Commerce Insurance v. Koch

522 N.E.2d 979, 25 Mass. App. Ct. 383, 1988 Mass. App. LEXIS 443
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1988
Docket87-314
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 522 N.E.2d 979 (Commerce Insurance v. Koch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commerce Insurance v. Koch, 522 N.E.2d 979, 25 Mass. App. Ct. 383, 1988 Mass. App. LEXIS 443 (Mass. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Kaplan, J.

Commerce Insurance Company (Commerce) is the plaintiff in this declaratory action. It seeks an interpretation of a provision of the simplified or plain-talk 2 Standard Massachusetts Automobile Insurance Policy (2d ed. 1979) as applied to the situation described in a statement of agreed facts. The facts may be summarized as follows.

On October 4, 1982, defendants' Benjamin Gray and Victor Koch were riding in a 1976 Chevrolet Monza automobile owned by Victor. These were youths seventeen years of age. They had drunk vodka before setting out. Benjamin was driving with Victor in the passenger *384 seat. The car went off the road and down an embankment and turned on its side. Alleging negligence on Benjamin’s part, Victor laid claim against Benjamin for the personal injuries he had suffered in the accident. 3 At the time neither youth was licensed to drive and there was no registration or insurance covering the Monza. The license plates affixed to the car were expired; they had belonged to one Thomas Manning and covered a 1970 Chevrolet Chevelle which he had traded away; he did not know how the plates had passed to other hands. Both youths were aware that the plates were expired and were carried illegally on the Monza. 4

Commerce sold Charles Gray, Benjamin’s father, a standard policy covering his 1982 Chevrolet Impala during the year 1982. Charles had elected Part 5, “Optional Bodily Injury to Others. ” Part 5 stated:

“Under this Part, we will pay damages to people injured or killed in accidents if you or a household member is legally responsible for the accident ....
“If someone covered under this Part is using an auto he or she does not own at the time of the accident, the owner’s auto insurance must pay its limits before we pay. Then, we will pay, up to the limits shown on your Coverage Selections page for any damages not covered by that insurance . . ..”

It is agreed that Benjamin was a “household member,” 5 and the defendants say that, as “owner’s auto insurance” on the Monza was absent and amounted to zero, Commerce was obliged to pay “up to the limits” of Charles’s policy. To the contrary, Commerce says any coverage by Charles’s policy was dependent on there being “owner’s auto insurance” on the Monza, and here that insurance was absent.

1. The first approach to the question of interpretation must be to read this insurance policy as one would read any ordinary contract — to inquire what the simplified, conversational language of the policy would mean to a reader applying normal reasoning or analysis. See Save-Mor Supermarkets, Inc. v. Skelly Detective Service, Inc., 359 Mass. 221,225-226 (1971). The judge below thought the second paragraph, quoted above, was “clear and unambiguous” and would be read to mean that the existence of owner’s insurance was a “condition precedent” to any liability on Commerce’s part. We disagree *385 with that conclusion. We think the reader would say at first reading that the language meant Commerce was simply to get the benefit of any owner’s insurance that existed to reduce its own liability. At second reading he or she might conceive the possibility that some owner’s insurance must be in force before Commerce became liable at all. However, upon consideration, this would appear a strained or curious interpretation. The reader would sense, as indeed the legal rule of interpretation suggests, that quite emphatic words are required to create a condition precedent forfeiting or limiting rights, and no such words appear here. See Charles, Henry & Crowley Co. v. Home Ins. Co., 349 Mass. 723, 726 (1965). An interpretation that owner’s insurance must have been in force is awkward because no amount is specified: insurance, if any existed, might be in any amount, small or large. On the practical side, policyholders and other insured persons under Commerce’s policy would be expected from time to time to drive borrowed cars: it would not comport with common sense to say that in case of accident Commerce’s exposure should turn on whether insurance on the borrowed car happened to have lapsed, or by its terms failed to cover the casualty, or did not exist for any of a number of other possible reasons. The home jurisdiction of the borrowed car involved in the accident might be one not requiring the owner by law to procure any insurance relevant to the accident, and the accident might indeed have occurred outside Massachusetts. Part 5 provides:

“Unlike the Compulsory Part, this Part does provide coverage ... for accidents occurring outside Massachusetts [meaning elsewhere in the United States or in Canada].”

Commerce is properly concerned that Part 5 should not be so construed as to enable a person to purchase Part 5 insurance on one car that he owns, leave uninsured (and, thereby, unregistered) one or more other cars that he owns, and then' claim coverage through the policy with respect to accidents occurring in the use of those uninsured cars. Part 5 foresees this difficulty and provides against it:

“ ... we will not pay:
“3. For injuries resulting from an accident while you or a household member is using an auto either of you owns or uses regularly, unless a premium for this Part is shown for that auto on the Coverage Selections page.”

Part 5 also excludes coverage of accidents by use of a stolen car:

“. . . this Part does not pay for the benefit of anyone using an auto without the consent of the owner.”

*386 The upshot of what we take to be the natural and reasonable interpretation of the Part 5 provisions is that, as a general rule, omitting refinements, where a person insured by Commerce, using a vehicle he or she does not own, is responsible in an accident, and owner’s insurance exists on that vehicle, and that insurer pays, Commerce is relieved to that extent; otherwise Commerce is bound to cover without deduction. Commerce’s liability thus has some resemblance or analogy to that of a secondary insurer which is obliged to come in and pay over and above any “collectible” primary insurance. Compare Massachusetts Insurers Insolvency Fund v. Continental Cas. Co., 399 Mass. 598, 599 n.2 (1987). Also compare Gulezian v. Lincoln Ins. Co., 399 Mass. 606, 611-612 (1987). 6

We gather that Commerce might reconcile itself to being held liable in a case where the insured did not know that the car he or she was driving was without insurance at the time, but it would exclude liability where the insured did know but nevertheless used the car. The difficulty with this position is that even express exceptions or exclusions are read conservatively, see Vappi & Co. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 348 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
522 N.E.2d 979, 25 Mass. App. Ct. 383, 1988 Mass. App. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commerce-insurance-v-koch-massappct-1988.