Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation v. Myers

22 F. Supp. 450, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2429
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. North Carolina
DecidedMarch 2, 1938
Docket1:12-m-00011
StatusPublished

This text of 22 F. Supp. 450 (Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation v. Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation v. Myers, 22 F. Supp. 450, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2429 (M.D.N.C. 1938).

Opinion

HAYES, District Judge.

This is a suit brought in equity by the Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation, Limited, against W. S. Myers, I. M. Myers, and Dixie Myers, for the purpose of obtaining a declaratory judgment under the Federal Declaratory Judgment Act, Jud.Code § 274d, as amended, 28 U.S.C.A. § 400, to determine whether the plaintiff is liable to either of the defendants under an insurance policy of indemnity issued to the Bronart Company of Akron, Ohio, and to restrain each of the defendants from prosecuting any suit or action at law against the plaintiff on account of any injury that either of the defendants sustained when the car in which they were riding collided with a car belonging to the Bronart Company under which the defendants claim the Bronart Company were insured against public liability by the plaintiff. The defendant admits that the controversy exceeds the sum of $3,000, and that there is diversity of citizenship, and that the court has jurisdiction. The defendant I. M. Myers pleads a cross-action against the plaintiff and alleges that he sued the Bronart Company in the state court of Ohio and obtained a judgment against it, and that the plaintiff participated ip the defense of the suit and continued its insurance policy in effect after the accident occurred, and that it waived any defense it had against his claim, and that it is estopped now to deny the validity of the judgment in favor of I. M. Myers amounting to $7,500, and this defendant prays affirmative relief and asks the court to grant the decree in his favor against the plaintiff for that amount, with interest and costs.

Bronart & Co. of Akron, Ohio, was engaged in transporting from Akron to Miami, Fla., a large number of automobiles which were to be used in the taxi business upon their arrival in Miami. In order to protect itself against liability on the account of accidents in which their *452 cars might be involved, the Bronart Company took out liability insurance with the plaintiff on cars covering their movement between the two points designated, and upon the arrival of the cars in Miami the blanket policy of insurance was canceled. The type of insurance carried was designated as a car for pleasure. The rate of premium charged was for a pleasure car. The policy contained an. exclusion clause under the caption, “Exclusions,” and under this head in bold letters were these words, “No insurance is granted by this policy,” and under that caption are seven clauses relating to exclusions; the material one in this case being as follows: “(f) While any private passenger or. commercial motor vehicle covered herein is being used for rental or livery purposes or in the carrying of persons for a consideration unless as respects each class of motor vehicles respectively, such use is specified in the declarations and proper premiums therein set forth.” In the declaration it is stated that the motor vehicles described will be used only for pleasure, and again under this head there is this clause: “(c) The purpose of use as defined in (a) and (b) the foregoing shall exclude the renting or livery use of any disclosed motor vehicle and the carrying of persons for a consideration.”

Among many other cars belonging to the Bronart Company covered by this policy was the Packard automobile which was involved in the accident upon which the litigation arose. The Bronart Company employed one Doris Goldman to drive this car for it from Akron, Ohio, to Miami, Fla., and agreed to pay .her the sum of $5 to do so. She enlisted the co-operation of two of her friends who were mutually interested in the journey, and who were to associate with her and room'with her in Miami, Fla., to go in with her atnd help provide the expenses for the trip. The three girls made up a common fund out of which they were to defray their expenses for gas and oil, storage, and their own lodging and board. They took the automobile of the Bronart Company and started to Miami. When they arrived in Cincinatti, Ohio, Miss Goldman learned through her aunt that some people were at the Cinant Hotel who wanted to go to Florida. She got in touch with these people at the hotel, and by arrangment with them went to the hotel to meet them. They discussed the matter, and Miss Goldman learned that these three people had the misfortune of breaking their car, and being unable to continue their journey to Miami, Fla., by way of automobile. After some discussion with Miss Goldman she agreed to take them, and they asked her how much she would charge, and she said that she would just leave that to them. Whereupon, they suggested that they would give her $10 each, which she accepted, and in consequence thereof Miss Góldman and her friends sent their luggage by express in order to make room for these three persons, who were strangers to Miss Goldman and her friends. When the car in question was being operated by Miss Goldman near Waycross, Ga., and on its way to Miami, it collided witli the car in which the three defendants were riding and inflicted serious injuries on all three of the occupants. Each of them instituted a suit in the state court of Ohio, and I. M. Myers obtained a judgment thereon in the sum of $7,500, while the suit by the other two defendants is still pending. The plain-1 tiff here investigated the accident, and, after obtaining information that Miss Goldman was hauling the three strangers from Cincinatti for a stated consideration of $30, disclaimed' any liability on the ground that the policy specifically excluded any insurance to the Bronart Company when persons were being carried for a consideration. In the meantime the Bronart Company became insolvent, and, having notified the insurance company of the insolvency and its inability to defend the suit, the company agreed to enter upon the defense of the suit provided the Bronart Company would execute a nonwaiver agreement, and with that understanding the plaintiff here prosecuted the defense of the Myers suit in the name of and for the Bronart Company, as it was under obligation to do under the policy if there was any liability.

It is necessary first to determine whether the car in question was covered by the policy, or whether it was excluded from coverage on account of persons being carried therein for compensation. Many cases Jhave been before the state and federal courts involving a similar question, and it seems to be the consensus of opinion that each case stands upon its ■special facts to determiné whether or not persons who are riding in the vehicle are being carried as passengers or as persons for a consideration, within the *453 meaning and terms of the policy. The arrangement between Miss Goldman and her comrades in Akron, Ohio, where three girls were desirous of making a trip together to Miami, Fla., and all of them made up a common fund for the purpose of defraying all of the expenses, and with no idea of making any compensation by one to the other, is typical of that class of cases where it is held that such transportation does not violate the policy or come within the exclusion clause. Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation v. Olson, 8 Cir., 87 F.2d 465; Park v. National Casualty Co., Iowa, 270 N.W. 23.

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Bluebook (online)
22 F. Supp. 450, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocean-accident-guarantee-corporation-v-myers-ncmd-1938.