Truck Insurance Exchange v. Transport Indemnity Co.

591 P.2d 188, 180 Mont. 419, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 743
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1979
Docket14267
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 591 P.2d 188 (Truck Insurance Exchange v. Transport Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Transport Indemnity Co., 591 P.2d 188, 180 Mont. 419, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 743 (Mo. 1979).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HASWELL

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff appeals from an amended judgment of the Powell County District Court granting summary judgment in favor of defendant on the question of liability for insurance coverage and rights of indemnification.

This is a controversy between two insurance companies as to which is obliged to provide coverage and defend against property damages and personal injuries arising out of an accident that occured on January 24, 1976, on the Racetrack overpass near Galen, Montana. That accident involved a semitractor and trailer and a passenger car. The tractor on the semi belonged to Forest Products International, Inc. (FPI), an Oregon based contract hauler, and was being driven by one Michael Wirkkala, an employee and major stockholder of FPI. The trailer on the rig belonged to International Transport, Inc. (ITI), a Minnesota corporation which is an authorized carrier licensed by the Interstate Commerce Commission (I.C.C.).

At the time of the accident, appellant Truck Insurance Exchange had an insurance policy in effect with FPI and with Michael Wirkkala individually, and respondent Transport Indemnity Co. had a policy in effect covering ITI. The dispute arises over conflicting provisions in the two policies as affected by certain I.C.C. regulations and terms of a “haulers contract” entered into between FPI and ITI.

On January 23, 1976, FPI and ITI executed a “Single Trip or Exempt Haulers Contract” whereby ITI (the carrier) retained the services of FPI (the hauler, Michael Wirkkala owner-operator) to transport an ITI-owned trailer from Oregon to Minnesota. ITI, as a licensed carrier, is subject to regulations promulgated by the I.C.C. FPI, as a hauler only and not a certified carrier, does not have to meet the same I.C.C. requirements.

*422 Among the terms of the hauler’s contract were numerous provisions which the I.C.C. requires licensed carriers to include in such agreements. One of those provisions appears in the contract as paragraph 6 and reads:

“During the existence of this contract, the Carrier [ITI] assumes liability for bodily injuries to or the death of any person (except the Hauler, or the employees, agents or servants of the Hauler) or for the loss or damages to the property of others (except the Hauler, or the employees, agents or servants of the Hauler) resulting from the negligent operation, maintenance or use of the vehicles described in appendix A hereof ...”

Both the tractor owned by FPI and Michael Wirkkala, and the trailer owned by ITI were described in appendix A of the contract.

An insurance company that enters into a policy of insurance with a licensed carrier is required by federal statute and regulation to file with the I.C.C. a certificate of insurance conditioned to pay up to specified limits any claims against its insured carrier arising out of negligent operations of motor vehicles under the carrier’s operating permit. Respondent Transport Indemnity Co., ITI’s insurer, had filed such a certificate of coverage for ITI here.

As a result of the accident on January 24, 1976, various parties have filed personal injury and property damage suite naming FPI and ITI as defendants. On April 20, 1977, appellant Truck Insurance Exchange (FPI’s insurer) filed a declaratory judgment action in Powell County District Court seeking a declaration that respondent Transport Indemnity Company (ITI’s insurer) was obligated to FPI by reason of the assumption of liability clause in the hauler’s contract to provide coverage for and defend against any claims asserted against FPI.

On June 8, 1977, respondent Transport Indemnity Co. (ITI’s insurer) filed an answer denying responsibility for providing coverage for or assuming the defense of the damages arising out of the accident and counterclaiming that all said damages were a consequence of the negligence of FPI and that therefore appellant Truck Insurance Exchange, as FPI’s insurer, was responsible for them. *423 The counterclaim cited several provisions from the insurance policy issued to FPI by Truck Insurance Exchange to support that conclusion. The cited provisions included the coverage clauses whereby Truck Insurance Exchange bound itself to pay all damages FPI became legally obligated for because of bodily injury or property damage arising out of the ownership, maintenance, or use of the vehicle to which the insurance applied, and the clause giving Truck Insurance Exchange the right and duty to defend any suit against FPI on account of such bodily injury or property damage. The counterclaim also cited language from the Truck Insurance Exchange policy issued to FPI that the insurance afforded by it was primary insurance, and contrasted that to the language in the Transport Indemnity Co. policy issued to ITI that if at the time of an occurrence to which the Transport Indemnity Co. insurance applied there was in effect any other valid and collectible insurance applicable to the same occurrence, then counterclaimant Transport Indemnity’s insurance was excess insurance only.

As originally framed, the counterclaim included an allegation that certain language in the insurance policy issued to FPI by Truck Insurance Exchange also extended coverage to ITI, Transport Indemnity Co.’s named insured, and that therefore the policy issued to ITI by Transport Indemnity Co. was only excess insurance giving rise to no primary duty or liability on the part of Transport Indemnity Co. On appeal, the claim that ITI is an included insured is abandoned and it is apparently conceded that ITI is not covered by the Truck Insurance Exchange policy because of a specific exclusion therein. (The effect of the excess coverage clause on the issue of which insurer is liable for primary coverage, however, is still contested.)

The significant underlying theory of the counterclaim for purposes of this appeal is that ultimate responsibility for the accident lay in the negligence of Michael Wirkkala; that the Truck Insurance Exchange policy is the only policy specifically extending coverage to him; and that therefore Truck Insurance Exchange is obligated to defend ITI against any claims asserted against it from the *424 accident and indemnify Transport Indemnity Co. for any settlements or other liabilities paid on behalf of ITI by Transport Indemnity Co. under its policy with ITI.

Truck Insurance Exchange filed its reply to the counterclaim on July 14, 1977, admitting that the language cited in the counterclaim was included in the policy issued to FPI by Truck Insurance Exchange but alleging that other language in the policy precluded the conclusion that Truck Insurance Exchange was liable for primary coverage. The reply did not specify what other language Truck Insurance Exchange relied on.

Subsequent to the filing of the original pleadings, an error in the naming of the plaintiff became apparent and amended pleadings were filed. The amended pleadings are substantially identical to the originals except for the change in name.

After a period of discovery, both sides moved for summary judgment and submitted briefs in support of their motions. The brief of Truck Insurance Exchange specified the language from the policy issued by Transport Indemnity Co.

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Bluebook (online)
591 P.2d 188, 180 Mont. 419, 1979 Mont. LEXIS 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/truck-insurance-exchange-v-transport-indemnity-co-mont-1979.