Farmers Cooperative Soc. No. 1 v. Maryland Casualty Co.

135 S.W.2d 1033
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 18, 1939
DocketNo. 5095.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 135 S.W.2d 1033 (Farmers Cooperative Soc. No. 1 v. Maryland Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers Cooperative Soc. No. 1 v. Maryland Casualty Co., 135 S.W.2d 1033 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

On the 24th of November, 1937, appellant, Farmers Cooperative Society No. 1, owned and operated a cotton gin at Quanah and was also engaged in the business of selling certain goods, wares and merchandise, among which was gasoline, kerosene and other associated commodities, its gasoline service station being located at the gin. One William D. Boswell was a customer of appellant and, between five and six o’clock in the afternoon of the date mentioned, he went to appellant’s place' of business with a can or container of approximately five gallons capacity and applied to appellant’s agents and servants in charge to purchase a quantity of kerosene, commonly termed coal oil. He was served by one Jim Har-rill, a clerk of appellant, who received from Boswell the price of the quantity of kerosene purchased by the latter. By a mistake of some kind, the exact nature of which is not shown by the record, the can or container was filled with gasoline or a mixture of gasoline and kerosene so that the liquid delivered was of much greater inflammable and explosive nature than kerosene. Upon receiving and paying for the liquid, Mr. Boswell carried the same to his home, which was located some 350 yards from the premises of appellant, and about two hours later, his wife, Effie Ann Boswell, in preparation for filling a lamp, poured a portion of the liquid from the five gallon container into a smaller one, intending thence to transfer it to the empty lamp. As it was growing dark, in order to see more clearly what she was doing, before pouring the liquid into the small container, Mrs. Boswell placed another lamp about four or five feet from the container into which she was pouring the liquid and, the liquid being of a much greater explosive nature than kerosene, its fumes or vapors were communicated to the lighted lamp and an explosion ensued. As a result of the explosion Mrs. Boswell’s clothes ignited and she was badly burned. The husband, being in the house, and observing the perilous condition of Mrs. Boswell, ran to her and succeeded in extinguishing’ the flames, but in doing so he inhaled flames, gases and vapors which irritated his' throat and lungs so that he immediately became very ill. Pneumonia developed in two or three days and Mr. Boswell’s death followed in about a we'ek.

*1035 Appellant, at the time, was carrying a policy of indemnity insurance which had been issued by appellee, termed “Manufacturers' Public Liability Policy”, by which appellant was insured against loss from liability imposed bylaw upon appellee on account of bodily injuries and death accidentally suffered by persons not employed by appellant, with certain exceptions and under conditions specified in the policy which will hereinafter be discussed.

On the 4th of March, 1938, Mrs. Boswell filed a suit against appellant in the district court of Hardeman County for damages occasioned by the alleged negligence of appellant in delivering gasoline or other similar explosive liquid to her husband instead of kerosene which he had purchased. On the same day, March 4, 1938, Mrs. Boswell for herself and as next friend for L. B. Boswell, a minor son, joined by Mattie Helms, a feme sole, and a number of other adult children, filed another suit of the same nature against appellant and on the 11th of October, 1938, judgments were rendered in these causes of action in favor of Mrs. Boswell and some of the other plaintiffs.

On December 28, 1937, after being notified of the explosion and the death of William D.' Boswell, appellee made an investigation and notified appellant that, under the terms of its policy, it was not liable to appellant and would not accept the defense of the’ two suits that had been filed by the Bos-wells against appellant. Appellant itself thereupon undertook the defense of the suits and on October 11, 1938, the entire controversy, including both suits, was settled by an agreement and compromise between the parties, which resulted in the judgments of that date which were for the total sum of $1,539 in favor of the plaintiffs. In defending the suits, appellant was subjected to an expense of attorney’s fees and court costs and it paid the judgments and the attorney’s fees and court costs amounting in the aggregate to $2,403.74.

On November 17, 1938, appellant filed this suit against appellee to recover upon the policy of indemnity the amounts paid by -it in discharging the judgments and the attorney’s fees and court costs in the former suits. The case was tried by the court without the intervention of a jury on the 14th of December, 1938, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the appellee and denying appellant any relief.

The controlling issue in the case as presented by the briefs involves the question of whether or not appellee, under the terms of the indemnity policy, was obligated to appear and defend the two suits filed by the Boswells and to pay the judgments entered therein. If, by the terms of the policy, appellee bound itself to perform that duty on behalf of appellant, the judgment of the trial court is erroneous. On the other hand, if the provisions of the policy are Such as not to cover the kind of suits filed, or the nature of the claims asserted by the Boswells, or if those suits and claims fall within one or more of the exceptions made by the provisions of the policy as being those not included in its general terms, then appellee was not obligated to appear and defend the Boswell suits nor to pay the judgments that were entered therein and the judgment of the trial court must be affirmed.

The ^general insuring clauses of the policy provide that in consideration of the premium paid, appellee would insure appellant against loss from liability imposed upon it by law for damages, either direct or consequential, on account of bodily injuries, including déath resulting therefrom, accidentally suffered or alleged to have been suffered by any person not employed by appellant while upon the premises or upon the sidewalks or other ways immediately adjacent thereto provided for. the use of employees or the public, occupied by appellant in the conduct of the business and. at the places named in Item IV(a) of the.Schedule of statements in the policy. This clause contained a parenthetical provision which extended the situs of such injuries to places elsewhere than the premises of appellant, “if caused by employees of the assured engaged as such in said business and at . said place, but who are required, in the discharge of their duties, to be from time to time at other places; provided such bodily injuries or death are suffered as the result of accident occurring within the term of this insurance * * *. ”

'Under Sub. VI, a number of obligations which appellant may assume or which may be imposed upon it by law, are specified as being those which are not covered by the policy. Among them is No. 6 which specifies as an exception, or one not covered by the policy, “any accident caused directly or indirectly by the consumption, use, installation, removal, repair, change or demonstration elsewhere than upon the premises own *1036 ed by or under the control of the assured and described in IV(a) of the Schedule hereof, of any goods, articles, or product, manufactured, handled or distributed by the assured.”

The rule of law is well established that where the language used in an insurance policy is plain and unambiguous the courts must enforce the contracts as made by the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.W.2d 1033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-cooperative-soc-no-1-v-maryland-casualty-co-texapp-1939.