HATHCOX v LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY
Docket No. 78-1773
Court of Appeals of Michigan
Submitted April 3, 1979, at Lansing.—Decided June 5, 1979.
90 Mich. App. 511 | 282 N.W.2d 374
- An employee is entitled to receive personal protection insurance benefits from his employer‘s insurer if he suffers accidental bodily injury while an occupant of a motor vehicle owned or registered to his employer.
- Occupying an automobile embraces a zone of connection with the subject vehicle which includes persons not actually inside of the vehicle at the time of an injury.
- Plaintiff occupied his employer‘s truck at the time of his injury. He was inside of the cab at various times to operate
REFERENCES FOR POINTS IN HEADNOTES
[1, 4] New Topic Service, No-Fault Insurance § 18.
[2] 7 Am Jur 2d, Automobile Insurance § 127.
[3] 7 Am Jur 2d, Automobile Insurance §§ 88, 90.
[5] New Topic Service, No-Fault Insurance §§ 1, 18.
4. Where an employee sustains bodily injuries while occupying his employer‘s motor vehicle in the course of his employment, he is not barred from recovering personal protection insurance benefits from his employer‘s no-fault insurance carrier by the exclusive remedy provision of the Worker‘s Disability Compensation Act.
Reversed.
R. M. MAHER, P.J., concurs in the result reached by the majority. He would hold that a plaintiff is entitled to recover no-fault benefits where he is injured while alighting from a vehicle and the requisite causal connection between the vehicle and the injury is established.
OPINION OF THE COURT
1. INSURANCE — AUTOMOBILES — EMPLOYEES — ACCIDENTAL INJURY — OCCUPANT OF VEHICLE — PERSONAL PROTECTION BENEFITS — STATUTES.
An employee who suffers accidental bodily injury while an occupant of a motor vehicle owned or registered by the employer shall receive personal protection insurance benefits to which he is entitled from the insurer of the furnished vehicle (
2. INSURANCE — AUTOMOBILES — “OCCUPYING” — CONSTRUCTION OF POLICY — STATUTES.
Interpretation of the word “occupying“, in an automobile insurance contract, embraces a zone of connection with the subject vehicle which includes persons not actually inside the vehicle at the time of an injury (
3. INSURANCE — AUTOMOBILES — NO-FAULT INSURANCE — “OCCUPYING” — EMPLOYER LIABILITY — STATUTES.
An employer‘s motor vehicle is occupied by an employee at the time of an injury and the employee is entitled to recover no-fault insurance benefits from his employer‘s insurance carrier where the employee was actually inside of the cab of his employer‘s truck-trailer at various times to operate hydraulic equipment while loading automobiles and fell immediately after having driven an automobile onto the deck of the trailer,
4. INSURANCE — AUTOMOBILES — NO-FAULT INSURANCE — INSURANCE BENEFITS — EMPLOYER LIABILITY — WORKMEN‘S COMPENSATION — EXCLUSIVE REMEDY — STATUTES.
The exclusive remedy provision of the Worker‘s Disability Compensation Act do not bar a plaintiff from recovering no-fault insurance benefits from his employer‘s no-fault carrier where the plaintiff sustained bodily injuries while occupying his employer‘s motor vehicle in the course of his employment (
CONCURRENCE BY MAHER, P.J.
5. INSURANCE — AUTOMOBILES — NO-FAULT INSURANCE — ALIGHTING FROM VEHICLE — CAUSAL CONNECTION — NO-FAULT BENEFITS — STATUTES.
A plaintiff is entitled to recover no-fault benefits where he is injured while alighting from a vehicle and the requisite causal connection between the vehicle and the injury is established (
Sinas, Dramis, Brake, Turner, Boughton, McIntyre & Reisig, P.C. (by George T. Sinas), for plaintiff.
James, Dark & Brill, for defendant State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company.
Foster, Swift, Collins & Coey, P.C. (by Michael J. Schmedlen), for defendant Liberty Mutual Insurance Company.
Before: R. M. MAHER, P.J., and M. J. KELLY and D. F. WALSH, JJ.
M. J. KELLY, J. Plaintiff, William Hathcox, brought an action against defendant insurance companies seeking to recover no-fault insurance benefits arising from injuries sustained when he fell from his employer‘s truck-trailer. Both defendants and plaintiff filed respective motions for
The facts underlying this appeal are not in dispute. Plaintiff, an employee of C & J Commercial Driveaway, Inc., of Lansing, Michigan, was loading new automobiles onto a truck-trailer on December 6, 1976. The truck-trailer was owned by his employer, who was insured by defendant, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company (hereinafter Liberty Mutual). After driving one of the automobiles onto the top deck of the truck-trailer and leaving the car, plaintiff slipped on the snow-covered deck and fell, sliding down the ramp to the ground. As a result, he suffered neck and back injuries which prevented him from working for over six months.
In denying plaintiff‘s motion for partial summary judgment, the trial court held that plaintiff‘s attempt to recover no-fault benefits from Liberty Mutual was barred by the exclusive remedy provision of the Worker‘s Disability Compensation Act,
Although the parties advance a host of issues in
I. Whether plaintiff was an “occupant” of his employer‘s motor vehicle at the time he sustained his injury, thus entitling him to recover no-fault insurance benefits from his employer‘s insurance carrier.
We find that plaintiff‘s injury did occur while he was an occupant of a motor vehicle owned by his employer.
The leading case illustrating this point is Nickerson v Citizens Mutual Ins Co, 393 Mich 324; 224 NW2d 896 (1975). In Nickerson, plaintiff was a passenger in a car when the vehicle stalled and plaintiff helped push it to the side of the road. Plaintiff reentered the car then left the car and walked around in front of it. An oncoming car struck the stalled vehicle in the rear, pushing it foward and injuring plaintiff. His right to recover under the insurance contract covering the host vehicle turned upon whether plaintiff was occupying the car at the time of the injury. In addressing this issue, the Court recognized that “there are two distinct lines of thought on this matter—one line of cases requires ‘physical contact’ for recovery, the other line of cases holds that ‘physical
“In sum, the approach to interpretation of this policy language which does not hold ‘physical contact’ mandatory, appears to us to be by far the more reasonable and persuasive approach. It accords with a strict reading of the policy language, it well implements the time-honored policy of construction of policy language against the insurer, and, perhaps most significantly, as Judge McGREGOR and plaintiff point out, it guards against recovery based entirely upon ‘fortuitous circumstance‘.
* * *
“We conclude that plaintiff Nickerson, due to his immediate prior ‘occupying’ of the insured vehicle and his subsequent injury arising out of the use or repair of the same vehicle, was an ‘assured’ under the policy of automobile insurance issued by defendant.” Id. at 331-332.
We think Nickerson is significant in that it demonstrates the broad judicial interpretation afforded the term “occupying“. The breadth of this construction is also evident in other Michigan cases. For example, in Ottenwess v Hawkeye Security Ins Co, 84 Mich App 292; 269 NW2d 570 (1978), the decedent was deemed an occupant of a dumptruck when “standing on or next to” the dump box while examining or attempting to repair a malfunction in the dumping mechanism; similarly, in Collins v Motorists Mutual Ins Co, 36 Mich App 424, 428; 194 NW2d 148 (1971), the Court stated: “in that decedent was leaning over the trunk of his friend‘s automobile, and had been within it shortly before he was struck, we believe he was occupying’ the vehicle at the time of his death“.
II. Does the exclusive remedy provision of the Worker‘s Disability Compensation Act,
The question raised in the present case is not one of first impression; to the contrary, it has been repeatedly considered by different panels of this Court with conflicting results. Mathis v Interstate Motor Freight System, supra, (holding that workmen‘s compensation benefits were plaintiff‘s exclusive remedy against his self-insured employer), Hawkins v Auto-Owners Ins Co, 83 Mich App 225; 268 NW2d 534 (1978) (holding that, because the exclusive remedy provision barred recovery only against the employer and not the employer‘s insurer, an employee was entitled to recover personal protection benefits from his employer‘s no-
We find the reasoning of Judge ALLEN‘S dissent in Ottenwess, supra, persuasive, and expressly adopt it. Accord, Hubert v Citizens Ins Co of America, 88 Mich App 710; 279 NW2d 48 (1979), Lewis v Yellow Freight System, Inc, 89 Mich App 66; 279 NW2d 327 (1979). After exhaustively reviewing the legislative history of the no-fault act and performing “a common sense reading” of
Because of our disposition of this issue, we do not reach the question of the liability of defendant State Farm to pay benefits under the policy issued to plaintiff.
We hold that plaintiff is not barred from recovering personal protection insurance benefits from his employer‘s no-fault insurance carrier and that plaintiff‘s complaint states a cause of action under the no-fault act.
D. F. WALSH, J., concurred.
R. M. MAHER, P.J. (concurring). I concur in the result reached by the majority and in the reasoning of Issue II. However, I would find that plaintiff is entitled to recover no-fault benefits because he was injured while alighting from the vehicle and the requisite causal connection between the vehicle and the injury was established,
