The plaintiffs by their complaint in this action sought a judgment declaring their rights and the liabilities of the respondent under a policy of liability insurance issued by respondent to M. R. Peck and Earl P. Kent, Jr., doing business as M. R. Peck & Son, a copartnership, and each plaintiff sought judgment against respondent
The partnership drilled a water well on property adjacent to that of plaintiffs. In so doing they caused the ground to vibrate and these vibrations resulted in damage to the respective buildings of the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs brought suit in the municipal court against the partnership and the individual partners (the action was dismissed as against all defendants except M. R. Peck and Earl P. Kent, Jr.). In the complaint filed in the municipal court each plaintiff alleged two causes of action, namely, “That the defendants so negligently, wantonly, recklessly, and unlawfully performed some or all of the drilling operations at said site that, to the defendants’ knowledge, dangerous vibrations were sent into the earth; that these vibrations extended to, throughout and beyond the real property on which plaintiffs’ residence and real-property improvements are situate; that thereby damage was caused to and sustained by said residence and improvements, as particularized below.” By the second cause of action each plaintiff alleged: “That while drilling at the said site, as aforesaid, the defendants discharged certain vibrations into the earth, which vibrations went forth directly and invaded plaintiffs’ real property and assailed their proprietary interest to and in said land and the improvements thereon; that directly thereby and because thereof said realty and improvements were damaged. . . . ” 1
The municipal court found that all of the allegations of the paragraph quoted above from the first cause of action were untrue and all of the allegations which we have quoted from the second cause of action were true. In its conclusions of law the court found that the defendants “intentionally caused an indirect trespass or trespasses into the various freeholds respectively owned by the plaintiffs, who in consequence were damaged by said trespass or trespasses. . . ” It rendered judgment against M. R. Peck and Earl P. Kent, Jr., for the amounts of said damages.
The judgment was not paid. Demand for payment was made on respondent and refused and the present action brought. In addition to the judgment roll in the municipal court action the only evidence received in the present action
In the policy sued upon the business of the partnership was stated to be “Waterwell Driller.” The policy named as insured: “M. R. Peck and Earl P. Kent, Jr., doing business as M. R. Peck & Son” and the word “Insured” is defined to include any partner but only with respect to his liability as such. In the policy the insuring agreement insofar as pertinent reads: “To pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay . . . as damages because of: . .. Coverage B—Injury to or destruction of property, . . . arising out of such of the following divisions of coverage as are shown as ‘Included’ in the Schedule of Coverages .. . Division 3—Other than Automobile or Products.” (Division 3 is included in the schedule of coverages.) By that part of the policy denominated “Exclusions” it is provided: “This Policy does not apply:
“(4) under Coverage B: . . .
“Divisions 2 and 3: unless caused by accident.”
By a rider attached, coverage of the liability of Peck and Kent arising out of their activities other than in the conduct of the business of the partnership is provided for. This rider by its express terms is made inapplicable to liability arising from activities of Peck and Kent in the conduct of the business of the partnership. The exclusions and conditions set forth in the rider are different from those contained in the policy. The exclusion in the policy which we have quoted above is omitted from the rider which, however, excludes “injury, ... or destruction caused intentionally by or at the direction of the insured.”
The court below found that the acts which gave rise to the municipal court lawsuit and judgment rendered therein were not accidental in nature; “That each and every act or activity giving rise to the Municipal Court cause of action, and judgment therein rendered, was caused intentionally by . . . the insured . . .”; that the terms of the policy excluded coverage for damage to property “unless caused by accident” and further found that the policy excluded coverage of any
It is undisputed that the trespass and damage to plaintiffs’ property occurred in the conduct of the business of the partnership, the named assured in the policy. Therefore, the trial court’s finding that the policy excluded from coverage any injury or destruction caused intentionally is clearly erroneous as that exclusion is not contained in the policy but in the'rider and the coverage of the rider, as we have said, by its express terms is made inapplicable to liability arising from the activities of Peck and Kent in the conduct of the business of the partnership.
The case here, therefore, hinges upon the question whether the court’s findings that the damage covered by the municipal court judgment was not accidental but was intentional is a correct interpretation of the policy and the effect of the judgment of the municipal court. In Webster’s New International Dictionary the word “accident” is defined as “An event that takes place without one’s foresight or expectation; . . .” In
Geddes
&
Smith, Inc.
v.
St. Paul Mercury Indemnity Co.,
The trial court in its memorandum opinion relied, and respondent here relies, upon the presumption set forth in section 1963, subdivision 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure, “That a person intends the ordinary consequence of his voluntary act;” as evidence that the consequences of the insured’s trespass on plaintiffs’ property were intentional, and, therefore, not accidental. 3
While this presumption is evidence to establish liability where intent is a necessary element of the crime or wrong it has no bearing on the question of whether the consequences of an intentional act were unexpected and, therefore, accidental within the meaning of a contract of insurance. Here, intent to trespass was an essential element of the cause of action upon which the municipal court judgment is based
(Gallin
v.
Poulou,
The fact that an act which causes an injury is intentional does not take the consequence of that act outside the coverage of a policy which excludes damage unless caused by accident for if the consequence that is the damage or injury is not intentional and is unexpected it is accidental in character.
(Ritchie
v.
Anchor Casualty Co., supra,
There was no evidence that the well drillers intended or expected the vibrations which their operation set in motion would cause damage to plaintiffs’ property. In fact, the evidence is to the contrary. 5
A policy of insurance should not be so interpreted as
We hold under the undisputed facts here that the loss established by the judgment in the municipal court was one caused by accident and not one intentionally caused and was, therefore, a risk included in the coverage provided by the insuring agreement.
The judgment is reversed with directions to the trial court to enter judgment for plaintiffs as prayed for in their complaint.
Shinn, P. J., and Kaus, J., concurred.
Notes
Retired judge of the superior court sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
Defendant was tendered the defense of this action but declined to defend on the ground that the facts alleged in the complaint did not constitute a risk covered by the policy.
In many cases it has been stated that if the happening is unexpected by and without the design
of the person
damaged or injured the occurrence is accidental within the meaning of the policy before the court in those cases.
(Ritchie
v.
Anchor Casualty Co.
(1955)
The trial court here did not find that the consequence that is the damage to plaintiffs' property was intentional but only that the acts and activities "giving rise to the Municipal Court cause of action, and judgment therein rendered" were intentional.
“An insurer is not liable for a loss caused by the wilful act of the insured; but he is not exonerated by the negligence of the insured, or of the insured’s agents or others. ’ ’
Respondent contends that the testimony given by Peek that he received a complaint from one of the plaintiffs that cracks had appeared in her house is evidence from which the trial court could have found as a fact that the damage was expected and therefore not accidental. The testimony of Peck, however, does not show whether this complaint was made before all of the damage accrued or after it accrued. The insuring clause of the policy was broad enough to include any damage to property for which the insured might be liable whether accidental or not, other than
Zuckerman
v.
Underwriters at Lloyd’s, London, supra,
