United States Fire Insurance Company v. Kentucky Truck Sales, Inc.

786 F.2d 736, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 23391
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 27, 1986
Docket85-5243
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 786 F.2d 736 (United States Fire Insurance Company v. Kentucky Truck Sales, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Fire Insurance Company v. Kentucky Truck Sales, Inc., 786 F.2d 736, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 23391 (6th Cir. 1986).

Opinion

786 F.2d 736

UNITED STATES FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
KENTUCKY TRUCK SALES, INC. (85-5243); Kimberly Thurman,
Individually and as Ancillary Administratrix of
the Estate of James F. Thurman
(85-5244); William J. McGuirk
(85-5290),
Defendants-
Appellants.

Nos. 85-5243, 85-5244 and 85-5290.

United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit.

Argued Feb. 4, 1986.
Decided March 27, 1986.

Charles S. Cassis (argued), Susan C. Simpson, Brown, Todd & Heyburn, Louisville, Ky., for Kentucky Truck Sales, Inc.

William A. Miller (argued), Louisville, Ky., S. Anthony Long, Phillips & Long, Boonville, Ind., for Kimberly Thurman.

William S. Bowman (argued) Leslye Mercer Murray, Louisville, Ky., for U.S. Fire Ins. Co.

Before KEITH and GUY, Circuit Judges, and TAYLOR, District Judge.*

ANNA DIGGS TAYLOR, District Judge.

In this diversity case, appellants claim error in the District Court's conclusion that the insurer owed neither coverage nor a defense to the insured, and its entry of a declaratory judgment for the appellee insurer. We affirm.

United States Fire Insurance Company (hereinafter USFI) issued a standard garage liability insurance policy to Kentucky Truck Sales, Inc. and its President, William J. McGuirk, effective by its terms from April 1, 1982 to April 1, 1983. The policy insured McGuirk and his business up to certain limits for liability for personal injury and property damage arising out of garage operations, but included the following exclusion at Part IV, C(9):

WE WILL NOT COVER--EXCLUSIONS:

9. Covered autos while used in any professional or organized racing or demolition contest or stunting activity.

The policy further provided that the insurer had no duty to defend "suits for bodily injury or property damage not covered by the policy."

The material facts are undisputed. Kentucky Truck was a Kentucky corporation dealing in sales of new and used semitractor trucks to the trucking industry. It did no trucking, itself. It was franchised by the Freight Liner and Volvo-White corporations to sell their semitractors, and offered service and repairs on new and used trucks at its garage. Kentucky Truck's semitractors were normally on the road only during a prospective purchaser's test drive, or during a post-repair road test by the service department. The company utilized three pickup trucks and four company cars for delivery of parts, service and sales, and only occasionally would utilize a used truck to haul heavy equipment or parts for internal use.

In March of 1983 Mr. Paul Young approached President McGuirk on behalf of Exhibit Management Associates, Inc., and asked if Kentucky Truck Sales would loan a semitractor truck to an event known as the Mid-America Truck Pull (or Mid-America Hot-Rod Pull) which was to be held in the coliseum ("Freedom Hall") of the Kentucky Fair and Exhibition Center, from March 25 through March 27, 1983. The loaned truck would be used as a tow-back truck. McGuirk agreed.

The Truck Pull was sponsored by three organizations, which shared equally in the proceeds. They were Exhibit Management Associates, Inc., the Kentucky State Fair Board, and the Kentucky Tractor Pull Association. Tickets for admission were sold to the public. The event consisted of a competition among trucks, by class (including hot rod tractors, a four wheel drive modified class, and a two wheel drive class), in pulling a weighted sled along a specially constructed dirt track, approximately 300 feet long and sixty feet wide. The winner of each class was the truck of that class which was able to pull the heaviest weight the greatest distance. Winners were awarded prize money and trophies.

The sled which was pulled by these trucks was operated by a rider who was able to increase or decrease its weight mechanically. All of the contestants performed consecutively, over the three days of the Pull, and all pulled the same sled on the same dirt track. This was made possible by utilization of the two-back truck which Mr. Young borrowed from Mr. McGuirk of Kentucky Truck. The tow-back truck pulled the sled back to the starting line, after each contestant truck had dragged it as far as possible down the track. At the direction of the starter, the tow-back truck placed the sled at the point along the starting line from which the next contestant must then drag it.

President McGuirk loaned a 1983 Autocar semitractor to the Truck Pull in exchange for the advertising value of announcements over the public address system that Kentucky Truck had lent it, program credits, and for the visibility of his vehicle on the track throughout the three day event where, according to his deposition, "several thousand people would get to see our product displayed out there." This was the first time that Kentucky Truck had ever loaned a vehicle to a Truck Pull.

When Mr. Billy Joe Miles, President of the Kentucky Tractor Pull Association and starter of this Pull, went to Kentucky Truck on March 25 to get the semitractor tow-back truck, he also recruited a Kentucky Truck employee, Floyd H. Marr, to drive the truck during the Saturday night and Sunday performances. Mr. Marr had never performed such a job before.

Marr was undisputedly instructed to drive the tow-back truck, in reverse, down the track behind the sled as each contestant pulled the sled. Then, when the contestant could pull no further and at the signal of the sled operator, he was to drag the sled as expeditiously as possible back to the starting line, for the next contestant. There appears to be a dispute of fact as to whether it was the usual practice for the tow-back truck to follow the sled as it progressed: but that is not a material fact, as the District Court properly held. It is undisputed that this was done on March 27, 1983, when the accident in litigation occurred. Miles, the starter and Association President, testified that it is essential that the tow-back truck move up the track with the sled, so that it can more expeditiously return the sled to the line, and each event will not become overly time-consuming.

The ambiance of the dirt track on which Floyd Marr and the Autocar semitractor were placed is also a matter of undisputed record. As the tow-back truck driver backed down the track, watching the sled operator from the rear-view mirror (as instructed) for the signal to tow back, the engine of the pulling vehicle generated enormous noise; its tires spun, spewing dirt and gouging holes into the track; it sometimes reared up onto its rear wheels, and on occasion its engine exploded. Although the speed of a vehicle's progress down the track was irrelevant to the competition, tire speed was a significant factor in the effort of the large vehicles to gain traction while pulling, and the faster a vehicle pulled, the further it was able to pull. The contestant vehicles were modified for this purpose and driven to maximum force.

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Bluebook (online)
786 F.2d 736, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 23391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-fire-insurance-company-v-kentucky-truck-sales-inc-ca6-1986.