Louis Buck v. United States Aviation Underwriters, Inc.

763 F.2d 224, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 19740
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 1985
Docket84-5694
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 763 F.2d 224 (Louis Buck v. United States Aviation Underwriters, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louis Buck v. United States Aviation Underwriters, Inc., 763 F.2d 224, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 19740 (6th Cir. 1985).

Opinions

MERRITT, Circuit Judge.

This diversity action involves the construction under Kentucky law of an aircraft liability insurance provision under which commercial pilots operating the insured’s aircraft are excluded from coverage unless they fall within a clause providing coverage to “any employee” of the insured. Plaintiff Louis Buck, a commercial pilot, claims that he was an additional insured and was entitled to be defended by defendant United States Aviation Underwriters, Inc. (Aviation Underwriters) in a personal injury suit brought in state court by a victim of an accident which occurred while Buck was operating a helicopter owned by D & R Coal and Equipment (D & R Coal) and insured by Aviation Underwriters. The District Court held that Aviation Underwriters did not have a duty to defend Buck because Buck was excluded from coverage as a commercial pilot. The court found that an exemption from the commercial pilot exclusion for “any employee” of the insured did not apply to Buck, because he was not a “regular employee” of D & R Coal. Because we find that the court impermissibly read into the policy restrictive terms which it did not contain, and construed the ambiguous term “any employee” in a manner limiting Aviation Underwriter’s duty to defend, we reverse and enter judgment for the plaintiff.

I.

On July 6, 1979, Ralph McClave brought suit in the Carter County, Kentucky, state trial court against Bates Aviation, Inc., D & R Coal, Bell Helicopter Company and federal plaintiff Buck. McClave sought damages for injuries he suffered when he walked into the moving tail rotor of a helicopter piloted by Buck, a commercial pilot employed by Bates Aviation, and owned by D & R Coal. At the time of the accident, McClave was attempting to sell coal mining rights to D & R Coal, and he had arranged for Buck to fly himself and a geologist apparently employed by D & R Coal to the site of the coal seam so that the geologist could verify the existence of coal. The accident occurred when the helicopter landed to pick up the geologist on the way out to the site. A 72.

In his complaint, McClave alleged that Buck was the “servant, agent and employee” of both Bates Aviation and D & R Coal. At the time of the accident, Aviation Underwriters provided aircraft liability insurance to D & R Coal. The policy provided that Aviation Underwriters would pay, inter alia, personal injury damages which “the insured” was legally obligated to pay, and specifically stated that “with respect only to the Liability Coverages,” “insured” also means:

any person while using or riding in the aircraft and any person or organization legally responsible for the use thereof, provided that the actual use of the aircraft is by the Named Insured (D & R Coal) or with his permission, and further provided that other than the Named Insured, none of the following shall be an insured:
(a) any person or organization, or any agent or employee thereof, engaged in [226]*226... the operation of ... a commercial flying service ... with respect to any occurrence arising out of such operations ... but this provision does not apply to any employee of the Named Insured while acting in the course of his employment by the Named Insured. A. 62.

Buck notified Aviation Underwriters of the accident and of McClave’s claim and demanded that Aviation Underwriters defend him. By letter, Aviation Underwriters refused to defend Buck, denying that the policy covered Buck because he was not an “insured” under the policy insuring D & R Coal. Buck then retained an attorney and defended the state court action at his 'own expense.

The state trial court overruled D & R Coal’s motion for a directed verdict on the grounds of contributory negligence and absence of vicarious liability and instructed the jury that Buck was the agent, servant and employee of both Bates Aviation and D & R Coal at the time of the accident. A. 68. The jury delivered a $350,000 verdict against Buck, D & R Coal and Bates Aviation jointly and severally. The Kentucky Court of Appeals reversed this judgment, however, and entered judgment for all the defendants on the sole ground that McClave had been contributorily negligent as a matter of law.

On December 16,1982, Buck brought the present action in District Court, seeking reimbursement for the attorney’s fees he had paid in the state court action and in pursuing the present action on the ground that Aviation Underwriters had violated its duty to defend him as an “insured” under D & R Coal’s aircraft liability policy. Buck contended that he was an employee of D & R Coal outside the exclusion for employees of commercial flying services, and that he therefore was an insured under D & R Coal’s policy. He argued that the state trial court’s jury instruction that he was an employee of D & R Coal had collateral estoppel effect in the present action, but that even if the instruction did not carry preclusive effect, McClave’s state court complaint alleged that Buck was an employee of D & R Coal, thus stating a claim within the policy coverage and triggering Aviation Underwriter’s duty to defend under Kentucky law.

The District Court issued summary judgment for Aviation Underwriters, finding that the issue in the present action was whether Buck was a “regular employee” of D & R Coal, and that the state court instruction and findings could not carry preclusive effect here because the state court decided the different issue of whether Buck was a “borrowed servant” of D & R. A. 116-117. The court went on to rule that the facts showed D & R Coal engaged a pilot from a commercial flying service to fly its airplane on a particular mission, making the pilot Buck at most a “borrowed servant” and not a regular employee of D & R Coal, and that Buck was therefore excluded from coverage as an insured because he was the agent or employee of Bates Aviation, a commercial flying service. A. 117. The court held that under Kentucky law, an insurance company has a duty to defend its insured whenever the complaint alleges facts which possibly state a claim within the breadth of the insured’s coverage, but that there was no duty to defend an individual who the company believed was not insured merely because the complaint stated facts which might qualify him as an insured. A. 117.

II.

We agree with the District Court’s decision that the state trial court’s jury instruction that Buck was an employee of D & R Coal at the time of the accident does not carry preclusive effect in the present action. While it is true that the insurer is bound by a judgment in the action against the insured as to facts which were actually determined in that action, Bituminous Casualty Corp v. Myers, 450 S.W.2d 272, 274-75 (Ky.1970), and also as to those issues which “might have been litigated in the original suit,” State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Shelton, 368 S.W.2d 734, 737 (Ky.1963), there is neither a state court judgment nor factual finding [227]*227on the issue of whether Buck is an employee of D & R Coal entitled to coverage as an insured. The decisions in Shelton and Myers

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Bluebook (online)
763 F.2d 224, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 19740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louis-buck-v-united-states-aviation-underwriters-inc-ca6-1985.