Moorhead v. Stearns-Roger Manufacturing Co.

320 F.2d 26
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 7, 1963
DocketNos. 7214, 7215
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 320 F.2d 26 (Moorhead v. Stearns-Roger Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moorhead v. Stearns-Roger Manufacturing Co., 320 F.2d 26 (10th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

DOYLE, District Judge.

The Steams-Roger Manufacturing Company recovered judgment in the amount of $73,111.63 against appellants W. C. Moorhead, Jr., and The Great American Insurance Company who now seek reversal. The case involved damage to an electrical transformer, the property of Public Service Company of Albuquerque, which was being transported on Moorhead's equipment. Great American was the insurer.

Stearns-Roger had contracted with the Public Service Company, an electrical utility, to install the transformer and to do the necessary construction work incident thereto. This was at the Gamerco substation near Gallup, New Mexico. Moorhead, who owned and operated a heavy hauling business in Gallup, New Mexico, applied to Stearns-Roger for heavy hauling business in connection with the project.

On April 10, 1960, one J. L. Wallace, General Superintendent for Stearns-Roger, called Moorhead and requested that he supply a truck and driver for the transportation of the transformer from a rail siding to the place of installation. Moorhead was told that the transformer weighed approximately fifty tons but that it would be loaded and unloaded by employees of Steams-Roger. On April 11, 1960, Moorhead supplied a thirty-five ton lowboy and driver for the transportation of the transformer. Whether Moorhead was then acting as a carrier or had by this particular arrangement leased the equipment to Stearns-Roger, is in ques[28]*28tion. If it was a lease, Stearns-Roger could recover only if the evidence established negligence or fault on the part of Moorhead. If, on the other hand, Moor-head was then acting as a carrier, his liability would exist regardless of fault on his part.

The evidence discloses that there were two possible routes from the rail siding to the cement pad where the transformer was to be put down. The foreman of Stearns-Roger, together with the driver for Moorhead, traveled the two routes and finally Moorhead’s driver decided that the longer route which passed over State Highway No. 66 would be the better one to follow.1 The transformer was loaded onto the lowboy and was moved over the route which had been selected. When it approached the cement pad where it was to have been installed, the trailer passed over a wooden culvert which collapsed causing the trailer to tip and causing the trailer and transformer to upset. The amount of damage claimed in the complaint was $75,000.00; however, at the trial it was stipulated that the damage to the transformer was $73,111.63.

Under its contract with the Public Service Company Stearns-Roger was responsible for the transformer from the time that it arrived at the rail head until it was installed on the cement pad which Stearns-Roger had prepared for its installation, and when Public Service Company demanded reimbursement Stearns-Roger paid and took an assignment from Public Service.

It is not disputed that Moorhead was ordinarily a common or public carrier. He held himself out to the public as such, being the holder of a Certificate of Convenience and Necessity issued by the New Mexico State Corporation Commission. He maintains that the present arrangement was special. Stearns-Roger was not a utility. During the course of the actual movement of the transformer Moorhead’s driver was in charge of the vehicle; however, employees of Stearns-Roger assisted the driver by giving hand signals and stopping traffic, along the way.

The trial court found that Moorhead was a common carrier of heavy equipment and that he was on this occasion acting as such. Although the trial court also found" that neither Moorhead nor Stearns-Roger was negligent, it imposed liability against Moorhead on the ground that as a public carrier his liability was that of insurer.

In seeking reversal Moorhead contends that the trial court erred in:

1) Holding that the contract between the parties was a contract of common carriage and in refusing to hold that it was one of rental of equipment and driver, and in concluding that his liability was absolute;
2) Excluding testimony of Moorhead as to private instructions which he gave to his driver prior to the undertaking;
3) Failing to construe properly and to give full effect to the insurance policy of Moox-head, and particularly the co-insurance clause contaixxed therein.

On cross-appeal, Stearns-Roger in turn, urges that:

The trial court erred in refusing to grant interest from the date of the injury to the date of judgment; and that The Great American Insurance Company should have been held independently liable for interest upon the insurance policy.

1. The public carrier issue.

It is axiomatic that the trial court’s findings of fact are not to be set aside unless they are clearly eivoneous.2 There is ample evidence in the record establishing that Moorhead held himself out to be a common earner by advertis[29]*29ing and otherwise. Moreover, he was the holder of a Certificate of Convenience and Necessity in accordance with New Mexico statutes.3 Further, it would appear to be impossible for defendant, a common carrier, to enter a contract of private carriage or of rental.4

The determination of the trial court that Moorhead was at the time in question acting as a common carrier and was thus subject to liability without fault was, in the light of the foregoing, proper.

2. The issue involving rejection of evidence.

The record does not disclose by offer of proof or otherwise, the particular testimony which Moorhead contends the trial court excluded. We only know that it involved his prior out-of-court statement to his employee immediately before the commencement of the transport project. It is not possible, therefore, to determine whether this excluded testimony was admissible and should have been received as an exception to the hearsay rule. From what has been brought to our attention, it would appear that the trial court’s ruling excluding this evidence was not incorrect.5

3. The contention re the co-insurance clause.

The Great American Insurance Company contends that its liability is limited by the co-insurance clause of the policy which covered the instant damage. It is paragraph 8 which is relied on. This provides that the company shall not be liable for a greater proportion of any loss or damage than the applicable amount of insurance specified in clause No. 1 bears to the total liability of the Assured with respect to the merchandise at risk hereunder involved in the casualty or disaster. The difficulty encountered in acceptance of this argument is that no limit is specified in clause No. 1. There are blank places under “description of motor trucks,” and “description of locations.” In each instance there is an item “amount of insurance,” but no limitation appears here or in any part of clause No. 1. Paragraph No. 5 imposes a limitation of $80,000.00 “in any one casualty,” but this is not the limitation referred to in paragraph No. 8. Paragraph No. 4, under “Conditions,” limits liability to “actual cash value,” but again this is not the limitation which is referred to.

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Bluebook (online)
320 F.2d 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moorhead-v-stearns-roger-manufacturing-co-ca10-1963.