On the morning of September 19th, 1956, one Lenard E. Tucker, a resident of Temple, Oklahoma, and also an employee of Sparks Grain Company, owned a 1954 model Buick, and his father, sometimes hereinafter referred to as “Mr. Tucker”, who was a cafe operator in the same town, owned a 1956 model Pontiac. On that morning, Lenard E. Tucker, hereinafter referred to as the “insured”, or by his given name of “Lenard”, having been directed by his employer, the evening before, to drive from Temple to Oklahoma City on Company business, left his parent’s home, where he also resided, ate breakfast at his father’s cafe and decided while there, that because of the worn condition of his Buick’s tires, he would not drive it on that trip. Accordingly, he borrowed his father’s Pontiac and left his Buick, with the keys in it, parked on the street near the cafe. Lenard had not driven the Pontiac many miles toward Oklahoma City before becoming involved in a collision, which resulted in the death of defendant in error’s intestate. After the accident, Lenard returned to Temple in the Pontiac about 1:30 that afternoon, and, after returning said auto to his father, worked the rest of the day at Temple, driving his own car.
Thereafter, in an action for damages on account of the aforementioned death, defendant in error recovered judgment in the sum of $25,650.00 against Lenard. Insurance companies other than plaintiff in error contributed to the limit of their coverages in paying $15,000.00 of said judgment. Thereafter, Lenard made written demand upon plaintiff in error, his insurer under a liability insurance policy issued to him in connection with his ownership and operation of the Buick, to pay the amount of its claimed coverage, i. e., $5,000.00 on the remainder of said judgment debt, aggregating more than $10,000.00.
Plaintiff in error denied liability under the policy and defendant in error instituted the present action, as plaintiff, to recover the $5,000.00 against plaintiff in error, as defendant.
Upon trial of the cause before the court, after jury waiver, said plaintiff recovered the judgment sought; and the defendant insurer perfected this appeal. We will hereinafter refer to the parties by their trial court designations, and to Lenard E. Tucker as the “insured.”
There is no significant question of fact present herein, it being agreed that the only question to be determined is whether or not the policy involved covered the insured’s operation of his father’s Pontiac under the circumstances in evidence. The policy’s provision controlling the matter extends the claimed coverage to a “Temporary Substitute Automobile”, which term it defines as follows:
“ * * * an automobile not owned by the named insured or his spouse if a resident of the same household, while temporarily used as a substitute for the described automobile when, withdrawn from normal use because of its breakdown, repair, servicing, loss or destruction.” (Emphasis ours.)
Defendant’s position in denying liability under the policy at the trial, and in herein attacking the trial court’s judgment rejecting said denial, depends solely on whether or not, under the circumstances surrounding the insured’s driving of his father’s Pontiac on the aforedescribed trip of September 19th, 1956, it was a “temporary substitute automobile” within the above-quoted definition.
*400 Defendant’s argument under its single proposition seems to be two-pronged in that it maintains that, during the insured’s use of his father’s Pontiac on the trip, his own car — the Buick, referred to in the above quoted provision as “the described automobile” — was not only not “withdrawn from normal use”, but that its not being used for the Oklahoma City trip was not “because of its breakdown, repair, servicing, loss or destruction”, within the meaning of the above provision’s quoted phrases.
Defendant contends that the last quoted phrase requires that the insured’s own automobile be in such a condition that it is “actually disabled” and cannot be used. For this, its counsel cites Iowa Mutual Ins. Co. v. Addy,
Nor do we deem it particularly significant that Lenard left his Buick parked near his father’s cafe, with the keys in it, when he borrowed his father’s Pontiac for the trip. In this situation, defense counsel say Mr. Tucker
could have
used the Buick while Lenard was gone, had he chosen so to do. They contend that, because of this, the Buick was not “withdrawn” from
all
normal use, within the rule announced in Service Mutual Ins. Co. of Tex. v. Chambers, Tex.Civ.App.,
In view of the foregoing, we have determined that the arguments of the defendant demonstrate no error in the judgment of the trial court. Accordingly, said judgment is hereby affirmed.
