Floralbell Amusement Corp. v. Standard Surety & Casualty Co.

170 Misc. 1003, 9 N.Y.S.2d 959
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 170 Misc. 1003 (Floralbell Amusement Corp. v. Standard Surety & Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Floralbell Amusement Corp. v. Standard Surety & Casualty Co., 170 Misc. 1003, 9 N.Y.S.2d 959 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

Madigan, J.

A question as to coverage under a public liability insurance policy is raised by a motion to dismiss the complaint for insufficiency.

The policy describes the “ assured’s trade or business ” as motion picture and vaudeville theatre.” It covers as to claims and suits against the assured * * * even if groundless * * * to recover damages arising or resulting from bodily injuries and/or death accidentally suffered or alleged to have been so suffered,” by any person other than an employee of the assured, resulting from the ownership, care, maintenance, occupation or use ” of the assured’s premises or from any business operations of the assured * * * therein conducted by the assured.”

The nature of the coverage is indicated by the words accidentally suffered or alleged to have been so suffered.” To that coverage the words accident ” and “ accidental ” in other parts of the policy obviously refer.

In this action the complaint, served by the assured, shows that one Dill asserted that he had been injured in an unprovoked assault committed in the assured’s theatre by its manager in furtherance of its business described in the policy, and that defendant in the present action, the insurer, refused to" defend the action for assault [1005]*1005brought against this plaintiff, the assured, by Dill. When Dill sued the assured defendant took the position that the policy does not relate to liability for assaults, and that is defendant’s contention on the present motion, to dismiss for insufficiency. The complaint in this action also sets forth that the assault alleged by Dill was in no wise and at no time authorized, consented to, participated in or ratified by the plaintiff or any officer, director or stockholder thereof,” and that plaintiff at his own expense successfully defended Dill’s action. That action was for an assault pure and simple as appears from the complaint, which in no manner alleges negligence. Dill’s complaint is an exhibit to the complaint here.

The present action is brought to recover from defendant, the insurer, the cost to plaintiff, the assured, of defending the claim which Dill prosecuted. It is asserted by plaintiff that such claim was one which the policy required the insurer to defend at its own expense.

Thus it will be seen that the question here is whether a public liability policy such as that issued by defendant to plaintiff relates to liability, or alleged liability, for injuries due to an unprovoked assault committed on a person other than an employee of the assured, without actual direction or participation by the assured and committed by an employee of the assured in furtherance of the business as to which the policy covers.

Apparently that question has not been decided in the State of New York. But see Raven Halls, Inc., v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company (142 Misc. 454) and Baron v. Auto Mutual Indemnity Company (247 App. Div. 731).

The law reports of but very few other States indicate decisions directly in point.

In Westerland v. Argonaut Grill (187 Wash. 437, 439; 60 P. [2d] 228, 229) the Supreme Court of Washington reasons as follows: “ An injury may be said, subjectively, not to be accidental, although objectively, it is. Whatever may be said of a bodily injury caused by the kick of a mule or the bite of a snake, as to its being accidental, from the standpoint of the mule or the snake, it cannot be doubted that it would be accidental from the standpoint of the person receiving the injury. The language in the contract in the present case does not purport to cover bodily injuries accidentally caused by the assured’s employees, but, on the contrary, it covers bodily injuries suffered by any person not in the employ of the assured, as the result of accident caused by the assured’s employees while engaged in the course of their employment. The injury here came to the respondent through external, unexpected force, not by his choice or provocation, and, as to him, it was accidental.”

[1006]*1006In Georgia Casualty Co. v. Alden Mills (156 Miss. 853, 861; 127 So. 555, 557) it is said, in reference to the effect of a public liability policy: There is a diversity of opinion on this question among the courts, but the great weight of authority, and we think the better reasoned cases, hold that injuries sustained by a person while defending himself from an unprovoked assault are within the terms of a policy insuring him against injury accidentally inflicted — that an injury inflicted on one who did not voluntarily enter into the affray in which he was injured is an accident.”

These excerpts from opinions filed in State courts of last resort are not to be misunderstood. It may be urged that, instead of inquiring as to the objects and purposes of the contract from the viewpoint of the parties to the policy, those decisions interpret the contract from the viewpoint of the person who alleges injuries and who is not a party to the policy. But the meaning to be given to the words of the contract is the generally accepted meaning of such words unless it satisfactorily appear that some other meaning was intended; and the court is seeking the meaning of the parties to the agreement when the court seeks to ascertain the generally accepted meaning of the words in the policy. An accident causing bodily injuries or death is something which befalls the person injured. From his standpoint, therefore, it seems natural to define the word accident.” Such definition does not imply an approach other than from the standpoint of the parties to the public liability policy. Moreover, suffered ” is the word of the contract. What was suffered by the person injured or killed? That, the policy itself suggests, is the question to be answered.

If the point of view to be taken is not that of the person injured, a conclusion favorable to the assured would, nevertheless, be indicated. Were the assured a lawyer his mind probably would run to differentiation between liability on the theory of negligence and liability on the theory of assault. But the approach should not be that of an assured who has studied law. What is to be sought on the present application is not a lawyer’s undérstanding of the language employed in the policy, but a layman’s. The court should seek to ascertain what the language would indicate to the ordinary buyer of public liability insurance. What meaning ought the insurance company expect the assured to ascribe to its printed policy? It seems fair to say that to him the policy would imply coverage under the circumstances disclosed by the complaint in the present action.

Still other considerations indicate the same conclusion.

For assaults by a dangerous employee or other dangerous person harbored by the assured there might be an action in negligence. [1007]*1007As to such an action it will be conceded that the policy would cover it. Clearly, then, it would not be true to say that under no circumstances whatever would the policy safeguard the assured as to liability to a person assaulted by an employee.

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Bluebook (online)
170 Misc. 1003, 9 N.Y.S.2d 959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floralbell-amusement-corp-v-standard-surety-casualty-co-nynyccityct-1937.