VanderLaan v. Educators Mutual Insurance

97 N.W.2d 6, 356 Mich. 318
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1959
DocketDocket 14, Calendar 47,871
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 97 N.W.2d 6 (VanderLaan v. Educators Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
VanderLaan v. Educators Mutual Insurance, 97 N.W.2d 6, 356 Mich. 318 (Mich. 1959).

Opinion

Dethmers, C. J.

Defendant appeals from judgment for plaintiff entered on special verdict rendered by a jury’s answers to 2 written questions submitted by the court. Suit is on the accidental death benefit provisions of an insurance policy, issued by defendant, naming Dr. John VanderLaan as assured and plaintiff as beneficiary. The assured was accidentally killed in an airplane crash. Pertinent excerpts from the policy are:

“Section 4. Limited air travel benefits.

“The master policy, and the individual certificates issued hereunder, provide benefits for accidental bodily injury sustained during aerial travel, but only while insured is traveling * * *

.«(b) * * * as a passenger in a powered civil

aircraft * * *

“Section 6. Exclusions and limitations “This certificate does not cover loss, fatal or nonfatal, resulting wholly or partly, directly or indirectly: (a) while operating, * * * or serving as a member of the crew of any aircraft; or * * * from (c) injuries sustained in consequence of riding-in any vehicle for aerial travel, * * * except as provided in section 4.”

The assured was a licensed pilot. He owned an airplane. It had dual controls so that either the person in the right or left front seat could operate it. One man could operate it alone without need for a copilot or crew. The assured, 4 other doctors and 3 laymen planned to fly to Canada on a fishing-trip. One of the laymen was "William Sutton, an experienced World War II pilot and air force flight *321 instructor. Assured’s plane and one owned by one of the other doctors were to be used. Because assured had suffered a heart ailment which had necessitated his leaving his medical practice, he was not certain that he could go, but arranged that, if he did not, his plane would, nevertheless, be used by the party with Sutton piloting; and it was understood by the members of the party that, even if assured did go, Sutton would fly it. It was common practice, when Sutton was in that plane, for him. to fly it.

The 8 men went on the trip, with 4 in each plane. Assured occupied the left front seat of his plane,known as the pilot’s seat, and Sutton the right front seat, in which an instructor ordinarily rides. Both participated in flying the plane. Sutton flew it more than half of the time. All flight plans filed with authorities listed assured as pilot of his plane. He and Sutton and the 2 who operated the other plane joined in preflight planning from time to time on the journey. Assured handled most of the radio communications on his plane, checked on weather reports, consulted maps and obtained clearance for take offs from the fields where they landed. Although it was known that assured did some of the flying on the trip, it was not possible for the pas-, sengers to see which of the 2 in the front seats was actually doing the flying at a given time. Their destination was 3,500 miles from home and required about 2-days flight each way. Stops were made every 3 or 4 hours. One poor landing was made because both assured and Sutton tried to operate the controls at the same time.

After fishing for some day's the party started on the return flight. En route, the planes landed at ¿ Canadian airport for Canadian customs clearance. The testimony indicates thát on the leg of the journey immediately preceding that landing Sutton had been *322 doing the flying. Weather‘conditions were unfavorable. Before deciding tó proceed, weather reports from the next contemplated stop were awaited. After receipt of such reports, indicating improved weather conditions there, Sutton told the assured, in response to the latter’s inquiry, that he would be willing to fly on. Sutton, the 2 operating the other plane, and the assured, referred to by one of the doctors as the 4 pilots, decided to go. The other plane flew iii the lead position. They lost sight of each other because of a mist, at which time Sutton said he was going to take the plane to the left) which was the preconceived plan to avoid traveling in the same flight plan as the other plane. The planes encountered scattered clouds. Word came by radio from the other plane that they had decided to climb over the clouds. Assured replied by radio, “All right, we will follow you up, and we will be right with you.” Shortly thereafter assured’s plane crashed, for reasons unknown. Assured and Sutton were killed. The 2 doctor passengers sitting in the back seats survived. They do not know whether the assured or Sutton, or both of them, were handling the controls of the plane just prior to and at the time of the crash. The doctor piloting the lead plane was of the impression that Sutton was doing the flying because assured’s plane, in following the first, flew in a position off its left side so that the aecupant of the right front seat of the assured’s plane (Sutton) could see the other plane.

Defendant’s brief states as the first question involved the following:

“Where, in a suit to recover on an insurance policy which afforded air travel benefits only while the insured was ‘traveling as a passenger’ and excludes while ‘operating or serving as a member of the crew,’ the proofs show the insured occupied the pilot’s seat, and another pilot occupied right front seat of the *323 insured’s private plane; all witnesses testified both participated in the operation thereof, and the official flight plan filed listed the insured as pilot, should the court have directed a verdict for defendant?”

Defendant answers that it was entitled to a directed verdict on the grounds that (1) assured was not a passenger and (2) he was serving as a member of the crew. Defendant takes its definition of “passenger” from 2 CJS, Aerial Navigation, § 2, p 902, as “any person riding in an aircraft, but having no part in its operation.” Defendant then points to the abqve outlined acts of assured on the trip as conclusive of his having had a part in the plane’s operation and urges that he was, therefore, not a passenger, and that, accordingly, he was not included in the coverage of section 4 of the policy, limited to passengers. Defendant contends that, on the contrary, assured came within the exclusionary provisions of section 6 of the policy because, in the course of the trip, he operated the plane at times and at other times at least participated in its operation, as shown by some of the above-stated facts, and was, therefore, serving as a member of the crew.

Plaintiff directs attention to items of proof, above mentioned, from which a reasonable inference might be drawn that Sutton, not the assured, was operating the plane when it crashed. This brings into focus the fundamental point of cleavage between the parties. Defendant says that the question of assured’s “traveling as a passenger” or “serving as a member of the crew” is one of his status on the plane during the entire trip. Plaintiff, as did the trial court, views the question as being one of what the assured was or was not doing just before and at the time of the crash.

In determining the meaning of “traveling as a passenger,” as used in the policy, we must look to all of its related provisions. One who is traveling as a pas *324

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Bluebook (online)
97 N.W.2d 6, 356 Mich. 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanderlaan-v-educators-mutual-insurance-mich-1959.