Martindale Lumber Company v. Bituminous Casualty Corporation

625 F.2d 618, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 14222
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 10, 1980
Docket79-1343
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 625 F.2d 618 (Martindale Lumber Company v. Bituminous Casualty Corporation) 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
Martindale Lumber Company v. Bituminous Casualty Corporation, 625 F.2d 618, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 14222 (5th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

TATE, Circuit Judge:

This suit is by a policyholder (Martindale) against its insurer (Bituminous). The district court held Bituminous liable for certain amounts due Martindale because of the insurer’s refusal to defend and pay a tort claim made against Martindale by a person injured in an accident within the coverage of the Bituminous comprehensive general liability policy issued to Martin- *620 dale. 1 The defendant appeals, contending that the injury and the off-premise accident fell within a Completed Operations or a Products hazard, as defined by the insurance contract, and by it expressly included from coverage. We affirm the district court’s rejection of this non-coverage defense and its conclusion that the accident was covered by the Premises-Operations and its Independent Contractors hazards insured by the policy. 2

I.

The present suit by Martindale against Bituminous, its insurer, arises out of an earlier suit against Martindale. In that action, Gray sued Martindale in tort for personal injuries. Martindale and Gray subsequently entered into a compromise settlement. 3 In the present suit against Bituminous for its failure to defend and pay the Gray claim against its insured covered by its policy, the district court allowed Mar-tindale recovery of the amount of the settlement (up to policy limits) and of Martin-dale’s attorney’s fees and other expenditures necessitated by the failure of the insurer to defend the suit brought by Gray against the policyholder. 4

The basis of Gray’s suit against Martin-dale was its alleged failure to band the lumber loaded at its Texas plant by its employees onto a truck operated by Gray. As a consequence of this failure, the unsafely secured lumber fell upon and severely injured Gray when he unchained the upper stacks at his truck’s arrival at the Louisiana premises of the eventual purchaser. Gray was a truckdriver employed by an independent contractor (Sears) retained and paid by Martindale to deliver the lumber to the destination designated by the purchaser.

Relying upon the transfer of physical possession of the lumber to Gray and his employer Sears, Bituminous contends that the accident and the resulting injuries fell within either or both the Completed Opera *621 tions 5 hazard or the Products 6 hazard, both of which are expressly excluded from policy coverage. The substance of its contention is that Martindale’s operations were “completed” (see footnote 5) and that the product was relinquished to “others” (see footnote 6) when Martindale delivered the lumber to Sears,, the trucking contractor (who according to Bituminous’ argument) was delivering the lumber for the purchaser rather than for Martindale. For reasons more fully stated below, we agree with the district court that these excluded hazards are not applicable, because: (1) Martin-dale’s oral contract with the buyer included its contractual responsibility to deliver the lumber through an independent contractor employed and paid by it; and (2) the accident occurred while the lumber was still in the possession of the independent contractor who was engaged in performing Martin-dale’s contract and prior to the lumber’s delivery to the eventual buyer. 7

II.

The present suit was tried upon stipulated facts. Relevant to the present issued, these show: Martindale sold the lumber to Elkins, a broker in Lake Charles, La. Mar-tindale contracted with Sears, a trucking company, to deliver the lumber to the destination designated by Elkins. Sears billed its delivery charges to Martindale, who paid them; Martindale billed Elkins for the price of the lumber at its mill and the exact freight charges billed to it by Sears, making no profit for the delivery itself (although making a profit on the lumber).

We find no error in the district court’s characterization of these facts as showing that the contract between Martindale, as seller, and Elkins, as buyer (broker), included Martindale’s contractual obligation to deliver and pay for delivery of the lumber sold. Thus, Martindale’s lumberyard operations included, in connection with the present transaction, the delivery of the lumber to the eventual purchaser. Although Elkins designated the destination of the lumber,' after Martindale had employed Sears as trucking contractor to deliver, nevertheless, under the contractual agreements, Sears in accomplishing delivery was primarily operations for Martindale, not for Elkins. 8

*622 In perhaps unnecessary elaboration of this conclusion, the determination of whether delivery is a part of Martindale’s operations insured by the Bituminous policy involves a construction of the policy term “operations” (otherwise undefined), which is narrowed by the policy schedule to include, relevantly, “lumber yards” and “logging and lumbering.” Commercial ventures of this nature contemplating marketing of the product manufactured or sold, and some sort of transfer of possession, i. e., delivery, of the product to the customer.

The delivery of the product to the customer can, of course, be accomplished in a number of ways. It could be accomplished by delivery to the buyer (or to a carrier for the buyer) at the seller’s site, in which case the seller’s operations might be completed at that time. Bituminous argues that such is the case under present circumstances. Under the facts properly found, however, instead the seller’s obligation included delivery through an independent contractor employed by him; such delivery was no less a part of the seller Martindale’s insured operations (under the present agreement between the relevant parties) than would have been Martindale’s delivery through its own employees. 9

Likewise, under the stipulated facts, the accident and Gray’s injuries had not been completed at the time of the accident. This occurred as Gray unchained the lumber, preparatory to having the Louisiana eventual purchaser’s employees commence unloading it. Martindale’s operations (performed through its contractor’s employee, Gray), might 10 have been concluded had the accident occurred after the purchaser’s employees commenced unloading the truck, since Gray had under the present facts no responsibility in that regard. It is, however, stipulated that this activity of the recipient of the lumber had not commenced at the time of the accident. It also appears from the agreed facts that unchaining at least the first-to-be unloaded portion of the stacked lumber was a necessary act in furtherance of delivery and relinquishment of possession by Sears, acting on behalf of Martindale. Thus, Mr. Gray was injured while delivering the lumber. 11

III.

We thus determine, in accord with the district court, that the accident that injured Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
625 F.2d 618, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 14222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martindale-lumber-company-v-bituminous-casualty-corporation-ca5-1980.