20 A.2d 317 | Ct. Jud. Disc. Pa | 1941
John J. Hagarty, appellant, instituted a trespass action to recover for personal injuries sustained by him when he fell twelve to fifteen feet to the bottom of a freight elevator shaft on premises occupied by William Akers, Jr., Co., Inc., located at the southwest corner of Tenth and Filbert Streets, Philadelphia, as he entered the shaft through a door at the rear of a taproom on *238 the first floor of the building, mistakenly assuming it to be the door to the men's room. A jury trial was had, resulting in a verdict for appellant in the sum of $7,500, on which judgment was duly entered April 23, 1940. Thereafter, on May 31, 1940, appellant caused a writ of attachment sur judgment to issue in which the appellee, New Amsterdam Casualty Company, insurance carrier on a policy of public liability insurance upon the premises in question at the time of appellant's injuries, was named as garnishee.
Appellant filed interrogatories to which appellee filed answers in which it admitted that it had issued a policy of public liability insurance upon the premises but denied all liability, averring that "the said occurrence was not covered under the terms and conditions of the policy which was in force and effect between the said William Akers, Jr., Co., Inc., and the New Amsterdam Casualty Company." The issue thus raised by appellant's interrogatories and appellee's answers thereto was tried before the court below without a jury: Act of June 25, 1937, P. L. 2090. The court found in favor of the appellee, holding that, as it contended, the liability incurred by William Akers, Jr., Co., Inc., for appellant's injuries was not within the coverage of the policy. Appellant filed a motion for judgment n. o. v. which, after argument before the court en banc, was overruled, whereupon he took this appeal.
The policy of insurance here involved, which insured,"subject to the limitations and conditions hereinafterprovided", against "bodily injuries or death suffered, or alleged to have been suffered, as the result of any accident occurring while this policy is in force . . . by reason of the ownership, care and maintenance or the occupation and/or use of the premises", is expressly made subject to certain exceptions set forth therein, one of which reads as follows: "This policy does not cover any accident: . . . (3) suffered by any person while in, entering or leaving the car of *239 any elevator or hoist not described in the Schedule ofStatements, or by reason of the existence of the well, shaft, or hoistway of any such elevator or hoist, including all machinery and appliances. . . ." The policy plainly shows that no elevator was described in the Schedule of Statements, as required; on the contrary, under the heading "Elevators" it is specifically stated "None Covered Hereunder". And, the "Analysis of Premium" shows that no premium was charged or paid for any elevator or hoist.
When this unequivocal and unambiguous language of the policy is construed as written, giving to the words used their ordinary and accepted meaning, it plainly excludes from its coverage any and all elevators upon the premises in question. So construing it, we think it was clearly intended to exclude all liability for an accident such as that which resulted in injury to the appellant and that to hold otherwise would be to vary the plain meaning of the terms of this policy. As stated in Topkis v. Rosenzweig,
Appellant's contention that, because the policy insures only against injuries suffered by persons "not in the employ of the assured" and such persons are not ordinarily expected or intended to be "in, entering or leaving the car of any elevator" other than a passenger elevator, the language of the exclusion clause was intended to refer only to a passenger elevator and "the shaft . . . of any such elevator" fails to take into account that there was no such elevator on these premises. As the only elevator thereon was the freight elevator here involved, it must necessarily have been within the contemplation of the parties when they provided, as to elevators, "None Covered Hereunder". Moreover, a direction on the face of the policy, requiring that the "kind" of elevator or elevators to be covered thereby be set forth, "whether passenger, freight, passenger and freight, sidewalk, one-story inside building, hand hoist, escalator or moving platform", plainly prohibits any such restrictive construction as is contended for. This contention is obviously without merit, as is also the contention that appellant's accident "does not come within the exclusion clause, because [he] did not suffer this accident by reason of the existence of the elevator shaft", but rather "by reason of his mistake in walking through the first doorway". As appellee states: "This argument overlooks the fact that if there had been no elevator shaft or well, there would have been no accident and no injury to [appellant]. . . . In the instant case there was no slip, trip nor stumble and [appellant] intentionally executed the step into space which resulted in his injury". Clearly appellant's fall was in no sense caused by any defect in the premises outside the elevator shaft and, consequently, Quinn v. Philadelphia,
Judgment affirmed. *241