Northwestern National Casualty Co. v. Phalen

597 P.2d 720, 182 Mont. 448, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 846
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1979
Docket14411
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 597 P.2d 720 (Northwestern National Casualty Co. v. Phalen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwestern National Casualty Co. v. Phalen, 597 P.2d 720, 182 Mont. 448, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 846 (Mo. 1979).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal is from a summary judgment entered in favor of Northwestern National Casualty Company in the District Court, Fifth Judicial District, Jefferson County, determining that no insurance coverage existed under a policy issued by the insurance company in an incident involving the defendant.

Northwestern had issued for a consideration a homeowner’s policy to Bernhardt W. and Josephine Phalen for a one year term beginning November 3, 1976. The policy provided public liability insurance to the limit of $50,000 for each “occurrence” during its term. Defendant William Phalen is the son of Bernhardt and Josephine Phalen, a resident of their household, under the age of twenty-one years and as such an “insured” under the policy.

An “occurrence” is defined in the policy as an accident which results in bodily injury or property damage. The policy excludes from public liability coverage bodily injury which “Is either expected or intended from the standpoint of the insured”.

On January 29, 1977, William Phalen was involved in an altercation with Thu Due Vo near the Windsor Bar near Boulder, Montana. Two weeks before, the same two persons had been involved in another altercation in which Thu Due Vo hit William Phalen over the head with a beer bottle. On January 29, a Sunday, at 1:30 a.m., William Phalen walked into the Windsor Bar and saw Thu Due Vo in the company of a young woman. At closing time, when everyone was leaving the bar, William Phalen went out with Vo and his woman companion. In a deposition, William Phalen described what happened then:

“Q. What happened after you left the bar? A. He was walking on the street. I walked down the street, and I started talking to him, and I had my arm around [the young woman], and Thu was there. I kind of had my arm around him, too, just talking to him. We were having a verbal disagreement. He grabbed my arm, twisted it, *451 wanted me to release, and I hit him once. Then, I was going to hit him again, and I grabbed his coat, and he slipped out from me. He ran around his car, and he ran back towards the bar, and Harry Johnson tripped him up, and he fell off the curb and hit the pavement.
“Q. O.K., and you testify you hit him only once. A Yes.
“Q. Then would you pick up your story from there please? A. Yeah, well, I was going to hit him twice, but when I went to swing, he jumped away and I grabbed his coat, and he run away from me. I had ahold of his coat, and he ran away from me and ran around his car, and then he ran right past me again and that is when Harry Johnson tripped him up.
“Q. Now, were you chasing him or was someone restraining you or what? A. [The young woman] was restraining me, but I started after him; I made a few steps toward him, I guess.
“Q. So, he was at least running because he was anticipating you chasing him; is that correct? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. And while he was running, Harry Johnson apparently tripped him? A. Yes.
“Q. What happened after he was tripped, then? A. Well, he hit the pavement pretty hard. I was — I looked at him, you know, and pretty soon all these women just came hollering and running so we decided we better get out of there, and so we went down to my house.
“Q. I believe you testified before that the way — you felt it was sort of an accident, the extent of his injuries was—
“(Objected to as a leading question; trying to lead the witness.)
“Q. Go ahead and answer. A. Will you ask me again?
“Q. I believe you testified before that this — the way he got hurt and the' extent of his injuries was accidental? A. Accidental to me because I don’t feel like I hurt him.”

Subsequently, William Phalen was charged in the District Court, *452 Jefferson County, with felony aggravated assault. In the affidavit of the county attorney for leave tó file the information it is recited that Thu Due Vo attempted to run away but that Harry Johnson tripped him, who then fell to the pavement and lost consciousness. The witnesses further stated to the county attorney that Thu Due Vo was bleeding from the head and mouth and appreared to be choking on his own blood and having difficulty breathing.

The injuries suffered by Thu Due Vo were substantial. The main fractures he sustained are to the zygoma and its attachment to the maxillary bone along the lower rim of the left orbit under his eye. He lost his left central incisor tooth and had swelling along the lower left side of his jaw and a laceration two millimeters long over the left corner of his mouth. He underwent surgery to realign the displaced fractured bones. He was treated by Dr. William Simic, of Helena, whose testimony showed:

“Q. Let me go back for a .minute, Doctor. I want to clear up something. When I asked you about the amount of trauma to the face, is it possible that one blow to the face from a fist could cause that type of break? A. It would be possible, if I might qualify this—
“Q. Yes. A. It could be possible to have a fracture like this result from one blow. I would not think that the overall injury pattern to the face was the result of one blow. By that, I mean the injury to the eye, the cheek, the teeth, and of course, the fracture itself.
“Q. Let me phrase it this way, Doctor. It isn’t likely that one blow to the cheek would cause this type of injury? Is that a fair statement? A. No, that’s highly unlikely.”
When Vo was tripped by Johnson, he fell flat on his face in the street. Later, it was found that the lower orbital rim of Vo’s left eye was displayed internally fifteen millimeters. In discussing this Dr. Simic testified:
“Q. Could this type of displacement be caused by falling down and hitting your face on a hard object like a pavement or cement or something like that? Is it possible? A. This particular fracture could. We will sometimes see this. The injury picture as a whole, I would think not.
*453 “Q. But was there some peculiar thing about this type of fracture that would indicate that it could have been caused by falling down? A. No. No, what I meant was that the other injuries to the eyelid, the laceration of the cheek, along with this, would indicate that it was more than a simple fall of the cheek area.”

William Phalen was represented in the criminal proceedings against him by attorney John H. Jardine. In what appears to be the result of a plea bargain, Phalen entered a plea of guilty to the charge of aggravated assault, and was given a three year sentence deferred subject (1) to the usual parole rules; (2) that he pay Jefferson County the sum of $500 for the cost of the proceedings; and (3) that he make restitution to Vo of one-half of Vo’s medical and dental expenses to the limit of $900, and to the extent that such expenses were not covered by insurance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
597 P.2d 720, 182 Mont. 448, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-national-casualty-co-v-phalen-mont-1979.