Mould v. Travelers Mutual Casualty Co.

257 N.W. 349, 219 Iowa 16
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 20, 1934
DocketNo. 42620.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 257 N.W. 349 (Mould v. Travelers Mutual Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mould v. Travelers Mutual Casualty Co., 257 N.W. 349, 219 Iowa 16 (iowa 1934).

Opinion

Donegan, J.

This is an action brought by the beneficiary of an insurance policy against the insurer based upon the claim that the death of the insured resulted from the disablement of an automobile in which the insured was riding and which he was driving. On the evening of February 12, 1933, the insured, Harry L. Mould, arranged with his daughter, who lived about seven blocks from his home, that he would go to the daughter’s home on the following day and prepare lunch for the daughter’s son. This arrangement was made because the daughter and her husband were to be out of the city on that day. About 11:20 in the forenoon of the following day, Lea A. Mould, the son of insured and plaintiff in this action, telephoned his falher. with w'hom he lived, and was told by the father that he was then preparing to go to his daughter’s home to prepare lunch for the grandson. Sometime before 1 o’clock in the afternoon of the same day, the grandson spoke to one E. F. Behrens in regard to the grandfather’s failure to come to his parents’ home to prepare his lunch for him, and Mr. Behrens and the grandson then went to the Mould home. When they arrived at the. Mould home, Mr. Behrens tried the front door and found it locked, and then went to the garage doors and found them closed. He tried to turn the catch on the garage doors but could not turn it sufficiently to release it and open the doors from the outside. He then went to a nearby fire station where Lea A. Mould was employed, procured the keys to the house from him, went back to the house, and opened and entered the front door. When he stepped into the house he noticed the odor of fumes from an automobile. He stated that he took a deep breath and went ■ to the basement through the inside *18 basement door; that the fumes of gasoline were stronger in the basement than in the upper part of the house; that, when he went into the garage, he noticed Harry Mould, the insured, sitting in the front seat of the automobile behind the wheel; and that he immediately went to tire doors back of the automobile and forced them open. The garage opened off the basement, a single door leading from the basement directly into the garage. The garage itself was about 12 feet wide and 24 feet long. The outside entrance to the garage consisted of two doors which opened from the center toward an alley. At the time Mr. Behrens entered the garage these doors were closed, and he was unable to open them from the outside. The door opening into the garage from the basement of the house was open and standing at a right angle to the wall. Mr. Behrens put his shoulder against the doors opening to the outside and placed his foot upon the rear bumper of the automobile and thus forced the doors open. When Behrens entered the garage he found the insured sitting behind the steering wheel, the left front door was partly open, his left foot was on the running board, his right foot near the accelerator and starter, his left hand at his side, “and his right hand was extended.” At that time the engine was not running, but the choke was partly open and the radiator was still hot. A doctor who examined the body a short time afterwards pronounced death due to carbon monoxide poisoning from the fumes of ’the automobile. No question is raised that the death was due to an accidental cause within the meaning of the terms of the policy. Payment of the policy was refused by the appellee, and this action was instituted by appellant. At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, defendant filed a motion for a directed verdict, which was sustained by the court. From such verdict and judgment entered thereon, plaintiff appeals.

The motion for a directed verdict contained several grounds, but it is unnecessary that we consider all of them. One of these grounds was that plaintiff had failed to show that the insured was riding in or driving the automobile at the time of his death. If this ground of the motion was well taken, the appellant could not recover and the judgment of the trial court must be affirmed.

The insurance policy upon which this action is based covered death of the insured “sustained by the wrecking or disablement of any vehicle or car operated by any private carrier or private person in which the insured is riding. This includes persons riding in or *19 driving automobiles or any other motor driven or horse drawn vehicles.” It is the contention of the appellant that, under the interpretation which must be given to this provision of the policy, it was a question for the jury to decide whether or not the insured was riding in or driving the automobile at the time of his death. In support of this contention, appellant puts forth the propositions that “one engaged in preliminary acts necessary to put an automobile in motion is engaged in driving,” and “one seated in a stationary automobile whose engine is running is riding in' such automobile.”

In support of the first proposition, appellant cites Field v. Southern Surety Company, 211 Iowa 1239, 235 N. W. 571, and Johnson v. Federal Life Ins. Co., 190 Minn. 580, 252 N. W. 666. In the Field case, the insured had returned from a journey during the nighttime. A Paige car, which had been used by his daughter during the day, was left standing on, the driveway in front of the garage, and, in order to enter the garage with the Ford' car in which he had made the journey, it was necessary to move the Paige car into the garage. This was done and the Ford car was then also driven into the garage and the doors closed. On the following morning, the insured was found dead seated on the left running board of the Ford car with his head resting on the front fender. The engine of the Ford car was shut off hut the engine of the Paige car was still running and the lights in the garage were still burning. It was undisputed that the cause of death was carbon monoxide poisoning from the fumes of the Paige car. The insurance policy involved covered death caused by bodily injury through accidental means “which bodily injury is sustained by the insured while driving or adjusting * an automobile,” and it was claimed by the plaintiff, among other things, that the death of the insured was caused by such accidental means while he was driving the Paige car. The trial court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant insurance company at the close of plaintiff’s evidence. In affirming the case, we said:

“The foregoing constitutes substantially all of the material and relevant testimony in the case. Does it show that the death of the insured resulted from an injury sustained by him ‘while driving an automobile?’ We answer in the negative. See Eynon v. Continental Life Ins. Co. of Missouri, 252 Mich. 279, 233 N. W. 228; Howell v. J. Mandelbaum & Sons, 160 Iowa 319, 140 N. W. 397, Ann. Cas. *20 1915D, 349; City of Harlan v. Kraschel, 164 Iowa 667, 146 N. W. 463. There is nothing ambiguous in the use of the1 word ‘driving’, as used in the policy: there is nothing to show that said word is used in a technical sense or that it should be given a meaning other than its usual and ordinary meaning. ‘Drive’ is defined by Funk & Wagnall’s New Standard Dictionary as ‘to urge forward under guidance; compel to go in a particular direction.’ It is also defined by the Oxford Dictionary as ‘urge onward and direct the course of (an animal drawing a vehicle or plough or the vehicle itself; also, by later extension, a railway engine or train, etc.).’ In Howell v. J. Mandelbaum & Sons, 160 Iowa 119, at page 122, 140 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
257 N.W. 349, 219 Iowa 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mould-v-travelers-mutual-casualty-co-iowa-1934.