Antedating the 1959 amendment to the declaratory judgment statute and the more recent civil practice statute this court distinguished an action by an insurer to determine liability before defending an action against its alleged insured from one brought by the alleged insured, as follows: "In that type of case the insurance company is faced with the problem of spending money to defend an action which it could not recover if it were later found to be not liable under the policy issued by it. However, such is not the case here where the insured is seeking the declaratory judgment, for if the insured defends the action, and certainly the insured wants any action against it defended, and the insurer is not liable the insured has lost nothing for it would have only spent money to defend an action
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brought against it which was not covered by the insurance policy, and, if the insurer is liable, the insured can recover any sums spent by it to defend the action, and, if a judgment is rendered against it, the amount of the judgment up to the limits of the policy in a breach of contract suit against the insurer.”
U. S. Casualty Co. v. Ga. S. & F. R. Co.,
We think it is obvious from the allegations of the petition that no claim for relief exists against Dodd except that of ancillary relief to restrain him from prosecuting his tort action which is necessarily conditioned upon a showing of a claim against the other defendants, and that no claim is pleaded against these defendants unless it is a claim for declaratory judgment. Viewing the petition in the light of the requirements for declaratory judgment, as outlined above, and further recognizing that the peitition must
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be viewed in the light of the present liberalized civil practice requirements for stating a claim (see
Southeastern &c. Fire Ins. Co.
v.
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
In this aspect the pleaded facts disclose nothing more than a dispute between the plaintiff and its alleged liability insurers concerning the nature and extent of coverage provided and in the case of one, whether there is any coverage, in respect to a pending tort action as to which the direct obligation of the plaintiff in the present action must be determined, either by settlement or an adverse judgment, by events which have occurred and which have no relation whatsoever to the presence or absence of insurance coverage or the obligation of any insurer to settle or defend the tort action.
The trial judge properly dismissed the petition.
Judgment affirmed.
