Owens v. the Ocean Accident Guarantee Corp.

109 S.W.2d 928, 194 Ark. 817, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 236
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 8, 1937
Docket4-4785
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 109 S.W.2d 928 (Owens v. the Ocean Accident Guarantee Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Owens v. the Ocean Accident Guarantee Corp., 109 S.W.2d 928, 194 Ark. 817, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 236 (Ark. 1937).

Opinion

Geieeih Smith, C. J.

Appellants conduct a fnneral home, and in connection with their business operate an ambulance or invalid coach.

Appellee, in 1934, issued its policy of insurance, under the terms of which it became liable to appellants for damages on account of bodily injuries, including death at any time resulting therefrom, and loss of services in consequence of such injuries sustained by any person or persons, caused by the ownership, maintenance, or use of a certain Henny ambulance invalid coach, as described in said policy. The contract further provided that the insurer would investigate any claim for such injury or damage and negotiate settlement thereof, and would defend suits arising from any such injury or damage, and would pay all costs incurred in the defense of suits, so instituted, growing out of the ownership, maintenance, or use of said motor vehicle, even if such actions were groundless.

In 1935, at a -time when the insurance was in force, the ambulance identified in the policy was sent by appellants to the home of Mrs. Mollie Mason in North Little Rock for the purpose of transporting Mrs. Mason to the Baptist State Hospital. The ambulance was parked on the street in front of Mrs. Mason’s home. A cot, utilized as a part of the ambulance equipment, was taken therefrom and Mrs. Mason was placed on it. While the cot was being so utilized in carrying Mrs. Mason from her home'to the ambulance, she was carelessly allowed to fall from the cot to the pavement just as the attendants or servants were passing with the patient from the yard to the sidewalk. Appellee was promptly notified of the accident.

Subsequently, suit for damages to compensate for the injuries sustained was filed by Mrs. Máson against appellants. Appellee was notified that suit had been filed, but it declined to defend, assuming that under the terms of the insurance contract it was not obligated.

Appellants thereupon employed an attorney, who for $306 effectuated a settlement of Mrs. Mason’s $30,000 claim. The attorney’s fee was $250'.

This appeal is from the action of the Pulaski circuit court, second diyision, wherein the judge, sitting as a jury by agreement of the parties, found that the policy issued by appellee did not apply to an accident sustained in the manner and in the circumstances herein stated.

Appellee relies upon a Tennessee case, J. H. Hinton & Son v. Employers’ Liability Assurance Corporation, 166 Tenn. 324, 62 S. W. (2d) 47, the facts there being almost identical with those now before us. Mrs. Bell Hall, for the purpose of being conveyed from her home to a hospital, was placed on a stretcher taken from an ambulance, and while being taken to the ambulance an attendant negligently permitted the stretcher to fall, injuring Mrs. Hall. Suits were filed against the ambulance company, which were successfully defended, after the Employers ’ Liability Assurance Corporation had denied liability under its policy. The suit of Hinton & Son against the Employers ’ Liability Assurance Corporation was to recover court costs and attorneys’ fees incurred in defending the suit brought by Mrs. Hall. The Supreme Court of Tennessee held that the insurance company was not liable. The clause of the' insurance contract, claimed-by Hinton & Son to be applicable, indemnified against damages “resulting- from the ownership, maintenance, operation, or use” of the ambulance. Citing I Couch, Cyc. of Insurance Law, 174, the Tennessee court said: “This general and broad language must be construed with reference to the subject-matter and the nature of the risk involved, with due regard to the objects and intentions of the parties as the same may be gathered from the whole instrument.”

In arriving at a determination of non-liability, the Tennessee court reviewed Panhandle Steel Products Co. v. Fidelity Union Cas. Co., (Texas Civ. App.), 23 S. W. (2d) 799, and Quality Dairy Co. v. Fort Dearborn Casualty Underwriters, (Mo. App.), 16 S. W. (2d) 613. In the Texas case, liability, was affirmed in favor of a pedestrian who had been struck by an iron beam while the beam was being unloaded from a parked truck. It was held that the accident resulted from the “use of the truck” within the meaning of the insurance contract. The Texas court said: “It will he noted, further, that the language used in the liability clause of the policy is broad and general in its scope, and not restricted by any words to the effect that the injuries covered by that clause must be the ‘proximate’ result of the use of the truck, or that the injury must be sustained while the truck was being driven, or the result of collision or overturning.”

In the Quality Dairy (Missouri) case, the court held that the obligation incurred by the insurer under a policy employing the words “by the reason of ownership, maintenance, or use” of an automobile was not limited .to cases where the truck itself produced the injury, but that the .contract was expressly drawn in terms broad enough to cover all claims arising by reason of the use of the truck.

In the Texas case, the .facts showed that at the time the pedestrian was injured, the truck was backed up to the curb, and the iron beam was being moved across the sidewalk into the building. When about one-half of the beam was off of the truck, the accident occurred. The Tennessee court, in distinguishing between the cases, said: “If the accident assigned by Mrs. Hall as the cause of her injury had occurred while the stretcher was being placed in the ambulance, or while it was being removed therefrom, we would be strongly inclined to follow that case, and hold it the result of the use of the ambulance. But the authorities and liberal rule of construction cited do not, in our opinion, justify the further extension of the terms of the contract, so as to include the accident in suit. When the stretcher was dropped, the ambulance had not been reached. Mrs. Hall was being transported to the ambulance, and not by it or on it. The transportation of sick persons from bed to street curb was a necessary incident to the conduct of complainant’s business of operating an ambulance for hire, but was not a necessary incident to the operation or use of the ambulance as a motor vehicle, as the actual placing or-removal of persons therein and therefrom would be. Complainants were insured against liability arising from the operation and use of the vehicle, and not ag'ainst liability arising from the conduct of their business.” See, also, Commonwealth Casualty Company v. Headers, 118 O. St. 429, 161 N. E. 278; Caron v. American Motorists Insurance Company, 277 Mass. 156, 178 N. E. 286; Luchte v. State Automobile Insurance Company, 50 Ohio App. 5, 197 N. E. 421.

It will be observed that the contract construed by the Supreme Court of Tennessee contained the words, “By the reason of ownership, maintenance, or use.” In the policy, written by appellee in the instant suit, it affirmatively appears that the automobile covered by the insurance is a commercial vehicle identified as ‘ ‘ one Hen-ney ambulance invalid coach,” and it is shown in the policy that appellants are engaged in the undertaking business.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 S.W.2d 928, 194 Ark. 817, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-the-ocean-accident-guarantee-corp-ark-1937.