Opinion
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in a declaratory relief action declaring and adjudging that he was not an “insured” under the uninsured motorist provisions of a policy of insurance issued by defendant. The appeal is on an agreed statement of facts.
On January 22, 1966, plaintiff was driving a 1965 Volkswagen owned by John Preston. Preston had given plaintiff permission to drive the car.
*967 On January 22, 1966, the aforementioned Volkswagen was the described motor vehicle in a current State Farm automobile policy (including uninsured motorist coverage) issued by defendant State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company to Preston.
Plaintiff testified that he and several guests left San Rafael with the intent of going to Squaw Valley on the date of the accident. In the vicinity of Colfax on Interstate 80 plaintiff pulled off to the side of the road in a stopping area to put tire chains on the car. It had begun to snow and tire chains were therefore required on all cars. Plaintiff got out of the car and took a bag of tire chains out of the front trunk of the Volkswagen. He then walked to the rear of the car and started to undo the bag containing the chains. Plaintiff was standing from one to four feet behind the car, when an uninsured motorist, Charles Kerr, drove up from behind and struck him with his automobile. Plaintiff was thrown against the Volkswagen so that his whole body was pressed against it.
Plaintiff testified at the trial that he had alighted from the Volkswagen, had gone around to the front and had taken the bag of chains out of the trunk of the car, that he then went to the back of his car and was standing approximately one to four feet away from the car at the time he was struck by the automobile driven by Kerr. Plaintiff further testified that no part of his body was touching the Volkswagen at the time he was struck by Kerr’s automobile; and that neither the chains nor the bag containing same were in contact with the Volkswagen at that time. He finally testified that he had been outside the Volkswagen approximately two minutes before the accident occurred and that he had not been reentering the vehicle at the time of the accident.
The insurance policy issued to Preston provided for uninsured motorist coverage. In pertinent part it defined the “insured” as “. . . any other person while occupying an insured automobile” and in turn defined the term “occupying” as follows: “Occupying—means in or upon or entering into or alighting from.” These definitions conform substantially with Insurance Code section 11580.2 1 relating to uninsured motorist coverage. The term “insured,” insofar as pertinent here, is defined by the code as “. . . . any other person while in or upon or entering into or alighting from an insured motor vehicle . . . .”
The trial court concluded that plaintiff’s conduct at the time of the accident was not encompassed within the meaning of any of these terms. It specifically found that plaintiff, at the time he was struck, had been outside the car for approximately two minutes and was standing 1 some one to four feet from it.
*968
Plaintiff contends that the trial court, disregarding its duty to liberally construe uninsured motorist provisions (see
Valdez
v.
Federal Mut. Ins. Co.,
Defendant, in response, contends that the trial court properly found that plaintiff was not entitled to coverage under the specific terms of the policy because he was neither “in,” nor “upon,” nor “entering in,” nor “alighting from” the Volkswagen at the time of the accident. Defendant also argues that unless plaintiff’s position with relation to the vehicle was as described by these terms the fact that he was “using” the vehicle is irrelevant.
Insofar as the uninsured motorist provisions are concerned, the issue presented in this case is one of first impression in this state. The only California case which has considered similar language is
Christoffer
v.
Hartford Acc. etc. Co.,
Although we are not bound by the holding in
Christoffer,
since it is a
*969
decision of the appellate department of the superior court, we agree with its conclusion. We do not, however, agree with its rationale suggesting that in every instance there must be a physical contact between the injured person and the car he is using. We note that the dictionary definition of the word “upon” includes “in or into close proximity.” (Webster’s Third New Internat. Dict.) We do not, however, consider that the resolution of the issue turns solely upon the dictionary definition of the words used in the subject clause. That clause, in our judgment, must , be read and interpreted in the light of the purpose of the uninsured motorist statute, the provisions of which are a part of the instant insurance policy. (See
Modglin
v.
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
In view of the foregoing we are convinced that the applicable principle is that which has been declared in other jurisdictions in cases involving the interpretation of language similar to that in the instant policy. Such language has been interpreted to mean that coverage is
*970
extended to the person seeking recovery under the policy where he was using the vehicle, either as the named insured or with the latter’s permission or consent, express or implied, and where he was in such a position in relation thereto as to be injured in its use. (See
Madden
v.
Farm Bureau Mut. Auto Ins. Co.,
In Madden, supra, the insured was struck by another automobile while leaning forward with the upper part of his body and arms in the rear compartment of his automobile to place therein a tire which he had removed. Under these circumstances recovery was allowed. Recovery was also permitted in Katz v. Ocean Acc. & Guar. Corp., supra, where the insured’s wife, who had parked her husband’s automobile and was locking the door on the driver’s side, was struck by an oncoming vehicle as she ran to the rear of her automobile in an attempt to escape the oncoming vehicle. Similarly, in Whisnant, supra, it was held that the plaintiff’s injuries arose out of the “use” of the automobile he was driving with the owner’s permission. There, while pushing the stalled automobile onto the shoulder of the road, the plaintiff was struck by another vehicle as he jumped away from the stalled vehicle in an effort to avoid being struck by an automobile approaching from the rear.
In Wolf, supra, the circumstances were similar to those in our case. There, the insured’s automobile was involved in a collision. The insured got out of his automobile and exchanged identification and license, number with the driver of the other automobile. While the insured was standing two or three feet in front of his automobile and while he was in the act of reaching for a pencil to write down his license number, a third automobile struck the rear of the insured’s automobile, knocking it forward and hitting him. The insured had been out of his car two or three minutes when the accident occurred. In permitting the insured to recover his medical expenses under the insurance policy the reviewing court observed that the word “upon” connoted some physical relationship enlarging the area defined by the words “entering or alighting” and the word “in.” (P. 780.)
Adverting to the facts of the present case, we observe first that it is *971 undisputed that plaintiff was using the insured’s Volkswagen permissively. Under the agreed facts it is also evident that plaintiff was performing an act physically and directly related to the car. Since plaintiff was traveling under highway conditions requiring tire chains, his acts of stopping the vehicle to put chains on, and of undoing the bag containing the chains while in close proximity to the car, clearly suggest his intent to place those chains on the car’s tires. Accordingly, we hold that plaintiff’s position preparatory to placing the chains on the tires of the car put him in the requisite physical relationship to the car. His injury while in that position, therefore, occurred while he was “using” the car and while he was “upon” the Volkswagen within the meaning of the policy and section 11580.2.
Since the facts in this case are stipulated to and the appeal is from the judgment, it is unnecessary to order a new trial.
(Pacific Home
v.
County of Los Angeles,
Sims, J., and Elkington, J., concurred.
Notes
Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Insurance Code.
