LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, a Corporation, individually and as use benefitee of The Howell Company, a Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
HARTFORD ACCIDENT AND INDEMNITY COMPANY, a Corporation, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 12129.
United States Court of Appeals Seventh Circuit.
February 4, 1958.
Rehearing Denied February 27, 1958.
Charles M. Rush, Kirkland, Fleming, Green, Martin & Ellis, Chicago, Ill., for defendant-appellant.
William P. Nolan, Pretzel, Stouffer & Nolan, Chicago, Ill., for appellee.
Before DUFFY, Chief Judge, and HASTINGS and PARKINSON, Circuit Judges.
DUFFY, Chief Judge.
The City of St. Charles, Illinois, maintained a dump which was divided into two areas. In one, burnable trash was to be deposited and the other was reserved for unburnable trash.
On March 28, 1953, an employee of The Howell Company collected on the company's premises, trash and discarded material consisting, in part, of a quantity of lint and several empty or nearly empty 5-gallon cans which had contained lacquer or paint used in the Howell Company's plant. The employee loaded this rubbish into a company truck and drove same to the city dump which was some distance from the Howell Company's premises. By means of a hydraulic lift apparatus which was a part of the truck, the driver unloaded the truck in the section of the dump reserved for rubbish to be burned, and then returned with the truck to the company's premises. Twenty-nine hours later, a blaze in the dump reached the cans causing an explosion which resulted in injury to Dale E. Slaten, a minor, who was walking through the dump.
On the pertinent dates, The Howell Company had in full force and effect two policies of insurance, one issued by Liberty and the other by Hartford. It is agreed that one or the other of the policies covered the risk hereinafter described. This is a suit for a declaratory judgment. The question to be determined here is which policy covered the risk.
The Howell Company was insured under a general liability policy issued by Liberty which provided coverage for bodily injury sustained by any person and caused by accident. However, the policy expressly excluded coverage for bodily injury arising from the loading and unloading of an automobile away from the premises of the company.
The Howell Company also was insured under an automobile liability policy issued by Hartford, which provided coverage for injuries and accidents arising out of the "ownership, maintenance or use of any automobile." In the policy, "Use" is defined to include the "loading and unloading" of insured automobiles. It is agreed that the company truck used in unloading the cans at the dump was covered generally by Hartford's policy.
An action for damages against The Howell Company was commenced in a State Court upon behalf of Dale E. Slaten. Hartford refused to defend the suit. Liberty then began the defense with a reservation as to its rights. The action was settled for $6,000.00 after consultation between representatives of Hartford and Liberty.
The case at bar was tried in the District Court upon a stipulation of facts. That Court held the negligent act which bore a causal relationship to the injury was the unloading of empty or nearly empty paint or lacquer cans in a burning dump.1 The Court held that Hartford's policy covered the risk.
There is considerable discussion in the briefs as to the "coming to rest" rule and the "complete operation" rule pertaining to the unloading of motor vehicles. The "coming to rest" doctrine limits coverage to the time when the goods come to rest off the vehicle although final delivery may not have then been made. See Stammer v. Kitzmiller,
The decision in the case at bar must be made by the application of Illinois law if it can be ascertained. There are no decisions by the Illinois Supreme Court on the point here in issue. Two Illinois Appellate Court cases have been cited by both parties. In ascertaining applicable Illinois law, we should follow the pertinent decisions of intermediate State Appellate Courts unless we are convinced by other persuasive data that the highest court in the State would decide otherwise. West v. American Telephone and Telegraph Co.,
The first case cited is Kienstra v. Madison County Mutual Automobile Ins. Co.,
The other Illinois decision is Coulter v. American Employers' Insurance Co.,
The Court, in Coulter, quoted extensively and apparently with approval from In re State ex rel. Butte Brewing Co. v. District Court of Second Judicial District,
In the instant case there is no doubt that the cans should have been placed in that part of the dump reserved for unburnable trash. Also, it is admitted that the truck was unloaded by its own mechanism and no other hoist, crane or apparatus was utilized. Liberty argues that these facts alone are sufficient to establish that Slaten's injuries resulted from the use of the truck and the unloading of same.
As indicated hereinbefore, the complete operation rule as pertains to unloading a vehicle covers the entire process from the time the goods are received until they have been finally delivered, regardless of whether the goods have come to rest at any time prior to final delivery. We think a correct interpretation of the Coulter case is that such rule is presently the law of Illinois. But that rule would have to be extended further in order to sustain the judgment entered below. The cans had been finally and completely delivered. No further action as to the cans was contemplated. The truck had returned to The Howell Company's premises. Even under the broadest interpretation, the unloading of the truck had been completed.
We think significance must be attached to the distinction which the Court made in Coulter to the case of Stammer v. Kitzmiller, supra. The Court pointed out that in Stammer a barrel of beer had reached its final destination in the basement of the tavern. The delivery had been completed. So, in the case at bar there was a complete and final delivery of the cans to the dump.
There is nothing in the Coulter opinion which would authorize us to extend the rule there announced. Whether an accident occurs nineteen hours or nineteen days or a year after a truck has been unloaded and the cargo carried therein has reached its final destination, we cannot say that Illinois courts would hold the accident was caused by the use of or the unloading of the truck. We decline to extend the present rule. If that is to be done, the Illinois courts must do so.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed with instructions that the judgment declare that the policy issued by Liberty covered the risk in question.
Reversed.
Notes:
Notes
There was nothing in the stipulation that specified or admitted the dump was burning at the time the truck was unloaded. There was, however, attached to the stipulation, a copy of the complaint in the Slaten case in the State Court, which pleading did contain an allegation that the dump was burning when the truck was unloaded
