Stewart-Smith Haidinger, Inc. v. Avi-Truck, Inc.

682 P.2d 1108, 1984 Alas. LEXIS 300
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1984
Docket6796
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 682 P.2d 1108 (Stewart-Smith Haidinger, Inc. v. Avi-Truck, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart-Smith Haidinger, Inc. v. Avi-Truck, Inc., 682 P.2d 1108, 1984 Alas. LEXIS 300 (Ala. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

COMPTON, Justice.

This is an appeal from an award of $60,-000.00 on an aircraft hull insurance policy to Appellees, Avi-Truck, Inc., and its owners, Loretta W. Coward, Robert S. Murnan and Kiku Murnan (jointly referred to as “Avi-Truck"). The hull claim arose out of the total loss of a Chase YC-122 aircraft on January 31, 1977, when it crashed following takeoff from Anchorage International Airport. The insurer, Stewart-Smith Haid-inger, Inc. and "certain British insurance companies” (jointly referred to as “Stewart-Smith”) challenge the award, claiming that certain exclusions in the policy avoided coverage and that, in any event, Avi-Truck does not have standing to sue because it is not a named insured in the insurance contract. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the award.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 1976, Trans-Northern Aleutian, Inc. (“TNA”) was an air transport company which operated a fleet of small aircraft. TNA, which was looking for a larger aircraft to use for moving large equipment, first became interested in the YC-122 in the summer of 1976. The YC-122 was a twin-engine, multi-crew surplus military aircraft, one of the few of its kind built sometime during the late 1940s or early 1950s. Robert Murnan, the chief mechanic for TNA, and Dick Clawson, a pilot working for TNA, ferried the plane from Palmer to Anchorage in early December, 1976. Although TNA had initially considered purchasing the YC-122, after the plane reached Anchorage TNA decided it would lease the aircraft instead. Murnan and Bob Coward, another mechanic for TNA, and their wives decided to purchase the aircraft, and formed Avi-Truck, Inc. in order to do so. They purchased the aircraft on December 29, 1976 and leased it to TNA on January 14, 1977. The lease agreement included a clause requiring TNA to insure the hull of the aircraft for $60,000.00.

TNA’s president, Lloyd Sudder, obtained the insurance for the YC-122 through Jack Good, an employee of Frank B. Hall and Company, an insurance brokerage. Sudder contacted Good about insuring the plane before the ferry flight and discussed the insurance with him several times thereafter. The parties dispute what information Sudder gave to Good concerning the aircraft. It is undisputed that Good was told the make and model of the YC-122 and that it would be used only for carrying cargo. Good went to the TNA offices to look at the plane and was aware that it was significantly larger and older than the other aircraft that he insured for TNA and the only one that would not be carrying passengers as well as cargo. It is also undisputed that the question of whether the YC-122 had an airworthiness certificate was never discussed. Good incorrectly assumed that the YC-122 had an airworthiness certificate. What is in. dispute is whether Sudder told Good that the aircraft would be used as a “public use” aircraft, i.e., one that is restricted to transporting government cargo, and that it was an ex-military aircraft. The significance of this information is that, as a practical matter, an airworthiness certificate could not have been obtained for the YC-122 for carrying private cargo for hire. Without this certificate, the aircraft could only be legally used for carrying government cargo. Furthermore, after talking with FAA employees, TNA believed that certain regulations concerning pilot qualifications would not apply to public use aircraft.

The parties also dispute whether Good was told that TNA did not own the plane. Although Sudder testified that he told Good that TNA would be leasing the aircraft, Good assumed TNA owned it. Avi-Truck was not named on the policy.

Good ordered insurance through John Chapman, a representative of the insurer, Stewart-Smith Haidinger, Inc. Chapman *1111 could act as an underwriter and bind certain London carriers under his “in-house” authority, or he could act as a broker and forward the risk to the London market through a London broker. After investigating the airworthiness of the YC-122, Chapman decided to do the latter, because of the aircraft’s age and because he was “suspicious” of a plane he had never heard of.

Good issued a binder on December 13, 1976, which provided coverage for the ferry flight from Palmer to Anchorage and then ground coverage until the plane’s first flight. Flight coverage was added on January 24, 1977. The binder provided that the plane would be used for carrying freight for hire and would be flown by pilots with specified qualifications. Although the binder indicated that a new policy of insurance would be issued to cover the YC-122, the coverage was effected by adding the aircraft to an existing hull insurance policy covering other aircraft operated by TNA. The endorsement adding the YC-122 to the fleet policy was not issued until February 8, 1977, one week after the aircraft crashed.

The YC-122 crashed on its second flight while carrying school supplies for the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Stewart-Smith disclaimed liability based on several exclusions in the policy.

The underlying action was commenced by Alaska Statebank, which sued Avi-Truck in order to collect on a loan that Avi-Truck had obtained to purchase the YC-122. Avi-Truck filed a third-party complaint against Frank B. Hall and the insurers, alleging that it was entitled to the proceeds of the TNA insurance policy.

Various cross-motions for partial summary judgment were filed, and on June 5, 1980, Judge Singleton entered an “Order for Partial Summary Judgment and to Simplify Issues.” That order included conclusions both that Avi-Truck had standing to sue even though it was not a named insured on the policy, and that exclusion (c) of the policy, which required an airworthiness certificate to be “in full force and effect,” would not avoid coverage, even though the aircraft had no airworthiness certificate. Stewart-Smith challenges these two conclusions on appeal.

The case went to trial on July 20, 1981. After five days of testimony Judge Souter ruled that coverage for the loss of the YC-122 existed. “Final Judgment as to Fewer than All Claims and Parties” was entered, awarding Avi-Truck $60,000.00, the amount of the hull coverage policy. In making the award the trial court found that the aircraft’s pilot’s lack of proper “type rating” did not justify avoiding liability under the policy, since TNA had been informed by the FAA that its pilots could legally fly a public use aircraft. Stewart-Smith challenges this finding and claims that the testimony by TNA employees as to statements made by FAA employees should have been excluded as hearsay.

II. AVI-TRUCK’S STANDING TO SUE

In its 1980 Order of Partial Summary Judgment, the trial court held that Avi-Truck had standing to sue the insurers under TNA’s insurance contract. The court based its holding on a finding that:

[T]he third party plaintiffs were within the class of persons contemplated to be covered by insurance at the time the insurance contract was negotiated, i.e. within the class of owners and operators of the aircraft. The court further finds that the persons contemplated to operate the aircraft, the pilots contemplated to fly it, and the persons contemplated to service the aircraft, remained unchanged at all times during the negotiation of coverage and thereafter, and that the risk to the carriers was not effected [sic] by ultimate ownership of the aircraft being placed in Avi-Truck, Inc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
682 P.2d 1108, 1984 Alas. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-smith-haidinger-inc-v-avi-truck-inc-alaska-1984.