Roberts v. Union Insurance Society

332 P.2d 600, 215 Or. 183, 1958 Ore. LEXIS 348
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 332 P.2d 600 (Roberts v. Union Insurance Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Union Insurance Society, 332 P.2d 600, 215 Or. 183, 1958 Ore. LEXIS 348 (Or. 1958).

Opinions

WARNER, J.

This is an action on an insurance policy issued by the defendant, Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ltd. It is here on appeal from a judgment for plaintiff following an order overruling the insurance company’s demurrer to the complaint after its default in pleading further. The only error alleged is the court’s ruling on the demurrer. The question involved is one of coverage.

The facts are simple; plaintiff’s Caterpillar tractor, while being operated on the ocean beach near Long Beach, Washington, became stuck in the sand. During this impairment to its further operation, it was “engulfed and flooded over and submerged by the ocean tide” to its damage in the sum of $1,612.95.

From the complaint, we learn that the policy provides coverage for loss or damage to the tractor by “flood (meaning rising waters).”

The sole matter for resolution is whether the rising of the ocean tide in the instant matter is a “flood (meaning rising waters).”

Neither the defendant insurance company nor the plaintiff in their respective briefs and arguments are able to give v. much aid. Both confess that there is little authority in point. It is a conclusion in which we must concur after our own independent search.

Appellant cites only one ease which approximates the problem now confronting us: Long Motor Lines, Inc. v. Home Fire & Marine Insurance Co. of Cal., [185]*185220 SC 335, 67 SE2d 512 (1951), to which we will make later reference.. Plaintiff brings none to our aid.

The insurance company, relying primarily upon the Long Motor case, represents that the controverted phrase is limited in meaning to “an inundation of water over land not usually covered by it.” The plaintiff, to the contrary, insists that by proper definition, the policy protects against loss or damage by flood from the rising of tidal waters.

We turn to ascertain, if we can, what the flooding situation, if any, was within the contemplation of the parties when they negotiated and executed the insurance contract. We look to the pleadings in vain. The complaint carries no part of the insurance contract except to plead that the “policy agreement provides, among other things, to insure against loss and/or damage to the above described property by ‘flood (meaning rising waters).’” There is no pleading of the contract haec verba nor any substantial part of it except the foregoing phrase from whence we might glean something of the intent or contemplation of the parties to it, as provided for in OES 42.240.1

Coming to us, as the matter does, with the sole assignment of error predicated upon an order overruling a demurrer to the complaint, there is no evidence of the circumstances attending its negotiation and execution which might be of assistance in construing the insurance contract with the possibility of extracting therefrom a precise meaning for the challenged phrase. OES 42.220.2

[186]*186We have already noted the paucity of legal literature to which we may turn for help. The little available supplies no definition of the phrase which may be said to be of “primary and general acceptation.” (ORS 42.250) Nor are we able to say that the phrase appearing in the policy has a meaning “naturally and popularly understood” (Boyd v. Olcott, 102 Or 327, 363, 202 P 431), or that it can be said to suggest a meaning naturally plain and of obvious significance (City of Portland v. Meyer, 32 Or 368, 370, 52 P 21) such as would imply one meaning to the exclusion of any other. Indeed, the word, “flood,” standing alone has been declared to be a relative term (City of Tulsa v. Grier, 114 Okla 93, 243 P 753, 757), and Black’s Law Dictionary (4th ed) p 768, speaks of the word as one “of variable meaning.”

Under the circumstances, we turn to dictionaries of general acceptation. The ones hereinafter referred to give a variety of definitions for the word, “flood.” At least from four to six of those found in each work embrace the concept of “rising waters.” But included in all of them we find that each gives to the noun, “flood,” the definition which comports with that which the plaintiff urges here. In Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d ed), we read that a “flood” can be “the flowing in of the tide; the semidiurnal swell or rise of water in the ocean; opposed to ebb.” Likewise, in Funk & Wagnall’s New Standard Dictionary, a “flood” is said to be “the semidiurnal coming in of the tide, as opposed to the ebb; especially, the tide at its height; high tide.” The Century Dictionary states as one of its several definitions for “flood,” “the inflow of the tide; the semidiurnal rise or swell of water in the ocean; opposed to ebb.” The first [187]*187meaning for “flood” found in the Oxford English Dictionary is: “The flowing in of the tide.”

Thus, we are left to choose from several definitions of “flood,” one having the element of “rising waters,” which seems most appropriate here.

“It is clearly within the province of the insurer to decide what it will insure against and what it will not.” Clark Motor Co. v. United Pac. Ins. Co., 172 Or 145, 149, 139 P2d 570. It had the opportunity to have limited its risk, if it so desired, by amplifying the exclusionary phrase by adding, for example, “excepting tidal waters.” It is not for v. to speculate on its reasons for not doing so, but we submit that it is within the realm of possibility that the insurance company may have known of the very kind of risks to which the instant heavy machine might be exposed at its places of use and have intended the very coverage for which plaintiff seeks recovery and may have protected itself with a commensurate premium. We note that a Caterpillar Tractor is a motor propelled vehicle used for the hauling of heavy burdens, usually off of the highway, and frequently remains for use in limited areas for limited times, as in construction or industrial enterprises. We take note, too, that the complaint alleges that it “became stuck in soft sand while being worked on the beach * * (Emphasis ours.) In this respect, it is unlike the carrier which was the subject of coverage in Long Motors, Inc. v. Home Fire & Marine Ins. Co., supra, where that vehicle was employed in the transport of furniture in connection with plaintiff’s transportation business.

This court has held that “words, having been selected by the insurer, if they are susceptible of more than one construction, are to be construed most strongly against the insurer.” (Nugent v. Union Auto [188]*188Ins. Co., 140 Or 61, 65, 13 P2d 343; 1 Restatement 328, Contracts § 236.) Here we find by recourse to the dictionaries that the word, “flood,” is susceptible to several meanings, all consonant with the characteristic of “rising waters,” including the one contended for by plaintiff.

We have also said: “Any reasonable doubt as to the meaning of the policy must be resolved in favor of the insured.” Clark Motor Co. v. United Pac. Ins. Co., supra (172 Or at 149), and cases there cited; Medford v. Pac. Nat’l Fire Ins. Co., 189 Or 617, 628, 219 P2d 142, 222 P2d 407, 16 ALR2d 1181.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
332 P.2d 600, 215 Or. 183, 1958 Ore. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-union-insurance-society-or-1958.