Continental Insurance Company v. Bussell

498 P.2d 706, 1972 Alas. LEXIS 225, 68 Lab. Cas. (CCH) 12,880
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1972
Docket1517
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 498 P.2d 706 (Continental Insurance Company v. Bussell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Insurance Company v. Bussell, 498 P.2d 706, 1972 Alas. LEXIS 225, 68 Lab. Cas. (CCH) 12,880 (Ala. 1972).

Opinion

BOOCHEVER, Justice.

Charles W. Bussell operates an electrical contracting business which is known as Alaska Bussell Electric Company. He entered into an employment agreement with the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers which required Bussell to

provide life insurance coverage for each employee while traveling for the employer in an aircraft in the amount of Twenty-Five Thousand Dollars ($25,000.00), and in the event of employee’s death, payable to his estate.

After entering into that contract, he purchased a liability insurance policy from the Continental Insurance Company.

Dennis Young, an employee of Bussell and a member of the union, was killed in an airplane crash while traveling in the course of his employment. His executrix brought suit against Bussell for recovery of the $25,000 “death benefit” under the union contract. He filed a third party complaint against Continental and its agent, Dawson and Company of Alaska, Inc., alleging inter alia, that Continental had denied that the policy covered the executrix’s claim and had refused to defend the action. Bussell sought a declaratory judgment as to the coverage of the policy and Continental’s liability thereunder. 1 In its answer Continental denied that the policy in question covered the obligation upon which the executrix’s claim was based.

Continental moved for summary judgment as to Bussell’s first claim which alleged that the policy encompassed his liability for failure to provide life insurance under the terms of the union contract. Bussell opposed Continental’s motion and he, himself moved for summary judgment on the same issue. The superior court by Memorandum of Decision and Judgment denied Continental’s motion for summary judgment and granted that of Bussell. It *708 is from that judgment that Continental now appeals.

The policy contained three “Coverage Parts” entitled respectively: Comprehensive Automobile Liability Insurance, Comprehensive General Liability Insurance and Contractual Liability Insurance. The automobile part obviously does not provide the coverage here in issue.

The Comprehensive General Liability part specifies:

COVERAGE A — BODILY INJURY LIABILITY
COVERAGE B — PROPERTY DAMAGE LIABILITY
The company will pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of
A. bodily injury or
B. property damage to which this insurance applies, caused by an occurrence .

Immediately following the above provision there appeared a section entitled “Exclusions” which stated:

This insurance does not apply :
(a) to liability assumed by the insured under any contract or agreement except an incidental contract . . . , 2

Since the union contract is not an “incidental contract,” Bussell’s potential liability under that contract is excluded from the coverage afforded by the Comprehensive General Liability part. We therefore must focus on the Contractual Liability 3 Insur-anee provision in order to resolve the issue raised by this appeal. That part specifies:

I. COVERAGES — CONTRACTUAL BODILY INJURY LIABILITY
CONTRACTUAL PROPERTY DAMAGE LIABILITY
The company will pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured, by reason of contractual liability assumed by him under any written contract of the type designated in the schedule for this insurance, shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of
bodily injury or
property damage
to which this insurance applies, caused by an occurrence .... [Emphasis added.]

Under the heading “Designation of Contracts” in the “schedule” referred to above, there was typewritten : “all written contracts provided under this coverage port[ion].”

Before addressing ourselves further to the issue of the policy’s coverage, however, we must determine the source of Bussell’s anticipated liability to the estate of Dennis Young. The estate’s claim for relief is based on the theory that Young was a third party beneficiary of the union-Bussell contract. We must therefore examine the nature of Bussell’s obligation under that contract. Bussell has urged upon us a theory of contract construction whereby he may perform his contractual duty to purchase life insurance either by procuring the requisite policy or by responding in damages for his failure to do so. Contrary to the plain meaning of the contract language he would thus have us permit him to become, in effect, a self-insurer.

*709 When Bussell convenanted to procure a life insurance policy for the benefit of his employees he undertook a duty which could be discharged only by the purchase of such a policy. The union had the right prior to Young’s death to insist upon specific performance by Bussell of the obligation to procure the policy rather than await the eventual result of a damage suit based on the breach of the union contract. 4 The union was not required to rely on Bussell’s financial responsibility as opposed to that of a life insurance company. Conversely, had Bussell in good faith secured an appropriate policy from a life insurance company, he would have complied with his duty under the union contract regardless of the financial ability of such company to pay the executrix in accordance with the policy terms. Bussell, under the contract, had no direct obligation to pay the $25,000 as damages.

In the event, however, that Bussell failed to discharge his duty to obtain a life insurance policy, the estate of Young would have the right to sue for damages for breach of the covenant to procure the life insurance policy. Any judgment which might be obtained in such a suit would be based on the breach of the duty which Bussell undertook upon entering into the contract with the union. As stated in the RESTATEMENT OF CONTRACTS:

A distinction exists between the discharge of a primary duty created by the formation of a contract and that of the duty to make compensation in damages, which is the only remedial duty enforceable for breach of most contractual duties . . . . In this chapter the expression ‘contractual duty’ is confined to the primary duty, and the term ‘duty to make compensation’ is used to express the secondary duty. 5

Young, as a third party beneficiary of the union contract, was entitled to performance by Bussell of his contractual duty to secure the life insurance. Bussell’s contractual duty was established at the time the contract was made.

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Bluebook (online)
498 P.2d 706, 1972 Alas. LEXIS 225, 68 Lab. Cas. (CCH) 12,880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-insurance-company-v-bussell-alaska-1972.