The case made by the bill is as follows: The plaintiff issued to the defendant Polo Leone a Massachusetts compulsory motor .vehicle liability policy, to which was attached a provision for “extra-territorial public liability,” by which the plaintiff agreed to indemnify Leone against loss by reason of his legal liability to pay damages to others for bodily injuries arising out of the operation of Leone’s automobile outside of Massachusetts within the United States or Canada. This extraterritorial provision was not to apply when the automobile was being “used for renting or livery use or the carrying of passengers for a consideration.” It was provided that Leone, upon the occurrence of an accident covered by this policy, should “as soon as practicable after learning thereof, give written notice with full particulars to the company or its duly authorized agent.” The plaintiff agreed to defend or settle any “claims, suits or other legal proceedings” to enforce any liability within the policy.
The defendants Di Benedetto and Coceo were sisters of Leone’s wife. In September, 1933, they suggested to Leone that if he would take them in his automobile to New York they would pay for the gasoline and oil consumed in the journey. He accepted the proposal, and the journey was made accordingly. On the return trip, on September 18, 1933, while Leone was operating the automobile in Connecticut, an accident happened, and the defendants Di Benedetto and Coceo sustained personal injuries. The plaintiff had no knowledge or notice of the accident until February 1, 1934, when Leone delivered to it the processes served upon him in actions of tort brought against him by the defendants Di Benedetto and Coceo.
This bill is brought under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 213, § 3, Tenth A, and Rule 101 of the Superior Court (1932), to obtain a determination of the rights of the plaintiff, of Leone, and of the two other defendants, under the policy of liability insurance. One question is, whether the failure of Leone to give notice of the accident earlier absolves the plaintiff from obligation to Leone, and from any derivative obligation to the other defendants. The scanty extracts from the policy incorporated into the bill leave some doubt whether the giving of the required notice was a condition of the plaintiff’s liability under the policy. Phillips v. Stone,
The case comes here upon appeals by the plaintiff from an interlocutory decree sustaining the demurrer of the defendants Di Benedetto and Coceo, and from the final decree dismissing the bill as to all defendants.
Procedure in the Superior Court for the interpretation of written instruments, without consequential relief, is not prescribed by any statute of general application. Compare St. 1935, c. 247. In some respects it is not new, Whiteside v. Merchants National Bank of Boston,
We think the demurrer should have been overruled. The present case is within the rule, The bill seeks a "determination of right, interpreting a written instrument.” In other words, the plaintiff asks the court to determine its rights, the correlative rights of the defendant Leone, and those of the other two defendants, all dependent upon a proper construction of the words of the policy (Blair v. Travelers Ins. Co.
But overruling the demurrer would not have meant that the plaintiff was entitled as of right to the determination sought. What is given to the Superior Court by Rule 101 is authority, not absolute obligation. The rule provides: “In its discretion, the court in a particular case may decline to make a determination of right, stating the reasons therefor.”
We think that, in the exercise of sound judicial discretion, the determination of the rights of the parties, sought in this bill, ought to be refused. The only present question is one between the plaintiff and Leone, whether the plaintiff is obligated to defend or settle the actions of tort brought against Leone by the other defendants. With that question the other defendants have no concern. That question appears to be of minor importance. What is really desired, is a decree that will establish the nonliability of the plaintiff to the other defendants, Di Benedetto and Coceo. A determination, between the plaintiff and Leone only, of the question whether the plaintiff is obligated to defend or settle the actions brought by the other defendants, would have no effect as an adjudication against them. Yet as a precedent (their rights being derivative, Blair v. Travelers Ins. Co.
Decree sustaining demurrer reversed.
Decree dismissing bill affirmed.
