Progressive Casualty Insurance v. Hoover

809 A.2d 353, 570 Pa. 423, 2002 Pa. LEXIS 2223
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 25, 2002
DocketGD 97-8034
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 809 A.2d 353 (Progressive Casualty Insurance v. Hoover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Progressive Casualty Insurance v. Hoover, 809 A.2d 353, 570 Pa. 423, 2002 Pa. LEXIS 2223 (Pa. 2002).

Opinion

*426 OPINION

Justice SAYLOR.

This appeal requires us to consider, for purposes of determining the effect of an interstate commerce endorsement appended to a commercial vehicle liability insurance policy, whether a tractor-trailer was engaged in interstate commerce when it collided with another vehicle.

The accident occurred in November, 1995, in Forward Township, Allegheny County; the tractor-trailer involved was dispatched by Appellee Marbec Trucking Company, leased from Appellee Wayne S. Hursh, and driven by Loren J. Druist. In a civil action commenced in Allegheny County against Marbec, Hursh, Druist, and others, Appellees Blanche M. and James E. Hoover averred that Druist failed to observe a traffic signal, causing the truck to strike the automobile driven by Mrs. Hoover, who sustained serious injuries. Marbec’s insurer, Appellant Progressive Casualty Insurance Company, filed the present declaratory judgment action naming the parties to the underlying action as defendants and seeking a judicial determination concerning its obligations under the policy issued to Marbec.

Progressive’s base policy covered vehicles scheduled within the declaration pages, which did not include Hursh’s truck. Nevertheless, in connection with Marbec’s federal certification to conduct interstate operations, the business had also obtained from Progressive an “Endorsement for Motor Carrier Policies of Insurance for Public Liability under Sections 29 and 30 of the Motor Carrier Act of 1980.” 1 Commonly referred to as an “MCS-90” or “interstate commerce endorsement,” this rider required Progressive to pay a final judgment recovered against its insured “resulting from negligence in the operation, maintenance or use of motor vehicles subject to the financial responsibility requirements of Sections 29 and 30 of the [MCA] regardless of whether or not each motor vehicle is specifically described in the policy.” Since Sections 29 and 30 *427 of the MCA pertained to certain matters involving interstate commerce, see infra note 8, the endorsement was therefore implicated in relation to Hursh’s truck only to the extent that it was operated, pursuant to the Marbec lease, in furtherance of interstate commerce.

Progressive and the Hoovers filed cross-motions for summary judgment to vindicate their respective views concerning the application of the MCS-90 and, in particular, to resolve whether the shipment at issue was interstate or intrastate in character. According to Progressive, because Hursh’s tractor-trailer was transporting its cargo between two points within Pennsylvania, it was necessarily engaged exclusively in intrastate commerce. Appellees’ position was that the carriage via Hursh’s truck represented merely the final leg of a continuous, interstate shipment, since the truck’s contents previously had moved between states. To further contextualize the question, the parties attached to their submissions transcripts from deposition testimony adduced from parties and witnesses.

The cargo involved was distiller’s grain, a byproduct of the production of ethanol used as a feed additive for dairy cattle. The shipment derived from an order placed approximately one month prior to the accident by the Pennsylvania Agricultural Commodities Marketing Association, Inc. (“PACMA”), a grain broker, 2 with the Jesse Stewart Co. (“Jesse Stewart”), a grain wholesaler that sells primarily to feed mills in Pennsylvania. PACMA requested to purchase fifteen truckloads of the grain, or approximately 345 tons. Jesse Stewart’s usual practice was to wait until it had accumulated enough orders to warrant the purchase of a bargeload (1,000 to 1,500 tons) of distiller’s grain, and then arrange for a barge to transport the commodity from the producer’s Illinois distillery to a storage facility owned and operated by Clairton Slag in West Elizabeth, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. 3 There, Clairton Slag un *428 loaded, stored, and loaded grain onto trucks at Jesse Stewart’s expense, with some trucks being commissioned by Jesse Stewart for delivery to its customers and others by the customers themselves. In the case of customers, including PACMA, making their own arrangements for land transportation, title to the grain transferred upon loading at the Clairton Slag facility.

When purchasing quantities of distiller’s grain, Jesse Stewart’s intention was to have the product move through the storage facility to customers as quickly as possible. A barge-load apparently remained in the facility for seven to fifteen days on average. 4 Although it appears that an order such as that placed by PACMA would aid in prompting Jesse Stewart toward purchasing a bargeload, a representative of the company testified that it would have done so only in the context of an overall buying strategy, not in the sense that the quantity ordered by PACMA could be traced to a particular bargeload (the storage facility could hold approximately one and one-half bargeloads). Moreover, the depositions do not reflect knowledge on the part of Jesse Stewart of the ultimate destination of the relevant portion (one of fifteen truckloads) of the distiller’s grain. This destination was Kreider’s Feed Mill in Loysville, Perry County, Pennsylvania (PACMA’s customer), with PACMA arranging for the transportation with Marbec as the carrier. The timing of the lodging of the order of Kreider’s Feed Mill with PACMA is also not clear. 5

*429 Based on the above, the common pleas court denied Progressive’s motion for summary judgment and granted the Hoovers’, noting that even though the route of a shipment may be entirely within a single state (here, West Elizabeth to Loysville, Pennsylvania), the shipment may nevertheless be part of a larger, continuing movement in interstate commerce. See Texas v. United States, 866 F.2d 1546, 1553 (5th Cir.1989). The common pleas court explained that whether a particular shipment is interstate or intrastate depends upon the essential character of the commerce — the primary determinant of which is the shipper’s fixed, persisting intent at the time of shipment — and that all of the circumstances surrounding the shipment at issue are to be considered in ascertaining the shipper’s prevailing intent. See Century Indem. Co. v. Carlson, 133 F.3d 591, 595 (8th Cir.1998) (quoting Roberts v. Levine, 921 F.2d 804, 812 (8th Cir.1990)). Having implicitly identified Jesse Stewart as the shipper, the common pleas court summarized the facts of the case and concluded that

[clearly] this grain was moving in interstate commerce. When Jesse Stewart purchased the grain from [the producer] in Illinois, its ultimate destination had in large part been predetermined. It would ultimately be shipped to Jesse Stewart’s customers at various locations in Pennsylvania based upon preexisting orders. The barge trip from Illinois to West Elizabeth was intended to be only the first leg of shipment.

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Bluebook (online)
809 A.2d 353, 570 Pa. 423, 2002 Pa. LEXIS 2223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/progressive-casualty-insurance-v-hoover-pa-2002.