Both parties appeal from a summary judgment in an action upon a policy of liability insurance. The complaint was in two counts, of which the judgment dismissed the first, and granted the relief demanded in the second. Judge Ryan’s opinion in the district court
1
states the posi
The validity of the second count depends upon the meaning of the defendant’s promise to “defend * * * any suit against the Insured alleging injury, sickness, disease or destruction covered by this Policy * * * even if such suit is groundless, false or fraudulent.” This language means that the insurer will defend the suit, if the injured party states a claim, which, qua claim, is for an injury “covered” by the policy; it is the claim which determines the insurer’s duty to defend; and it is irrelevant that the insurer may get information from the insured, or from any one else, which indicates, or even demonstrates, that the injury is not in fact “covered.”
There is no answer to the logical cogency of this reasoning, because to allege that an injury -happened in one of several ways, is not to allege that it happened in any one of the ways. In the case at .bar it did not matter to the plaintiff whether he was injured by the insured’s “use” of the elevator or by falling into an unguarded shaft; but, since in the first event the policy would not cover the ensuing liability, and since the allegation did not declare which of the two had happened, it did not declare that the injury was within the policy. However, any complaint, though its language may cover two or more events, is meant to advise the defendant of only one event, unless two separate .events create' separate liabilities. The “intended” event is that on which the injured party means to rely; and, although he has not made it plain whether it is within the class of events covered by the policy, it either is or is not within that class. His allegation leaves its membership in that class open, but the class of the event he is talking about is definitely fixed.
Whether the insurer ought to de-s fend such an action at least until it appears that the claim is not covered by the policy is not free from doubt; but it seems to us that we should resolve the doubt in favor of the insured. In most cases — the case at bar was one — it will pot be difficult for the insurer to compel the injured party to disclose whether the injury is within the policy; and, if it transpires that it is not, the J; insurer need go on no longer. There may
be
cases, however, in which that question will remain uncertain even until the end of the trial, and, if the defendant is right, the insured will be obliged to conduct the defence of a claim which it turns out the j insurer has promised to pay. We do not
believe
that, had the question been present- [ ed to the parties in advance, they would ! have agreed that the promise to defend did j not include all occasions in which the insurer eventually becomes liable to pay. The only exception we can think of is that the injured party might conceivably recover,! on a claim, which, as he had alleged it, was outside the policy; but which, as it turned! out, the insurer was bound to pay. Such; - is the plasticity of modern pleading that no'1 one can be positive that that could not hap-'y'
It follows that, if the plaintiff’s complaint against the insured alleged facts which would have supported a recovery covered by the policy,. it was the duty of the defendant to undertake the defence, until it could confine the1 claim to a recovery that the policy did not cover. This it did not do; it relied upon the complaint alone, and that did not limit the plaintiff’s recovery to an injury arising from the insured’s “use” of an elevator. The Tenth "Article did allege that “through the negligence” of the insured the plaintiff was “caused to fall * * * to the pit of the shaft”; and the Twelfth Article alleged that the insured had allowed the “premises occupied” by it to become dangerous, had “invited” the plaintiff into a place of danger, and had “so carelessly operated and maintained the. aforementioned premises so (sic) as to render them unsafe and dangerous.” But all this is quite consistent with the insured’s liability for a breach of its duty towards a “business guest,” who had entered the ground floor, and fallen into the pit because the shaft was open and unguarded. Such a recovery the policy would have covered, and the defendant was bound to defend the suit as it stood. Since all the facts, including the damages, were conceded, the judgment was right upon the second count, as well as upon the first.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. Lee v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., D.C.,
. Consol.Laws, c. 28, § 167, sub. 1 (b).
.
. Goldberg v. Lumber Mutual Casualty Insurance Co.,
.
. Janneck v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.,
.
