This appeal from summary judgment entered against the plaintiff in a Louisiana direct action proceeding presents the single question whether the coverage of the automobile insurance policy extended to protect one employee of a common employer against the suit brought by the heirs of a fellow employee.
Stewart, the decedent, and Vallotton, the driver of the truck, were co-employees of Raymond Concrete Pile Company, the named Assured in the policy. Vallotton was, of course, driving the truck with the permission and consent of the named Assured and was, therefore, generally within the scope of the standard omnibus clause.
If that were all there was to the case, summary judgment on policy coverage would not have been permissible. For as we have pointed out in the detailed discussion in American Fidelity &
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Casualty Company, Inc., v. St. Paul-Mercury Indemnity Company, 5 Cir.,
But there was something more. For the Omnibus Clause, the very portion of the policy required to extend the insurance to Vallotton, prescribed 2 in definite language that the insurance was not available for the situation in which an employee sues a fellow employee of a common employer.
This is frequently referred to as the “cross employee exception” to coverage which, applied universally, in Louisiana, Arcenaux v. London Guarantee & Accident Co., La.App.,
“The insurance * * * does not apply:
“(b) To any employee [Vallotton] with respect to injury to or sickness, disease or death of another employee [Stewart] of the same employer [Raymond Concrete Pile Company] injured in the course of *446 such employment in an accident arising out of the maintenance or use of an automobile in the business of such employer [Raymond Concrete Pile Company].”
On undisputed facts, there was simply no coverage. Summary judgment was compelled.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The policy provided:
“This policy does not apply:
“(d) Under coverage A, to bodily injury to or sickness, disease or death of any employee of the insured arising out of and in the course of (1) domestic employment by the insured, if benefits therefore are in whole or in part either payable or required to be provided under any workmen’s compensation law, or (2) other employment by the insured;”
. This policy provided:
“Definition of Insured. With respect to insurance for bodily injury liability and for property damage liability, the unqualified word ‘insured’ includes the named insured and also includes, under divisions 1 and 2 of the Definition of Hazards, any person while using the automobile and any person or organization legally responsible for the use thereof, provided the actual use of the automobile is by the named insured or with his permission * * *. The insurance with respect to any person or organization other than the named insured does not apply:
* # * *
“(b) To any employee with respect to injury to or sickness, disease or death of another employee of the same employer injured in the course of such employment in an accident arising out of the maintenance or use of an automobile in the business of such employer.”
. Among the many cases, some of the more recent ones abstracted in Automobile Liability Insurance Cases, Risjord & Austin, c. 22 under Definition of Insured — Cross Employee Exception-Driver and Injured are Co-Employees and c. 35 under Cross Employee Exclusion — Coverage for Omnibus Insured for Injury by such Omnibus Insured to Employee of Named Insured and Where Omnibus insured claiming coverage is also an employee of named insured — are: McDowell v. United States F. & G. Co.,
