29 A.2d 215 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1942
Argued November 9, 1942. The policy in suit insured the plaintiff against, inter alia, bodily injuries caused by external, violent and accidental means and sustained "while riding within a private automobile."
While plaintiff was driving his private automobile along Route 29 in Luzerne County, it suddenly stopped; he got out of the automobile, walked to the front of the car and attempted to crank it, in an effort to start the motor, and in so doing received injuries which disabled him for ten successive weeks.
The court below sustained the defendant's affidavit of defense raising a question of law, filed under section 20 of the Practice Act of 1915, P.L. 483, in lieu of demurrer, and entered judgment for the defendant.
Plaintiff appealed. The judgment will be affirmed.
The case seems to us to be too clear to require extended discussion. The clause in the policy relied upon by the plaintiff insured him against injuries sustained by him only while he wasriding within a private automobile, not while on an automobile trip. At the time he was hurt he had alighted from the automobile and *542
was standing in front of it trying to crank it so as to make the motor run. By no stretch of the imagination can a person thus engaged in cranking an automobile from the outside be said to be riding within it. The language in the policy of insurance is too clear and unambiguous to leave room for doubt. In this State, we do not "create" a doubt in insurance cases, "which would not be tolerated in any other kind of contract," in order to resolve it in favor of the insured: Urian v. Scranton Life Ins. Co.,
The case of Wright v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
We are not called upon to decide whether we agree with the conclusions of the majority of the court in that case; but we do say that if the subsequent language in that opinion is broad enough to bring injuries sustained by one who gets out of an automobile for the purpose of cranking it and is hurt by the recoil of the crank, within a clause in a policy insuring only against accidental injuries received while riding within aprivate automobile, we are unwilling to follow it. We do not think, however, that the language of the opinion considered in connection with its facts, is capable of such a construction.
Judgment affirmed.