Plaintiffs Royal Insurance Company of America (“Royal”) and its named insured, Single Source Roofing Corporation (“Single Source”) brought this declaratory judgment action to determine their liability for damages arising from an automobile accident involving Single Source’s employee, defendant Andrew Fisher. Fisher was driving a company-owned pickup truck when he collided with four vehicles occupied by Billy Barfield and several other individuals named as defendants in this action. Barfield and the other defendant occupants either filed personal injury suits or made personal injury claims against Fisher and Single Source, which carried an automobile liability policy with Royal. In this action, Royal and Single Source allege that Fisher was not a “permissive driver” covered under the Royal policy because he drove the truck after drinking alcohol, in violation of company policy. They also argue that Single Source is not liable for *842 any injuries because Fisher was not acting within the scope of his employment when the collision occurred. The trial court granted summary judgment to Single Source and Royal on both issues. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
Viewed in a light most favorable to the defendants, the record shows Fisher worked as a traveling technician based at Single Source’s Atlanta office. His only vehicle was the company-provided pickup truck. On Friday, October 27, 1995, Fisher left Atlanta in the truck to visit an old friend on Tybee Island, Georgia. Work was not going well, he testified, and his supervisors told him to take the weekend off. Fisher was also considering moving, and he planned to look for housing on Tybee Island. Hoping Single Source would hire his friend, Fisher also took along job applications for him and any other people he met who might be interested in the roofing trade. After arriving at his friend’s house Friday night, Fisher drank until the early morning hours. He arose the next day and had part of a beer before spending Saturday afternoon helping his host’s friend move a trailer.
Single Source had provided Fisher a camera to use in his work. That camera broke while Fisher used it to take personal photos Saturday afternoon. Fisher had earlier told a supervisor the camera was not working well, and the supervisor had instructed him to replace it “at your convenience.” Because he needed the camera for work Monday, Fisher decided to use the hour before dinner to drive to WalMart in Savannah and purchase a new one.
Fisher drove the company pickup towards Savannah but turned around before he reached the store. He explained, “[F]or one thing, [Wal-Mart] was farther than I thought, [and] another thing, I forgot to bring my old camera and I wanted to buy the exact same kind since I was replacing one of the company’s. ... I was running out of time [for dinner] and I was freezing. ... I got really chilly.” On the way back to Tybee Island, the collision occurred. Fisher was charged with and later pled guilty to driving under the influence and serious injury by vehicle.
When asked whether he had abandoned his camera-purchasing errand or planned to finish it later that night, Fisher gave unclear responses. He testified that when he turned around, “I decided that I could leave a little bit earlier [Sunday] and get a camera in Atlanta before work Monday.” But he also stated he “was going to get that camera and maybe go to the shopping district in Tybee Island. ... I was going to look and if worst came to worst I was going to use a disposable camera.” He later testified he was only trying to “use up” the hour before dinner and “just wanted to come back and eat.”
1. Barfield and the other injured defendants claim the trial court erred in finding that Fisher is not insured under the Royal policy, *843 which provides liability coverage for Single Source and “anyone else while using with [Single Source’s] permission a covered auto [Single Source] own[s]. ...” A company rule stated that “[possession and consumption of alcoholic beverages ... in company vehicles is prohibited.” Fisher was aware of this rule and understood it to mean he “was not supposed to use the vehicle while [he] was drinking or under the influence of alcohol.” He knew of no exceptions to the rule. The trial court ruled that Fisher exceeded the scope of his permission by driving the vehicle while under the influence of alcohol and, therefore, was not a “permissive driver” entitled to coverage under the Royal policy. We affirm the trial court’s ruling.
“Permissive use” clauses such as the one in Royal’s policy are valid, even where the named insured can limit the scope of the permission through instructions, rules, or regulations. See
Massachusetts Bay Ins. Co. v. Wooten,
Both
Wooten
and
Register
involved drivers who used the insured vehicle for a
purpose
forbidden by the owner. Here, although Fisher used the truck in an unauthorized
manner
by driving it while under the influence of alcohol, we find the rationale of the prior cases applicable. “[T]here is an absence of permission within the meaning of the policy if the vehicle is being driven at a time or a place or for a purpose not authorized by the insured.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.)
Register,
Although no Georgia case is directly on point, decisions from other jurisdictions support this holding. In a case with very similar facts, a Pennsylvania appellate court found a roofing laborer was not an insured under a permissive use clause in
Gen. Accident Ins. Co. of America v. Margerum,
2. The trial court erred, however, when it found that Fisher was outside the scope of employment merely because he violated Single Source’s rule against drinking and driving.
1
‘Where a servant disobeys instructions of his master, the fact of disobedience alone does not insulate the master from liability for the servant’s negligence.”
Huddle House v. Burke,
Because a judgment right for any reason must be affirmed, we determine whether the record otherwise shows Single Source entitled as a matter of law to the finding that Fisher was not acting in the scope of his employment when the collision occurred. See
State Farm Fire &c. Co. v. American &c. Ins. Co.,
Fisher was driving Single Source’s truck; therefore, a presumption arose that he was acting within the scope of his employment when the collision occurred.
Viau v. Fred Dean, Inc.,
Single Source has not met its burden. Fisher’s testimony shows his supervisors told him to obtain a new camera for the company’s business “at [his] convenience.” From his unclear testimony, at the time of the collision Fisher was either returning from an aborted mission to purchase the camera or was going back to obtain the broken camera and find another place to purchase a replacement. Although Single Source cites the rule that an employee going to or returning from work is not acting in the scope of employment, that rule does not apply where the employer has provided the employee a vehicle which enables the employee more conveniently to perform a duty for the employer.
Chappell v. Junior Achievement &c.,
3. Under our holdings in Divisions 1 and 2, in the event a jury finds Fisher solely liable for damages resulting from the collision, the Royal liability insurance policy would not provide coverage for those damages. The Royal policy may, however, cover damages resulting from the collision if a jury finds Single Source vicariously responsible for Fisher’s actions.
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Notes
None of the defendants raised any issue regarding the propriety of a declaratory judgment on the scope of employment issue, which would presumably be at issue in any personal injury case arising from this collision. This issue is unrelated to the “permissive use” insurance issue. See
Register,
