191 A. 588 | Pa. | 1937
Argued March 25, 1937.
This action is a sequel to Fehrs v. McKeesport,
Verdicts were rendered for the plaintiffs in that suit in the sum of $10,000, and were sustained by this court. The City of McKeesport had argued that the act of the girls in carrying the dynamite cap to a point outside the park, and there giving it to the minor plaintiff, was an active intervening agency which broke the chain of events sufficiently to relieve the city of legal responsibility, but the court overruled this contention. The City of McKeesport, having paid the verdicts, now seeks to recover from defendant company on a public liability insurance policy. To plaintiff's statement of claim defendant filed an affidavit of defense raising questions of law, and in support thereof assigned three reasons. In our opinion all of these reasons were valid ones, and the court below was right in sustaining the affidavit of defense and entering judgment for defendant. *170
Defendant agreed in the policy to defend suits instituted against plaintiff and to pay claims against it for damages from bodily injuries accidentally suffered "(a) resulting from the ownership, care, maintenance, occupation or use of the premises described in the Declarations . . .; and (b) occurring at, within, or upon the buildings or other specified work places of the assured or upon the sidewalks or other public ways immediately adjoining the territories disclosed in Item 3 of the Declarations . . . all of which are herein called 'the assured's premises.' " Liability under the policy was thus limited to damages from bodily injuries which not only resulted from the maintenance or use of the city's premises, but alsooccurred upon such premises. This was further clarified and confirmed by an "Endorsement Explaining Coverage," which stated that: "It is mutually understood and agreed that any reference in the under-mentioned policy to the 'Assured's Premises' shall contemplate claims for injuriessustained at locations hereinafter mentioned and not elsewhere." (Italics supplied.) The locations thereinafter mentioned were the streets and sidewalks of the city and several enumerated public parks, including the one where the dynamite cap had been picked up by the children. The injuries sustained by the minor plaintiff in the Fehrs case did not occur at, within, or upon the assured's premises, at any of the locations specified in the policy, but at the private residence of the minor's uncle, more than one-quarter of a mile distant from the park.
Plaintiff labors under the mistaken apprehension that theFehrs case decided that the accident to the boy happened upon the city's premises, and therefore urges that "it would be a most unfair application of law to say that the accident did happen on the park premises and convict the municipality of negligence, and then, when the municipality seeks to recover from the carrier that insured the park premises, to say that the accident did not happen on the premises." The Fehrs case did not hold, *171 however, that the accident happened in the park, but merely that the city was liable because of its negligence in allowing the dynamite cap to lie exposed in the park where it could be picked up by children innocent of its dangerous potentialities, and since there was no break in the causal sequence of events it was immaterial that the cap was carried out of the park and injured the boy at some other place. The city's liability was not affected by the question as to where the boy was when he sustained his injuries. But the express terms of the policy on which the present suit is founded limit recovery to cases where the injuries occurred upon the assured's premises.
The second reason assigned in the affidavit of defense is that among the declarations in the policy "which the Assured makes and warrants to be true by the acceptance of this policy," was one to the effect that "There are no explosives intended for use as such, made, sold, kept, or used on the premises — except as herein stated: No Exceptions." This warranty was broken, because dynamite caps, which are explosives, were used on the premises, even if not used, at the time of the accident, in the immediate neighborhood of the place where this particular cap was found. Plaintiff contends that when the policy was issued defendant knew or should have known that dynamite was being used to blast the tree stumps in the park, and therefore should be estopped from setting up a breach of such warranty: Central MarketStreet Company v. North British Mercantile InsuranceCompany,
The final reason specified in the affidavit of defense is that the "Endorsement Explaining Coverage" provides that "Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in said policy, the coverage does not contemplate: . . . (b) Injuries caused by the prosecution of work being done by the assured or for the assured under contract." The injuries suffered by Fehrs were caused by the negligence of the employees of the city during the prosecution of work being done by it. The blasting operations were still being carried on at the time of the accident. It is true that Fehrs was not injured while one of the dynamite caps was actually being exploded by the city, but the negligence of the city's workmen in allowing a cap to be placed or to fall and remain in the park, and in not making certain that all unexploded caps were accounted for and removed, which negligence ultimately resulted in the injuries to Fehrs, took place in the general course of prosecution of the work, and, from a legal standpoint, was a part of it. The accident was therefore excluded from the coverage of the policy.
Judgment affirmed.