Truck Insurance Exchange v. Bill Olinger Mercury, Inc.

495 P.2d 1201, 262 Or. 8, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 447
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 495 P.2d 1201 (Truck Insurance Exchange v. Bill Olinger Mercury, Inc.) 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
Truck Insurance Exchange v. Bill Olinger Mercury, Inc., 495 P.2d 1201, 262 Or. 8, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 447 (Or. 1972).

Opinion

HOLMAN, J.

This is a declaratory judgment proceeding in which plaintiff, an insurance company, seeks to estab *10 lisli that it has no responsibility under a policy of automobile theft insurance it issued to the defendant, Bill Olinger Mercury, Inc., (Olinger). The case was tried to the court. Olinger appealed from a judgment that plaintiff owed it no duty under the insurance contract. The other parties to this ease are not concerned with this appeal.

Plaintiff’s policy insured Olinger, an automobile dealer, against loss occasioned by theft of its automobiles. However, it excluded losses which arose from “* * * embezzlement, conversion, secretion, theft, larceny, robbery or pilferage committed by any person entrusted by the insured with custody or possession of the automobile; * * Miller, a salesman for Olinger, removed, or caused to be removed, four of Olinger’s used automobiles from the dealer’s premises without authority, sold them, and pocketed the money. The parties stipulated,that Miller embezzled, secreted, converted, stole and pilfered the vehicles.

The sole assignment of error is “[t]he court erred in finding that ‘the autos were stolen while Miller was entrusted with custody’ and further erred in failing to find that plaintiff failed to sustain its burden of proof that Miller was entrusted with custody or possession at the time when he stole the vehicles.”

Disposition of the assignment of error involves a factual determination, and, therefore, at the outset it is important to determine whether the case should be treated as an equitable or a legal proceeding. If it is an equitable proceeding, the factual issues are tried de novo. If it is a legal proceeding, the court is bound by the trial court’s factual determinations if there is sufficient evidence to sustain them. We have held that declaratory judgment proceedings to determine cover *11 age under insurance policies are legal in nature rather than equitable. May v. Chicago Insurance Company, 260 Or 285, 490 P2d 150, 153 (1971); Falk v. Sul America Terrestres, 255 Or 246, 248, 465 P2d 714 (1970). Therefore, because the trier of the facts found in favor of plaintiff, the evidence must be viewed on appeal in a manner as favorable to plaintiff as the testimony will permit.

Olinger operated a large new and used automobile dealership adjacent Canyon Road, one of the principal highways leading into the city of Portland. Its extensive frontage on the highway was bisected by 93rd Street, which intersects the highway at approximately a right angle. Several hundred new and used vehicles were stored and/or displayed on Olinger’s lots. During the day, the keys were left in the used vehicles which were displayed for sale so that the salesmen could start the vehicles for customers. The keys were inserted in the vehicles each morning by either the lot boy or the salesmen, or by both. In the evening, it was the duty of the salesmen to remove the keys from the vehicles and to turn them in to the office. Salesmen were expected to “keep an eye” on the vehicles, with a view to preventing damage or theft.

It was also the duty of the salesmen to align the vehicles on the used car lots in an orderly fashion and to change their relative positions often so that the public driving by would not conclude the automobiles were not selling well, which would be the case if they were to see the same cars in the same spot over a considerable period of time. Salesmen could drive the vehicles back and forth across 93rd Street from one part' of the premises to the other. They had no permission, however, to drive the vehicles from the prem *12 ises unless they had a customer with them to whom they were demonstrating the car. Salesmen could not permit a customer to drive a vehicle from the lot unless the salesman was with the customer. No salesman had authority to close a deal with a customer. All offers for vehicles had to he submitted to and approved by management.

One of the vehicles in question was taken from Olinger’s premises when Miller, contrary to general instructions, allowed a customer to drive it from the lot and to keep it. Miller was subsequently paid for the vehicle by the customer, although no certificate of title was ever given to the purchaser. There is only circumstantial evidence concerning the manner in which the three other vehicles were taken from Olinger’s premises. The evidence shows that Miller sold two of the vehicles during business hours to other automobile dealerships in or about Portland. He appeared at each of the dealerships with a vehicle and its title certificate, and the vehicle was paid for by the dealer, who thought Miller was representing Olinger. In one instance, Miller was actually driven back to Olinger’s premises after the purchase by the dealer to whom the vehicle had been sold. Finally, Miller absconded with the fourth automobile, which he sold, delivering the certificate of title to Hen House Auto Sales, South Mills, North Carolina.

There is no testimony concerning the manner in which Miller secured the certificates of title which he delivered. However, there was evidence that the desk in which the certificates of title had been kept was broken into and money taken therefrom. The certificates were not missed until some weeks later, shortly after Miller disappeared.

*13 It is our conclusion that there was sufficient evidence from which the trial judge could find that Miller had custody of the stolen vehicles, as contemplated by the exception to coverage in the policy in question. The policy uses the words “custody” and “possession” in the alternative. “Custody” does not rise to the dignity of “possession” within the ordinarily accepted meaning of the term. It is a term particularly descriptive of a servant’s relationship to his master’s goods with which the servant must deal during the course of his employment. The salesmen, including Miller, could be found to have had custody of the used vehicles as the automobiles stood upon the lots with the keys in them. By virtue of their employment, the salesmen had temporary physical control over the vehicles which put them in a position whereby they could more easily steal the cars. The salesmen were permitted to drive, handle, and demonstrate the vehicles to customers and were responsible, to a degree, for the security of the vehicles.

Olinger argues that the salesmen’s authority was insufficient to constitute custody but, if the salesmen were found to have had custody, such custody could *14 only have existed while the vehicles were on the lot, and that Miller had no permission to take the vehicles from the lot nor had he any authorized custody of them after they were removed. All that this latter argument proves is that the vehicles were unlawfully taken •from the lot by Miller or pursuant to his unauthorized permission. That was the moment when Olinger was unlawfully deprived of his property.

Olinger also argues that there is insufficient evidence that the vehicles were taken at a time when Miller had custody.

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

Related

In re Harris Lindsey
District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2020
Loeb Properties, Inc. v. Federal Insurance Company
663 F. Supp. 2d 640 (W.D. Tennessee, 2009)
Ho Bros. Restaurant v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.
492 So. 2d 603 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1986)
NORTH PAC. INS. v. Forest Indus. Ins. Exch.
571 P.2d 138 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1977)
C & B LIVESTOCK, INC. v. Johns
539 P.2d 645 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1975)
Waller v. Rocky Mountain Fire and Casualty Co.
535 P.2d 530 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1975)
INTERNATIONAL HEALTH & LIFE INSURANCE CO. v. Lewis
530 P.2d 517 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1975)
General Accident Fire & Life Assurance Corp. v. Shasky
512 P.2d 987 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
495 P.2d 1201, 262 Or. 8, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/truck-insurance-exchange-v-bill-olinger-mercury-inc-or-1972.