82 Pa. Super. 191 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1923
Argued October 10, 1923. Plaintiff sued in assumpsit on an insurance policy issued to him by defendant and insuring certain motor trucks against certain hazards. This appeal is from a judgment entered on a verdict for plaintiff. Plaintiff's employee was driving the truck southwardly on Rising Sun Avenue, Philadelphia. The traveled roadbed was about wide enough for three trucks to pass each other at the same time. On each side of the traveled way was a trolley track. The rails were T rails about four and a half inches high and set upon ties like railroad tracks with no ballast between the rails. The top of the inside rails was flush with the surface of the highway. The truck driver turned off of the traveled roadbed on his left, putting his left front and rear wheels between the rails of the trolley track in order to pass another truck which was standing in the middle of the road. He continued to travel at a speed of about fifteen miles an hour, bumping over the ties, and then tried to turn back into the roadway. When his front left wheel came into contact with the rail, the truck turned over and the damage sued for followed. The right of plaintiff to recover depends upon the construction of the rider which was attached to the policy of insurance. It read as follows:
"In consideration of $2,329 premium and subject to all its other terms, conditions, limitations and agreements, the policy to which this endorsement is attached is hereby extended to cover:
"Against loss and or damage to the automobile described herein, including its operating equipment if caused solely by accidental collision with another object, either moving or stationery, excluding, however, all loss and or damage by fire arising from any cause whatsoever."
The question is whether the damage was the result of accidental collision with another object. Conceding that it is the rule to construe the language of an insurance contract liberally in favor of the insured so as not *194
to defeat, without clear necessity, his claim to indemnity which it was his object to secure, still the language must be construed in its plain, ordinary, popular sense. What is the plain, ordinary meaning and popular sense in which the words "accidental collision with another object" were used? It would be a work of supererogation to discuss the question if the words "collision with another object" were not modified by the word "accidental." This court held in Wetherill v. Williamsburgh Insurance Co.,
The first assignment of error is sustained, the judgment is reversed and the record remitted to the court below with instruction to enter judgment for the defendant notwithstanding the verdict.