Defendant raises two questions: whether summary judgment was properly granted for plaintiff, and whether the court abused its discretion in denying defendant’s motion to continue. We affirm.
I.
Plaintiff and defendant agree on the terms of defendant’s policy and on the facts giving rise to this case. The issue is whether defendant’s policy provides coverage for defendant’s insured under the undisputed facts. These facts are as follows:
Defendant’s insured is a service station owner, insured by defendant under a garage liability policy which provides coverage for bodily injury sustained in connection with garage operations.
Plaintiffs insured brought three of his tractor-trucks to the garage of defendant’s insured for routine servicing. When plaintiffs insured returned to pick up the trucks, one of them failed to start. He asked defendant’s insured to help him fire the cold diesel engine of the stalled truck. As a favor and at no extra charge, defendant’s insured drove the truck while plaintiffs insured towed it along the adjacent highway. When the stalled truck fired, the two trucks stopped in the road. Defendant’s insured remained at the wheel while the air brakes on the truck that had been stalled pressurized. At the same time employees of plaintiffs insured began to disconnect the towline. When defendant’s insured determined that the brakes were pressurized, he began to pull the truck off the road. In so doing he struck and injured an employee of plaintiffs insured.
The employee brought negligence actions against the owner of the truck, plaintiffs insured, and against the driver, defendant’s insured. Defendant denied coverage and declined to defend its insured. Both policies contain identical “Other Insurance” clauses. It is not disputed that if defendant’s policy provides coverage defendant is liable to plaintiff in the amount of the judgment.
II.
By its terms defendant’s policy provides coverage for bodily damage “caused by an occurrence and arising out of garage operations.” Garage operations are defined as “the ownership, maintenance or use of the premises for the purposes of a garage and all operations necessary or incidental thereto.”
The question refined, therefore, is whether defendant’s insured, while driving the truck at the request of plaintiffs insured for the purpose of assisting plaintiffs insured to start the truck, was engaged in an operation “incidental” to the operation of his service station. This is a question of “the meaning of the language used in [defendant’s] policy of insurance[.]” Trust Co. v. Insurance Co.,
We are satisfied that the term “incidental,” as applied to the undisputed facts here, is not ambiguous. It is a nontechnical word and, unless the context requires otherwise, must be given a meaning consistent with its use in ordinary speech. Trust Co. v. Insurance Co.,
“Courts have frequently been called upon to interpret the word ‘incidental.’ ” Peirson v. Insurance Co.,
III.
Cases finding no coverage under the policy term in question are distinguishable from this one on their facts. In Peirson v. Insurance Co.,
The accident here, by contrast, was clearly a natural consequence of the operation of a service station. It is patently unreasonable to expect that a service station owner would not help a customer start a vehicle the owner has just serviced. That the owner renders the aid voluntarily, to obtain or maintain good will, and for no extra charge, does not remove the act from the range of coverage. See, e.g., Calkins v. Merchants Mutl. Ins. Co.,
We hold that the court ruled correctly that an accident on a highway, when a stalled truck is being started- by a garage owner after he has serviced it, is as a matter of law an operation incidental to the use of the premises as a garage. The language of the policy, as applied to the undisputed facts, is not reasonably susceptible to any other construction. As stated in Lipton, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
Defendant contends the court erred in denying its motion to continue. The granting of a continuance is within the discretion of the trial court and absent a manifest abuse of discretion its ruling is not reviewable on appeal. Tripp v. Pate,
Affirmed.
