Washington Fire & Marine Insurance v. Hodge

320 S.W.2d 926, 230 Ark. 42, 1959 Ark. LEXIS 572
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 16, 1959
Docket5-1764
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 320 S.W.2d 926 (Washington Fire & Marine Insurance v. Hodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington Fire & Marine Insurance v. Hodge, 320 S.W.2d 926, 230 Ark. 42, 1959 Ark. LEXIS 572 (Ark. 1959).

Opinion

Carleton Harris, Chief Justice.

This appeal relates to the construction of a limitation of use endorsement, attached to, and forming a part of a motor vehicle collision policy of insurance issued by Washington Fire & Marine Insurance Company, appellant herein, to appellee, Bunk Hodge, on August 28,1956. On said date, Hodge, who resided at Walnut Eidge, Arkansas, and still so resides, while engaged in highway construction work, purchased a 1956 2-ton Dodge truck from the Led-better Motor Company upon a monthly payment sales contract, it being understood that insurance on the truck would be issued as a part of the transaction. A few days later, Hodge received from appellant company the policy of insurance sued upon. Item 1 lists the name of “Bunk Hodge” and underneath the name, “Walnut Eidge, Ark. ’ ’ Item 4, entitled ‘ ‘ Garage; ’ ’ provides ‘ ‘ the automobile will be principally garaged in the above town and city, county and state, unless otherwise stated herein;”. The policy was issued to Hodge at a reduced premium because of the following endorsement:

“AUTOMOBILE
(Physical Damage)
LIMITATION OF USE ENDOESEMENT— (COMMEECIAL AUTOMOBILE)
(Eastern, Western and Southern Territories)
Attached to and forming part of Policy Number BF 94297 issued to Bunk Hodge by Washington Fire & Marine Insurance Company located (city and state) ST. LOUIS, MISSOUEI.
Date of Endorsement: 8-28-56

In consideration of the premium at which the Policy designated above is issued, it is warranted by the Insured that no regular or frequent trips of commercial vehicles described in such policy are or will be made during the policy period to any location beyond a 50 mile radius from the limits of the city or town of principal garaging of such vehicles.

All other terms and conditions of such Policy remain unchanged.

BY AT: JONESBORO, ARK.

AGENT

JOHN E. COOK AUTHORIZED AGENT”

On August 3, 1957, while the insured truck was being driven by James Capales, on a highway construction job at Marianna, Arkansas, it collided with another truck. Appellant refused to pay the resulting loss because the truck had, for several weeks prior to the date of the collision, been daily used on construction work at sites more than 50 miles beyond Walnut Ridge. After the institution of suit by Hodge against appellant company for recovery, the court, sitting as a jury, awarded appellee judgment for $1,800 (the amount of the damage), the 12% statutory penalty, and attorneys’ fee of $300, making a total amount of $2,316. From such judgment comes this appeal.

The evidence reflects that Hodge would locate a construction job, make arrangements for the hire of his trucks (which were equipped with dump beds and used for hauling dirt or stone), and arrange for a permanent place for the drivers to stay, along with garaging the trucks. The trucks would be moved to the selected base of operation, and used on the particular construction job until the project was completed. They would then be moved to another location with similar facilities, and the operation repeated. The operating base selected might be at any point in the state, but the haul distance from each point would not he in excess of the 50 mile limit imposed in the endorsement. In accordance with this general plan of operation, appellee placed the truck to use at Diggers, Arkansas, a distance of about 30 miles from Walnut Ridge, and the truck remained on the job for three or four weeks. The truck was then returned to Walnut Ridge and placed on another job in September.1 The vehicle was then put up for the winter, and placed on a job at Elaine, Arkansas, in July, 1957, a distance of considerably over 100 miles from Walnut Eidge. The next job was the Marianna job, from which this litigation arises. According to the evidence, Marianna is approximately 90 miles from Walnut Eidge, and was the “home base” for the particular job engaged in at that time, i. e., the truck was being garaged in that city each night. The proof reflects that the collision took place within two or three weeks after the “Marianna job” started, and that the longest haul made was about 8 miles.

Hodge testified that he had bought two trucks from Ledbetter in 1952 or 1953, and that one of them was wrecked on a job at Texarkana. He stated that he had held an identical policy of insurance (issued in 1953), with the identical endorsement, on the truck wrecked at Texarkana, and with the same company, Washington Fire & Marine, appellant herein. Hodge testified that appellant company paid the claim. From his testimony:

“The only trouble I had with them, they thought I was running it over 50 miles. See, they thought I was garaging it here and going over in Texas.
Q. Where were you using the truck as it was at the time it was wrecked?
A. In Texas and Arkansas.
Q. Where was it garaged at that time?
A. At Texarkana. * * *
Q. Was it on one particular job?
A. Yes, we run the same road every day.
Q. Where did it have the wreck?
A. I think it was close to the land, the land where he was hauling material from over in Texas, I think it was 24 miles then, come through Texarkana bringing it on 67.
Q. On the other side of Texarkana?
A. Yes. What they thought, was we was hauling over 50 miles from the garage, and we never was hauling over 24 miles from the garage. * * * they just paid off and never said a word. ’ ’

Appellant objected to this evidence as irrelevant and immaterial, and contended that it had no bearing on the contract in question. The court overruled the objection.

We are primarily concerned with whether the language of the policy, together with the endorsement, makes clear that the collision was covered (or vice versa), —or to the contrary, is such language ambiguous?

Appellant relies on items 1 and 4, together with the endorsement, as precluding recovery by appellee, contending that under the terms of the contract, the truck was not covered with collision insurance at any point located more than 50 miles from Walnut Ridge. Admittedly, the trips from Marianna would come under the definition of “regular and frequent.” It is argued that this use of the vehicle was precisely the risk precluded by the language of the endorsement. Appellant’s counsel state: “We are thus persuaded because one of the underlying principles of rate fixing is expressly predicated on the premise that degrees of risk vary between geographical divisions or locations.”, and cite several cases from other jurisdictions to support this contention.

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

Related

United Insurance Co. of America v. Woodard
339 S.W.2d 862 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
320 S.W.2d 926, 230 Ark. 42, 1959 Ark. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-fire-marine-insurance-v-hodge-ark-1959.