George Maurice Hamilton and Barbara Jane Lawson v. Maryland Casualty Company

368 F.2d 768
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 17, 1966
Docket22833
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 368 F.2d 768 (George Maurice Hamilton and Barbara Jane Lawson v. Maryland Casualty Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George Maurice Hamilton and Barbara Jane Lawson v. Maryland Casualty Company, 368 F.2d 768 (5th Cir. 1966).

Opinion

*769 JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge:

Another of that ever-growing list 1 of intramural insurance Donnybrooks which, as local disputes over the local reading of a local contract with no federal overtones, constitutional, statutory or otherwise, could better be left to local courts to resolve, 2 it seems the better part of judicial wisdom to bring this to an end without postponing the evil day of decision. Guillot v. Cenac Towing Company, Inc., 5 Cir., 1966, 366 F.2d 898. Helpful as is the Florida Supreme Court reference procedure, 3 especially in areas which present alternative governmental or social policy choices even though ostensibly garbed in the austere form of an insurance policy, 4 we think the question here is the simple one whether the insurance contract says what it means and means what it says. Jacksonville Terminal Co. v. Florida East Coast Railway Co., 5 Cir., 1966, 363 F. 2d 216, at 220. If it does — and we hold that it does — the District Court was clearly correct and should be affirmed. In construing what is euphemistically called the Family Automobile Policy only one real question specifically arises: is a brother-in-law living in the same *770 household as the sister-in-law a relative? Once that is answered the only problem remaining is whether there is any justifiable basis for disregarding the plain words of the contract.

The facts neither complex nor conflicting can be severely capsulated. As with another family, this, too, begins in the beginning. Patterson v. Thomas, 5 Cir., 1961, 289 F.2d 108, 117 (dissenting opinion). Margie Frye, the Assured, lived in the same household with McElroy Lawson and Mrs. McElroy Lawson, the sister of Margie Frye. Barbara Jane Lawson, the daughter of the McElroy Lawsons, was obviously Miss Frye’s niece. While driving her father’s automobile, Barbara injured the Damage Claimant, George Hamilton. The Damage Claimant, Hamilton, not unnaturally, pursues the Insurer to secure satisfaction of the judgment he has against Barbara who as co-plaintiff and co-appellant is now aligned with her former adversary, likewise a not uncommon contemporary development dictated by self-interest, morality, or a combination of both. See, Smoot v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 5 Cir., 1962, 299 F.2d 525; Smoot v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 5 Cir., 1964, 337 F.2d 223; Seguros Tepeyac S.A., Companía Mexicana v. Bostrom, 5 Cir., 1965, 347 F.2d 168. It highlights the significant questions to likewise capsúlate the District Court’s action. The District Judge held that McElroy Lawson, a brother-in-law of the Assured, was a relative. This had the effect of denying coverage under the exclusion for a non-owned automobile if owned by a relative residing in the same household with the Assured.

This Family Automobile Policy presumably on the 1958 revised form afforded, and was intended to afford, broad and liberal coverage both as to persons known and unknown and vehicles known and unknown. 5 The changes wrought by the 1963 revision are of no significance here. 6 Of critical importance, the *771 significant terms of the clauses describing the assureds such as "relative," "owned automobile," and "non-owned automobile" were specifically defined. 7 As to these the 1963 revision 8 also made some changes, none significant here.

Since the accident was caused by an automobile other than the one owned by the Assured, Aunt Margie, both as to coverage 9 and the persons insured (see note 5, supra, Par. (a) (1) (2)), the re-suit depends on whether Barbara's father's car was a "non-owned automobile" (note 5, supra, Par. (b) (1) (2)) as the policy defines it. (Note 7, supra). It simplifies the problem to reconstruct the definition clauses into an amalgam of "relative" and "non-owned automobile." It then reads:

"`Non-owned automobile' means an automobile * * * not owned by * * * either the named insured *772 or any relative of the named insured who is a resident of the same household * *

The possible points of controversy are thus quickly and sharply reduced. The car was not owned by Aunt Margie, the named Assured. But just as positively, it was owned by Barbara’s father. Equally clear, and unlike so many cases where the very vexing factual problem is whether the “relative” is a resident of the household, 10 Barbara’s father was a part of this household.

All that is left, therefore, is the question whether a brother-in-law of the named Assured is a “relative.” And on that score we have no doubt that within the context of this broad coverage, he is so. The role of the Court is perhaps fortunately easier since the term is a neutral one in the sense that to be a relative is, on occasions, the status which affords insurance coverage, while in others the status works an exclusion of coverage. 11 The sauce ought therefore to be for insurer and assured alike. In a policy which extends insurance to persons whose age, sex, physical, mental competence and moral responsibility are completely unknown and covers vehicles of unknown age, vintage, operability, mechanical condition or ownership, there is no place for a narrow reading of “relative.” Stated in operational terms, not the legalism of wills, trusts, estates, and conveyancing, any attempt', as urged here, to read into it distinctions betweén affinity and consanguinity would thwart the intended breadth of the coverage as well as the reflext exclusions which are essential to prevent abuses.

For Florida we make such an Erie alignment. 12 For Florida we reject the notion that “relative” is ambiguous. 13

*773 There this case would end without more were it not for the contention alternatively asserted but pressed almost as the main argument that Barbara qualifies under Par. (c) (2) (note 5, supra) as a “person * * * legally responsible for the use of * * * (2) a non-owned automobile.”

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Bluebook (online)
368 F.2d 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-maurice-hamilton-and-barbara-jane-lawson-v-maryland-casualty-ca5-1966.