Reimers v. International Indemnity Co.

254 P. 852, 143 Wash. 193, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1180
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1927
DocketNo. 20205. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 254 P. 852 (Reimers v. International Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reimers v. International Indemnity Co., 254 P. 852, 143 Wash. 193, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1180 (Wash. 1927).

Opinion

Tolman, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment holding the indemnity company liable upon an ordinary policy of automobile liability insurance. The facts are not in dispute and, so far as necessary to an understanding of the question here presented, may be briefly summarized as follows:

Respondent was engaged in the retail business in the city of Spokane and in April, 1923, he owned and used a Ford delivery truck, 1919 model, engine No. 3,378,924. At that time he procured liability insurance thereon for one year by a policy issued by the appellant. During the life of that policy and some six months before it expired, the crank shaft upon this *194 truck was broken and tbe old chassis was discarded. A new chassis, 1924 model, bearing engine No. 8,373,288,'was purchased, and the delivery body which had been used upon the old chassis was placed upon the new, and the truck thus created or assembled was used as the old one had formerly been in respondent’s, business, the discarded parts of the old truck being relegated to the scrap heap'. ' In April, 1924, when the then.existing.policy expired, appellant’s agent, having no knowledge of-the change in the truck, sought and obtained respondent’s consent to issue a new policy for another year, and the policy now in suit was accordingly issued, describing the truck insured as did the original policy, by the same year and number. Thereafter and during the year of the new policy’s.life, an accident occurred, a child being. injured by respondent’s truck,;and suit was brought against respondent, on behalf of the injured child. The defense of that action was tendered to the appellant, but it refused to act. Judgment in that action, went against .the respondent and he now sues for the amount necessarily expended'‘iii’defending that action and in payment of that;judgment,'which amount, with interest, the trial" court,' sitting without a jury, awarded him by the judg-miént appealed from.

Appellant’s contention seems to' be that'the appellant never insured the truck that caused the injury;1 that the truck it intended to insure and which Was' described'in the policy had passed out of existence before the policy was written; that there was no mutual mistake' because appellant intended only to insure' the truck described in the policy, and that the identity of the; truck'is governed by its chief and operating parts,'and not by the mere body, which might readily be transferred from one chassis to another. It is ad *195 mitted, however, that the appellant would .as willingly and readily have insured the -truck which caused the injury, if it had been asked so to do.

A very engaging argument is made to support these views and a number of authorities are cited, among which are Hessen v. Iowa Automobile Mut. Ins. Co., 195 Iowa, 141, 190 N. W. 150, 30 A. L. R. 657, where it is said:

“It is essential that insurance policies identify the property which the insurance covers. The description in the instant policy .is not ambiguous, and, plaintiff seeks a recovery on a particularly described car which the evidence fails to prove. This case deals with the application'and the enforcement of a written contract, and we cannot disregard principles ’-which have heretofore been announced and applied in-the interpretation and enforcement of .written documents.”

And Zap v. United States Casualty Co., 115. Misc. Rep. 634, 189 N. Y. Supp. 31,the court there saying:

■“'The plaintiff was bound to prove'that it was the intention of the defendant, as well as hi's own-intention, to have the policy read and stipulate as he now seeks to have. it. The .defendant- did precisely what it intended and was instructed to do. It did not make a mistake, and it understood and apprehended accurately and fully the instruction and direction given it, and acted in strict conformity with such instruction. It did not agree or intend to agree otherwise than as stated in the insurance policy. The fact. that. the defendánt may have been as willing to insure the plaintiff with regard to one car as another is not equivalent to a mutual mistake on its part in designating the car it intended to insure. The defendant intended to insure what the-plaintiff then described. . The defendant’s intention attached itself to that description and is not subject to alteration by the plaintiff or by the courts.”

The Iowa case was an action .upon a. policy" against theft of the vehicle which was insured* and of'course' *196 in such cases the question of identity is highly important, both to prevent fraud and to enable the insurer to seek and recover the stolen property. But the Iowa court in a case hereinafter referred to, on a policy against loss by fire, laid down a much more liberal rule. In the' New York case there was apparently rather more than a suspicion that the insured was endeavoring to protect two automobiles by one policy, and of course in all such cases the rules must be rigidly enforced. Other cases cited by the appellant go only to well recognized general principles.

. Here, respondent’s truck was not insured. Respondent only, was insured against liability which might be incurred by him through the operation of his truck. He owned and operated but one truck and we think appellant intended and did undertake to indemnify him against damages caused by the particulár truck which he owned and operated, without reference to the year of its manufacture or the number of its engine. Those things could only become important as helps in identifying the truck or to prevent respondent from covering the operations of two or more trucks by means of one policy. The identification of respondent’s truck was complete, and it is not suggested that he ever had or operated more than one truck at any one time. As we have, already suggested, the question here materially differs from that of a policy insuring a particular article against loss by fire or theft. But even, in such cases, many courts of high standing have adopted a liberal rule as to numbers and like terms of description. In White v. Home Mutual Ins. Ass’n., 189 Iowa, 1051, 179 N. W. 315, the supreme court of Iowa said:

“The number of the automobile was inserted merely for the purpose of identification. The insurance was intended to be and was of the automobile; not the number plate. It was the car insured quite as certainly, *197 if fully identified, without resort to the number. There was such identification, for the evidence, without conflict, showed that the automobile burned met the description contained in the policy in all other respects, was the only automobile owned by the insured, and was the one intended to be covered by the policy. When the insured property can be so identified, there is no occasion for correcting the description contained in the policy covering personal property.”

The supreme court of Kansas, in Moore v. North River Ins. Co., 111 Kan. 420, 207 Pac. 760, said:

“. . .

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Bluebook (online)
254 P. 852, 143 Wash. 193, 1927 Wash. LEXIS 1180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reimers-v-international-indemnity-co-wash-1927.