Shelman v. Western Casualty & Surety Co.

562 P.2d 453, 1 Kan. App. 2d 44, 1977 Kan. App. LEXIS 124
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedMarch 4, 1977
Docket48,307
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 562 P.2d 453 (Shelman v. Western Casualty & Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shelman v. Western Casualty & Surety Co., 562 P.2d 453, 1 Kan. App. 2d 44, 1977 Kan. App. LEXIS 124 (kanctapp 1977).

Opinion

Foth, J.:

Plaintiff Garold E. Shelman, having obtained a $50,000 judgment for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained at the hands of the A1 Elam Construction Company, Inc., sought to collect his judgment on behalf of himself and the other plaintiffs claiming through him by this suit against Elam’s general liability underwriter, Western Casualty and Surety Company. (The claim of the other plaintiffs arises out of workmen’s compensation benefits paid to Shelman.) The primary issue is whether Western’s comprehensive liability insurance policy covered the incident in which Shelman was injured, or whether the incident came within an exclusionary clause of the policy. By stipulation the case was submitted to the trial court on depositions, exhibits, briefs and oral argument. It found coverage and rendered judgment against Western for $25,000, the limit of its policy. Western has appealed.

The facts, as found by the trial court, are not disputed.

In June, 1966, R. G. Aldridge, d/b/a the Aldridge Construction Co. (one of the plaintiffs), was engaged in building a highway bridge across the Osage River in Missouri, just below Bagnell Dam. It needed to move its equipment to the opposite bank, but the size of the equipment precluded its being transported by highway. Aldridge therefore engaged Elam, the insured here, to ferry the equipment across on a barge. Elam was basically a sand and gravel dredging operation, and had never performed such work before. It nevertheless agreed to furnish its barge, its stern-wheeler tug “Popeye,” and a captain and a deckhand (Albert Ash) to operate them. Aldridge was to be responsible for loading and unloading his equipment.

Shelman, the injured plaintiff, was an employee of Capitol Stores, Inc., of Topeka, and was in charge of maintaining the tires on Aldridge’s equipment. On this occasion he was present to protect the tires during the move.

The trial court’s findings narrate the manner in which the accident occurred:

*46 “11. Elam’s phase of the aforementioned ferrying operation, aside from the actual transportation, was to stabilize the barge at the riverbank, by means of the tugboat’s power and by means of two steel cables % inches in diameter, one of which was attached to each bank-end corner of the Elam barge, the other ends of which were attached each to a piece of Aldridge’s heavy earthmoving equipment parked on the riverbank; Aldridge’s mechanic would then back the piece of Aldridge’s heavy equipment which it was intended to move across the river at the time, across a dirt ramp built by another of Aldridge’s men and onto the barge, after which the lines at the barge end of the operation were cast off, and the ferrying operation would proceed; the ties, or fastenings, of the cables to the barge were made by Elam’s deckhand, who employed a number of figure 8 loops around a eaveness or cavel (a metal horn) on the barge. As the operation progressed, personnel other than the deckhand assisted in the tying. The ends of the cables attached to the bulldozers remained in place. So the tying and untying on each trip occurred only on the barge end.
“12. During the action (sic — actual) loading stabilization of the barge was of key importance. The stabilization was accomplished by virtue of the cables which had to be taut and the pushing of the barge against the bank by the tug under power. The bulldozers were moved on each loading to insure taut cables. The tug alone had insufficient power to stabilize the barge while the equipment was being loaded. The cables alone, were insufficient. It took both cables and the tug power to stabilize. Throughout the day different volumes of water were discharged out of Bagnell Dam into the river. This changed the level of the river sufficiently that troubles were encountered in keeping the cables taut and in keeping the dirt ramp adequate for the loading.
“13. Four or five loadings and trips across the river were made uneventfully.
“14. The next loading was to occur around noon. Aldridge did not have another piece of equipment in place to load when the tug returned. The deckhand went forward to eat lunch. The loading commenced. As the equipment was being loaded the cable came loose from the upstream end of the barge. The barge swung downstream. The equipment being loaded turned over, severely injuring plaintiff Shelman.
“15. A1 Elam employees had complete control over the barge and tug. No one else directed or controlled the operation of same. The accident occurred on the barge, which was on the river, and was a result of the cable on the barge coming loose. There is a question as to who actually tied the cable in question. It could have been Ash or an Aldridge employee. The Aldridge employees did tie some cables during the day — but they were copying the figure eight knots used by Ash initially.”

Western was notified of the accident, which occurred June 15, 1966. It investigated and on January 31, 1967, wrote its insured, Elam, that it was denying coverage. Thereafter several abortive suits were filed against Elam; finally, on May 19, 1971, one resulted in the judgment which supplies the basis for this suit.

That suit was brought by all plaintiffs against Elam in the *47 United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri. Western was notified of the suit but refused to defend. Elam, through its own counsel, filed an answer in which it raised a number of defenses. It also asserted a counterclaim against Aldridge for indemnity, claiming Aldridge had contracted to assume all responsibility for the ferrying operation and for all injuries or damages arising out of it.

Negotiations between the parties resulted in a stipulation of settlement of a character specifically authorized by Missouri statute (R. S. Mo. 1976 Supp. § 537.065). Under its terms Elam paid to the plaintiffs $10.00, dismissed its counterclaim, and consented to trial without further notice to it. In return, plaintiffs agreed that if they obtained a judgment against Elam it would not be a lien against Elam’s property and they would not seek to execute except against any insurer whose policy covered Elam’s liability for such damages.

The federal court approved the stipulation and proceeded to hear the case without a jury. It found from the evidence presented that the upstream end of the barge came loose as a direct result of the negligence of Elam’s employees, causing Shelman’s injuries. It awarded plaintiffs judgment, as their interest might appear, in the amount of $50,000. This suit followed.

Western’s basis for denying coverage and the foundation for its defense in this action is the so-called “watercraft exclusion” clause in the policy it issued to Elam:

“This policy does not apply:
“(c) under coverages A and C, except with respect to operations performed by independent contractors and except with respect to liability assumed by the insured under a contract as defined herein, to the ownership, maintenance, operation, use, loading or unloading of (1) watercraft twenty-six feet or more in overall length and not specifically described in the declarations of the policy, if the accident or occurrence takes place away from premises owned by, rented to or controlled by the named insured, or (2) aircraft. . .

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Bluebook (online)
562 P.2d 453, 1 Kan. App. 2d 44, 1977 Kan. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelman-v-western-casualty-surety-co-kanctapp-1977.