The rights and obligations of the parties are fixed by the insuring provision of the policy which .provides protection for liability resulting from: “The ownership, maintenance or use of the premises for the purpose of an automobile dealer, repair shop, service station, storage garage or public parking place, and all operations necessary or incidental thereto, and the ownership, maintenance or use of any automobile in connection with the above defined operations, and the occasional use for other business purposes and the use for non-business purposes of (1) any automobile owned by or in charge of the named insured and used principally in the above defined operations, and (2) any automobile owned by the named insured in connection with the above defined operations for the use of the named insured, a partner therein, an executive officer thereof, or a member of the household of any such person.”
We have neither the right nor the desire to make contracts for litigants. When controversy arises as to the meaning of a contract of insurance, we must interpret it. If the language used is ambiguous and susceptible to two different interpretations, that interpretation is given which is most favorable to the insured. If, -however, the language is plain and unambiguous, we must give effect to the language which the parties selected to create the asserted rights and obliga
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tions. The words used 'are given their ordinary, accepted meaning unless it is -apparent another meaning is intended, and each is given effect. The abject of interpretation should not be to find discord in differing clauses, but to harmonize all clauses if passible.
Rivers v. Insurance Co.,
We examine the quoted insuring provisions in accord with established principles. It is apparent that liability is imposed for injuries resulting from the use ¡of an automobile -in either of two events: (1) where the automobile is used principally in the garage business even though not used for that purpose when the injury is inflicted; (2) when the automobile produces injury -as a result of a- -use incidental to -the garage business.
By stipulation of the parties the automobile was not being used for business purposes when Mrs. Peirson was injured. It is also stipulated that the automobile w-a-s not used principally in the business of automobile dealer, repair shop, service station, storage, or public parking place. On the contrary, it is established that the use for that purpose was only occasional and the principal use was in connection with plaintiff’s mercantile business.
It is clear, -therefore, the operation of the automobile when Mrs. Peirson was injured was not protected unless, ¡as plaintiff contends, the -operation of plaintiff’s individual business of selling retail hardware, building materials, supplies, feeds, fertilizer, hunting -and fishing equipment, and similar farm and home supplies and appliances was, in the language of the policy, an -operation “neces-s-ary or incidental” to the business of “automobile dealer, repair shop, ¡service station, storage garage or public parking place.”
The facts stipulated establish that the mercantile business operated by plaintiff is neither necessary nor incidental to the business of servicing, repairing, or storing motor vehicles.
Clearly, neither business is necessary to the operation of the other if /the word “necessary” is to be given its ordinary, accepted meaning of “A thing that is necessary or indispensable to -some purpose; something that -one cannot do without; a requisite, -an essential.”
Storm v. Wrightsville Beach,
Courts have frequently been called upon to interpret the word “incidental.” In The Robin Goodfellow,
The Supreme Court of South Carolina, in
Archambault v. Sprouse,
In
Spiegel v. Felton,
In
Boh v. Pan American Petroleum Corp.,
In
Heritier v. Century Indemnity Co.,
“In small towns the same merchant frequently sells coal and ice, but the selling of ice is hardly incidental to the conduct of the coal business. Funeral directors were at one time better known as undertakers. When they made their own coffins they often used their spare time in making beds and furniture. Gould if be said that the manufacture of beds was incidental to the burial of the dead?”
The selling of clothes made by others is not incident to the business of manufacturing and selling the clothes of that manufacturer.
Nicollet Nat. Bank v. Frisk-Turner Co.,
Burk v. Mead,
Since plaintiff’s automobile was not used principally in the business of repairing, servicing, etc. for which protection is provided by the policy, and the mercantile business operated by plaintiff as an individual is neither necessary nor incidental to the business of repairing, servicing, and .storing protected by the policy; it follows that, upon the established facts, no liability rests on defendant.
Reversed.
