recovery. It was further reasoned that the phrase “descending from” referred to a more gradual and voluntary movement than a fall:

[I]t includes, we think, such things as making a voluntary descent by parachute not because the plane is about to crash, or as descending from the plane after it has landed, things separated in causal connection from the “riding in.”

Willingham, supra, at 228 (emphasis added). Application of this reasoning in the instant case leads us to the conclusion that Mr. Childress’ death is not excluded from coverage under the policy written by defendant. The court in Willingham ruled that “descending from” was added to refer to death by, among other things, use of a parachute, and that those things included within the meaning of “descending from” are separated in causal connection from “riding in.” The logical conclusion to be drawn is that “riding in” was not intended to include the use of a parachute. Similarly, we hold that Childress was not “riding in” a device for aerial navigation; if anything, he was “descending from” one, and the policy which covered his death did not exclude coverage for death caused by descending from an aircraft.

*707 We are further supported in our holding for plaintiff by Clark v. Lone Star Life Insurance Co., 347 S.W.2d 290 (Tex.Civ.App. 1961). There, an insured died while sport parachuting.

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Bluebook (online)
461 F. Supp. 704, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childress-v-continental-casualty-co-laed-1978.