Jorgenson v. Girard Fire Marine Insurance Co.

38 N.W.2d 209, 229 Minn. 48, 1949 Minn. LEXIS 590
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 10, 1949
DocketNo. 34,953.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 38 N.W.2d 209 (Jorgenson v. Girard Fire Marine Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jorgenson v. Girard Fire Marine Insurance Co., 38 N.W.2d 209, 229 Minn. 48, 1949 Minn. LEXIS 590 (Mich. 1949).

Opinions

Loring, Chief Justice.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in favor of defendant Girard Fire & Marine Insurance Company, hereinafter referred to as defendant.

*49 Plaintiff owned a 14-foot self-propelled combine, which was damaged while being transported in his truck near Concordia, Kansas. Defendant had issued a policy of insurance which contracted to insure plaintiff against loss or damage to the combine caused by fire, lightning, and transportation. As to transportation, the policy described the coverage as “by the stranding, sinking, burning, collision or derailment of any conveyance in or upon which the automobile [combine substituted for automobile] is being transported on land or on water.” The sole question is whether the policy covered a collision in which the combine being thus conveyed struck another vehicle before the conveyance on which it was loaded struck it, causing the damage to the combine for which this suit was brought.

Plaintiff’s employe and truck driver loaded the combine onto a truck for the purpose of hauling the machine to the southern states for the 1947 harvest, as was customary in midwest grain-growing areas. It was firmly anchored to the truck, which was a 1946 Chevrolet 1%-ton truck, with a 14-foot box platform bed, also owned by plaintiff. The truck platform bed was 8 feet wide. The combine, including its cutter bar, was 15 feet wide. The machine was loaded so that 5% or 6 feet of the cutter bar projected beyond the right edge of the truck body. It would not have been possible to load the combine so that it did not project beyond the edge of the truck without removing the cutter bar. Ordinary automobiles could go underneath the projections of the combine, which extended over the road on either side.

In June 1947, the truck was near Concordia when the driver came upon two trucks at the foot of a hill. One truck was stalled. The other was in front of it, stopped so that its driver could help make repairs on the stalled truck. Plaintiff’s driver stopped, then started in low gear to go around the trucks to the left. Just as the platform on plaintiff’s truck was even with the back end of the stalled truck, the front wheel of plaintiff’s truck dropped into a washout on the road. This caused the load to sway toward the left, after which it swayed back toward the stalled truck. The outside edge of the cutter bar of the combine caught the corner of the stalled truck, *50 doing injury to both, trucks and combine. It is undisputed that the first contact between the conveying vehicle and the stalled truck ivas after the cutter bar caught the corner of the stalled truck.

Pertinent provisions of the policy are stated in a footnote. 2

The case was tried to the court, which found the facts in substance as heretofore stated and reached the conclusion that the loss was not within the collision provision of the policy and that consequently defendants were entitled to judgment. There was no motion for a new trial or substituted findings.

The question presented for decision is whether the policy, properly construed, covered the damage to the combine. This is a case of first impression in Minnesota, and similar clauses in insurance policies have received dissimilar interpretations in other jurisdictions. The case is important here because of the practice of farmers in this state, who, in order to justify their heavy investment in farm machinery, convey it to southern states on trucks and follow the seasonal farming operations as such operations move north.

The general terms of the policy before us cover loss by “Fire, Lightning and Transportation.” Then, in a later clause relative to transportation, it describes such losses as “by the stranding, sinking, burning, collision or derailment of any conveyance in or upon which *51 the automobile [combine] is being transported on land or on water.” Here, the property insured was specifically described as a 1946 “Model 21-A, Massey-Harris Self Propelled Combine-14Ft. Serial Number U3S89.” That description has an important bearing upon the mutual intent of the parties as to the risks to be assumed. Here, the combine was so constructed that, without removing the cutter bar, it could not be placed upon the truck without extending over the sides of that conveyance. When anchored securely to the truck, as it was in the case at bar, it would extend over the sides of the vehicle and would, naturally, first come in contact with any roadside obstruction with which the truckload might come in contact.

All of these circumstances must be taken into consideration in connection with the proper construction to be placed upon the clauses in the contract of insurance, because those circumstances were in the minds of the parties to the contract and would naturally be within their contemplation in reference to it. To construe the words “any conveyance” as limiting the coverage of the word “collision” to the conveyance alone, as distinguished from the unit composed of the truck and its load, would be to reach an absurd result. In the case of C. & J. Commercial Driveway, Inc. v. Fidelity & Guaranty F. Corp. 258 Mich. 624, 242 N. W. 789, a similar policy was before the supreme court of Michigan, where an automobile was being carried on a truck constructed for that purpose. It was loaded in the usual way with the front end of the forward automobile elevated above and at the rear of the cab of the truck. While the truck was passing over an old-fashioned, wooden covered bridge near Bardstown, Kentucky, the front end of the forward automobile came in contact with an overhanging plank and was damaged. The policy there involved covered “accidental collision of the truck with any other automobile, vehicle or object.” The truck itself did not come in contact with the bridge, and defendant company denied liability. The Michigan court, however, held that the words, though standing by themselves were clear enough, must be considered in relation to the other language of the policy in order to ascertain *52 what meaning the parties mutually intended to give them which would be consistent with the object and purpose of the insurance. The court, following the case of Importers’ & Exporters’ Ins. Co. v. Jones, 166 Ark. 870, 378, 266 S. W. 286, 287, held that the words used were descriptive and not limitations upon the word “transportation” and that, in such relation, they expressed the plain, common-sense meaning of the contract.

Perhaps, the most thoroughly considered and best expressed opinion covering the principles here involved is that of the superior court of Pennsylvania in Bucks County Const. Co. Inc. v. Alliance Ins. Co. 162 Pa. Super. 153, 56 A. (2d) 338. In that case, the damaged property being conveyed was a power-driven shovel, so large that of necessity it extended beyond both sides of the vehicle in which it was being transported. The damage occurred when the shovel collided with a concrete pillar under the Thirtieth street station of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company in Philadelphia. The vehicle on which it was loaded did not collide with any object. Defendant insurance company denied liability for that reason. The court said (162 Pa. Super. 155, 56 A. [2d] 339) :

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.W.2d 209, 229 Minn. 48, 1949 Minn. LEXIS 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jorgenson-v-girard-fire-marine-insurance-co-minn-1949.