Smith v. Maryland Casualty Co.

246 N.W. 451, 63 N.D. 99, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 160
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1933
DocketFile No. 6104.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 246 N.W. 451 (Smith v. Maryland Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Maryland Casualty Co., 246 N.W. 451, 63 N.D. 99, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 160 (N.D. 1933).

Opinion

Burr, J.

This action is brought to recover upon a “Special Automobile Accident Policy” in which the plaintiff is named as beneficiary.

At the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendant moved the court to dismiss the action, which motion was renewed at the close of the entire case. The court dismissed the jury, and later rendered judgment for the defendant. From the judgment and from the order denying her motion for a new trial the plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff is the widow of W. Jay Smith, killed in an automobile accident, occurring May 26, 1930. Defendant had issued to the deceased a “Special Automobile Accident Policy” upon an application by the insured made upon a blank furnished by the company describing the policy as one which would pay for injuries sustained “while operating, driving, riding in, demonstrating, adjusting, repairing or cranking an automobile;” but not insuring “any driver or operator of an *102 automobile truck.” The policy insured the deceased, as specified in the application blank.

Under a heading denominated “Additional Provisions” the policy states: “This policy shall not cover injuries, fatal or non-fatal, suffered: (9) By any person while working on, cranking, driving, or riding in or on any motorcycle, automobile truck, tractor, patrol wagon or fire apparatus or air craft of any description.”

It is conceded the insured was killed in an automobile accident; but the defense is that at that time he was driving and riding in an “automobile truck.”

The issue involves, solely, the nature of the car in which the defendant was riding.

At the time the policy was'issued the defendant was the owner of a passenger car and later he purchased the car in question. This new car, when sold to him, was described as a “Pord Pickup.”

The plaintiff apparently concedes that if the accident occurred while the deceased was riding in an “automobile truck,” she cannot recover ; but it is her contention that this vehicle was not an “automobile truck” within the purview of the policy. Plaintiff says, in effect, that the policy covered — so far as this case is concerned — accidents in any class of automobile except an “automobile truck;” and, therefore, an accident occurring while riding in a “pickup” was covered by the policy.

The car involved is not a passenger car as ordinarily understood— that is, it is not a sedan, runabout, coupe, etc. It is one of the well-known varieties of light delivery cars, having a cab on the front part covering the driver’s scut, and back of this is an open platform with sides and drop end. The dealer, who sold the car, testified that this “pickup is a car mounted on the Pord passenger car chassis with a cab similar to the. cab which is mounted on our trucks, and has a box, a steel box, approximately five feet long and four feet, four or five inches wide.” Further, that with the exception of having a heavy year spring the chassis “is the same as the passenger car chassis;” and that this particular car was of that type. He then described the difference between the chassis on this car and on the Ford truck; that the latter is the heavier chassis, longer wheel base and “of much heavier construction;” different construction and arrangement of springs, different drive and different transmisison of power from that used on tho *103 “pickup” or roadster. He testified, regarding this car in issue, “personally we do not speak of it as being a balf ton trucktbe trade calls it a “lite” delivery — that it is not generally considered a truck-— though he did say that if any prospective buyer asked for a half ton truck he would show him this type. lie said that as a Ford dealer he had three classes of cars for sale, the year this was sold — “passenger cars, commercial cars, and trucks, and this pickup was included in the commercial class.” He explained that they were required to make a ten day report and this type was reported in the commercial classification, that this was the classification given to it by the Ford Motor Company. Another dealer testified to the same effect. Dealers produced by the defendant testified that in trade parlance, this particular car was called a truck, and also known “as a Pickup, — Light Delivery.” They admitted that the chassis for this pickup was of the passenger ■car type, and not the heavier truck type; that in the reports they were required to make every day there were “three separate classes of automobiles in 1929” — passenger, commercial, and truck.

The insured was a civil engineer and contractor and at the t.ime of the accident was on his way to Enderlin to take charge of a contract for excavation. He had with him in this vehicle some of his employees, their luggage and his surveying instruments. The testimony shows the deceased used this vehicle as a passenger car “for driving around and moving some small staff from one place to another,” that he had a regular truck for the hauling of freight but would use this car for “an emergency call for repairs — if they were small enough to carry in that truck,” — for carrying his surveying instruments and he “may have hauled five gallons or so” of gasoline in it at times.

All through the policy issued reference is made to “automobile” accident, explosion, burning, etc. In large heavy type the policy is -described as “Special Automobile Accident Policy.” The application blanks provide spaces for information to be furnished by the applicant and place for signature — all. on the first page. On the back of the application blank, in large type, we find the phrase “Special Automobile Accident Policy,” with a reference to the number of “automobile fatalities last year,” and the statement, as in the policy itself, that the policy insures one against injuries sustained “while operating, driving, riding in, demonstrating, repairing or' cranking an automobile,” and *104 against injuries sustained “by being struck or run down by an automobile while walking on or across any public highway.” It is not until we come to the very last lines on the back of the application for the policy that we find in small type, the statement “This policy does not cover any driver or operator of an automobile truck.” It is the same in the policy itself. Any one reading the policy casually might readily consider it covered all accidents sustained while driving or riding in an automobile. The exception is at the end of the policy. The policy sets forth a “copy of application,” but this copy does not include anything that was on the back of the application.

It is the contention of the defendant that the word “automobile” when used throughout the policy, means what is ordinarily known as a passenger car — a car designed for that purpose — and that we must so construe the term when determining the character of the vehicle in which the deceased was riding. But the same term “automobile” is used with reference to the vehicle which may run down an insured as is used in describing a car in which the insured may be riding at the time of the accident. The insured in such policy is protected against being “run down by an automobile while walking on or across a public highway,” but if the term “automobile” is to be confined to passenger cars only then he would not be protected if run down by an automobile truck.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
246 N.W. 451, 63 N.D. 99, 1933 N.D. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-maryland-casualty-co-nd-1933.