Yosemite Insurance v. Meisner

561 P.2d 185, 277 Or. 519, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1167
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1977
DocketNo. 406-198, SC 24417
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 561 P.2d 185 (Yosemite Insurance v. Meisner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yosemite Insurance v. Meisner, 561 P.2d 185, 277 Or. 519, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1167 (Or. 1977).

Opinion

HOLMAN, J.

Plaintiff, an insurance company, brought a declaratory judgment proceeding against defendant, its insured, to determine whether its policy of garage liability insurance covered an accident in which defendant was involved. Plaintiff appeals from a judgment that the policy covered defendant’s accident.

Defendant operated an automobile repair shop. A friend came to defendant’s place of business with a person who wanted to use defendant’s welding equipment. Defendant’s friend was operating his 1966 Ford Mustang automobile. It had a transmission with four forward speeds, but the reverse gear was defective and the transmission had to be replaced. While the friend waited for his passenger to use the welding equipment, a discussion ensued concerning the effectiveness of a four-speed transmission as against a three-speed transmission. Defendant had in his possession an identical automobile with a three-speed transmission which he had just repaired for a customer. As a result of the discussion, defendant and his friend drove the respective vehicles out onto the street to see which one of the two automobiles had the more effective transmission. While the comparison was being made, defendant became involved in a serious accident with two other vehicles.

The policy had an exclusion which provided:

"This insurance does not apply * * * to bodily injury or property damage arising out of the * * * operation * * * of any * * * automobile * * * while being used in any prearranged or organized racing, speed or demolition contest or in any stunting activity or in practice or preparation for any such contest or activity, * *

The trial court made the following findings of fact, which plaintiff does not question:

"6. Meissner [defendant] and Aust [his friend] left the shop before the accident with the previously arrived at understanding that they were going to accelerate the two cars to compare the performance of the Hunter [522]*522[owner of vehicle which defendant was driving] 3 speed transmission with Aust’s 4-speed transmission.
"7. When Meissner’s Mustang struck another vehicle and then left the street and hit Penrod, Meissner and Aust had been trying to out accelerate or outrun one another at a high speed in a residential area.”

Plaintiff assigns as error the following conclusion of law:

"3. The activity in which Meissner and Aust were engaging was not a "prearranged or organized racing, speed or demolition contest.”

Because plaintiff has not questioned the correctness of the findings of fact, the only issue is one of law, which is whether the trial court’s conclusion is proper when the factual findings above set forth are taken into consideration. The record does not disclose the basis for the trial court’s conclusion, but it must be assumed that it concluded that the facts as found did not constitute a racing or speed contest as contemplated by the policy exclusion. Therefore, the first issue is whether the rapid acceleration of the vehicles to a high speed to compare the performance of the two transmissions constitutes racing as contemplated by the policy exclusion. Defendant’s argument is, as follows:

"Plaintiff argues that this finding of fact is tantamount to a finding of racing. Defendant disagrees. Had the trial court intended to find that Aust and Meisner were racing, it would have been a simple matter to specifically so state. Where the question of whether Aust and Meisner were racing was so crucial and so hotly disputed, the action of the trial court in not finding Aust’s and Meisner’s conduct to be racing but instead finding that they were trying to 'out accelerate or outrun one another’ is significant.
"Defendant submits that the above finding is closer to a finding that Aust and Meisner were not racing. Since plaintiff has conceded that the trial court’s findings of fact are supported by the evidence, such a finding would seem to demand a conclusion that the racing exclusion does not preclude coverage in this case.”

[523]*523Defendant’s argument does not meet the ultimate issue; i.e., was the trial court’s legal conclusion that the participants were not racing a proper one in view of the factual findings? The finding of whether or not they were racing as contemplated by the policy is a legal conclusion involving contractual interpretation and is not a finding of fact. It is our opinion that pitting the acceleration of one transmission against the other is a race or speed contest. The following definition of a race was applied to a similar exclusion in Universal Underwriters Company v. Semig, 26 Mich App 254, 182 NW2d 354, 356 (1970):

"A race is an intentional competition in respect to some phase of locomotion. The dominant characteristic of a race is the awareness or intent of competition in respect to speed and distance to prove superiority in performance in some respect.”

The purpose of the exclusion is to remove from coverage situations in which an automobile is not usually found and which present additional hazards; i.e., contests in which speed is involved and in which preoccupation with the contest may result in the taking of chances which would not otherwise have been taken. See Alabama Farm Bureau Mut. Cas. Ins. Co. v. Goodman, 279 Ala 538, 188 So2d 268, 270 (1966). Danger from these sources still exists even though the contest is ostensibly between two pieces of equipment. The risk is of the kind the exclusion was intended to cover.

Another issue is whether the conduct was prearranged as contemplatéd by the policy. The necessity that it be prearranged is to delete from the exclusion spontaneous, spur-of-the-moment racing activity as differentiated from that which is planned in advance. Detroit Automobile Inter-Insurance Exchange v. Bishop, 24 Mich App 90, 180 NW2d 35 (1970) (evidence of prearrangement found to be inadequate). Defendant contends that a "prearranged” race is one in which the activity is of a formal, commercial nature. He cites as authority for such a conclusion [524]*524Country Mutual Insurance Company v. Bergman, 38 Ill App2d 268, 185 NE2d 513, 514-15, 517-18 (1962), in which the court said that

"* * * said exclusion refers solely to prearranged races or tests of speed such as stock car races or sports car races on a regularly laid out track and set at a specified time, and that said exclusion in law refers only to automobiles operated in such a sports contest for which profits, awards and gains are available to the winner.”

We do not believe the case is applicable here because of the difference in the policy language. The policy here provides, "any prearranged or organized * * * contest,” whereas the language in the cited case was, "any prearranged * * * test.” It is readily apparent from the quotation in the Illinois court’s opinion that "prearranged” was being equated with "organized.” It is impossible to equate the two words in the present policy because the language is "prearranged or

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
561 P.2d 185, 277 Or. 519, 1977 Ore. LEXIS 1167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yosemite-insurance-v-meisner-or-1977.