United States Ins. Co. of Waco v. Boyer

269 S.W.2d 340, 153 Tex. 415, 1954 Tex. LEXIS 547
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1954
DocketA-4538
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 269 S.W.2d 340 (United States Ins. Co. of Waco v. Boyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Ins. Co. of Waco v. Boyer, 269 S.W.2d 340, 153 Tex. 415, 1954 Tex. LEXIS 547 (Tex. 1954).

Opinion

Justice Wilson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit upon the collision clause of a standard automobile insurance policy issued August 17, 1953. While the insured car was parked on a downtown street in Waco, a windstorm demolished a building and left the car crushed under brick and timbers.

In affirming the judgment against the insurance company 264 S.W. 2d 151,152, the Court of Civil Appeals stated the principal question to be:

“* * * Whether a stationary vehicle damaged by falling debris from a building damaged by a tornado is” within “an insurance policy insuring against damage or loss to an automobile in collision with another object.”

It based its decision upon Providence Washington Insurance Company v. Proffitt, 150 Texas 207, 239 S.W. 2d 379, and reached the conclusion that the impact between the timbers, brick, etc., and the car was a collision within Coverage E-l. 1 Petitioner contends this holding conflicts with O’Leary v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 196 S.W. 575, and American Automobile Insurance Co. v. Baker, 5 S.W. 2d 252.

In construing contracts, the time-honored method of the courts has been to search for the intent of the parties and this is true in cases construing insurance contracts just as in other contracts. While undoubtedly in the early days of the insurance *418 business the actual intent of the immediate parties to the contract was material, now with the insurance business regulated and the policy forms prescribed by a State Insurance Commission, the court in construing a policy determines the everyday meaning of the words to the general public — the meaning of the words “in common parlance” — “the usual and popular understanding of the term.” American Automobile Ins. Co. v. Baker, supra. As a practical matter, the actual intent involved in the precise words is as much or more the intent of the Insurance Commission which prescribes the wording of the policy as it is the intent of the parties. It is unlawful to issue a policy in words other than those expressly approved by the Insurance Commission, and every insurance company selling this type of insurance is required to word its policies precisely alike. Art. 5.06 Insurance Code, V.A.C.S. Uniform policies are necessary to a uniform rate structure, which in turn resulted from the public injury caused by highly competitive wildcat insurance schemes. Therefore, a true search for what the courts usually speak of as the intent of parties will not be an inquiry as to what the words of the contract meant to this particular insurer or insured. It is, first, an effort to determine the ordinary lay meaning of the words to the general public, and, in the light of this meaning, it is, second, an examination of the choice the purchaser had and the choice he made. Glen Falls Ins. Co. v. McCown, 149 Texas 587, 236 S.W. 2d 108.

Under the policy form prescribed by the Insurance Commission, a windstorm is defined as a separate peril. It might be that the Insurance Commission could prescribe one all-inclusive risk policy on automobiles and give the public the choice of that or nothing. But the Insurance Commission has not done that. It has attempted to divide up the risks and allow the public the oppor-. tunity to purchase collision without purchasing hail or windstorm if that seems desirable. If the impact of hailstones on a car is a collision, why should anyone purchase collision and hail? Likewise, if the impact of objects blown through the air by the wind is a collision, why purchase collision and windstorm? Under the method of basing premiums upon the loss experience, the effect of the respondent’s construction would be to drive up the premium rate on collision by including losses from wind and hail in the loss experience and make it impossible for the public to purchase collision without some wind and hail coverage. This construction tends toward one all-inclusive risk policy contrary to the policy of the Insurance Commission and therefore contrary to its intent.

*419 Here the insured elected to purchase Coverage E-l 1 and elected not to purchase Coverage H 2 (which would include windstorm) , or Coverage I 3 (which would also include windstorm). We know this much about his specific intent. He intended to purchase collision and he intended not to purchase windstorm.

In Providence Washington Ins. Co. v. Proffitt, supra, this court held these things: (1) The rush of water against an automobile was a “collision,” both within the lay definition of that term as given by lexicographers and within the legal definition thereof as found in the decided cases; (2) the policy coverage against the hazard or peril of collision, which the insured purchased, protected him against loss or damage sustained as a proximate result of the collision of rushing water against the automobile. (3) the language of the comprehensive coverage provision of the policy which recited that loss resulting from certain named perils should not be deemed loss caused by collision was written therein for the purpose of enlarging the liability of the insurer under that coverage and not for the purpose of limiting liability under the provision for collision coverage, and therefore could not be used for the latter purpose; (4) the collision having “set in motion the series of events which, unbroken by the intervention of any new and independent cause, led to the destruction of the automobile,” it was immaterial that the injury was done in fact by water. This court did not hold that the court could not and would not look to other coverages in the policy for the purpose of determining the rights of the parties. We specifically reaffirmed Providence Washington Ins. Co. v. Proffitt, supra, 150 Texas 207, 239 S.W. 2d 379, 381 (7), 382.

In the case at bar, the windstorm set in motion the series of events which, unbroken by the intervention of any new and independent cause, led to the destruction of the automobile. The fact that a windstorm blows two objects together does not bring the claim within the collision clause. Any other construction would eventually nullify the policy of giving the public some freedom of choice in selecting insurance against particular perils. Here the actual and dominant peril which destroyed the automo *420 bile was the windstorm and no one could seriously contend that the windstorm was not a sine qua non to the destruction of the automobile. The insured could have purchased protection against this peril but elected not to do so.

Accordingly, we hold that the impact of the bricks, stone, and timbers upon the automobile was simply incidental to and a part of the destruction caused by the dominant force of the windstorm. In view of the effort of the Insurance Commission to segregate and define specific perils in order to give the public a choice in purchasing, insurance, we hold that this loss falls within the windstorm provision of the policy and not within the collision provision.

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Bluebook (online)
269 S.W.2d 340, 153 Tex. 415, 1954 Tex. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ins-co-of-waco-v-boyer-tex-1954.