PETER SMALL, PLAINTIFF, v. MARTIN M. SCHUNCKE, ET AL., DEFENDANTS. MARTIN M. SCHUNCKE, DEFENDANT AND THIRD-PARTY PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT, v. PENNSYLVANIA THRESHERMEN & FARMERS’ MUTUAL CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY, THIRD-PARTY DEFENDANT-RESPONDENT.
Supreme Court of New Jersey
June 1, 1964
42 N.J. 407
Argued April 21, 1964
We cannot concern ourselves at this stage of the proceeding with the question whether the statements set out in the leaflets are libelous. Their defamatory character had to be assumed conclusively for purposes of the summary judgment motion and we must hold to that assumption in order to deal with the only problem to be decided, i. e., the preemption problem.
For the reasons stated, I vote to reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division and to reinstate the order of the trial court striking the defense of preemption.
Justices SCHETTINO and HANEMAN join in this dissent.
For affirmance - Chief Justice WEINTRAUB, and Justices JACOBS, PROCTOR and HALL - 4.
For reversal - Justices FRANCIS, SCHETTINO and HANEMAN - 3.
Mr. Edward M. Gurry argued the cause for the third-party defendant-respondent (Messrs. Gurry & Conlan, attorneys; Mr. Edward M. Gurry on the brief).
PROCTOR, J. This case concerns coverage under the omnibus clause of an automobile liability insurance policy. The policy was issued by the third-party defendant, Pennsylvania Threshermen & Farmers’ Mutual Casualty Insurance Company (Pennsylvania), to Herbert B. Weidel of Baltimore, Maryland, and covered his automobile, which was involved in a collision on June 8, 1957. The omnibus clause was of standard form and provided in pertinent part that coverage under the policy was extended to the named insured, his spouse, and any person while using the automobile * * *, provided the actual use of the automobile is by the named insured or such spouse or with the permission of either.
The facts are not in material dispute. Weidel entered a hospital in Baltimore on June 2, 1957, for treatment of poison ivy. A day or two later, he requested his nephew, Michael Wagner, also of Baltimore, who was home on leave from the Navy, to use his car to take Mrs. Weidel to and from the hospital to visit him, to take her shopping and to do other errands for him. Wagner agreed and Weidel gave him the keys to the car. Wagner did not ask whether he could use the car for his own purposes, nor did Weidel tell him not to. In short, the matter was not discussed. Wagner used the car for several days to do the errands requested of him and parked it each evening in front of his home. On Friday night, June 7, after driving Mrs. Weidel from the hospital to her home, he picked up a friend, Martin Schuncke, the third-party plaintiff herein, and the two spent several hours together drinking coffee and later a few beers. They decided to drive to New York for the week-end and en route they picked up five hitchhikers. Along the way Schuncke took over the driving. Early the next morning they were involved in a collision with a truck near Newark on the New Jersey Turnpike, which resulted in the death of one of the passengers and injuries to others.
Actions in negligence were instituted against Weidel, Schuncke, and the owner and driver of the truck. Pennsylvania notified Schuncke that it was not extending coverage to
On February 27, 1962 the Superior Court, Law Division, granted summary judgment for Schuncke in the third-party action, directing that Pennsylvania was obligated to extend the coverage of the Weidel policy to Schuncke. On motion to settle the form of judgment, an order was entered on July 19, 1962, which required Pennsylvania to pay to Liberty the sum of $20,000 plus 6% interest and costs, interest to run from December 16, 1958. On Pennsylvania‘s appeal to the Appellate Division, the judgment of the Law Division was reversed on the ground that Schuncke was not covered by the omnibus clause in the Pennsylvania policy. 80 N. J. Super. 97 (1963). We granted Schuncke‘s petition for certification. 41 N. J. 199 (1963).
The parties have briefed and argued the case on the assumption that New Jersey law should be applied to the issues here involved. We accept their position and treat the matter as
Pennsylvania contends that the decisions of this Court in Matits v. Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co., 33 N. J. 488 (1960), and Indemnity Ins. Co. of North America v. Metropolitan Cas. Ins. Co. of N. Y., 33 N. J. 507 (1960), establish the guidelines to be followed in the resolution of the issue here presented and further contends that those cases were properly applied by the Appellate Division when it held that Schuncke, at the time of the collision, was not using the car with the permission of the named insured.
The Matits case adopted for New Jersey the initial permission rule to be used in determining whether coverage is available to persons other than the named insured under a standard omnibus clause in a liability insurance policy. The rule was stated to be: [I]f a person is given permission to use a motor vehicle in the first instance, any subsequent use short of theft or the like while it remains in his possession, though not within the contemplation of the parties, is a permissive use within the terms of a standard omnibus clause in an automobile liability insurance policy. 33 N. J., at p. 496. In that case we rejected the minor deviation rule that the permittee is covered under the omnibus clause so long as his deviation from the permissive use is minor in nature. We also rejected the conversion rule that any deviation from the time, place or purpose specified by the person granting permission takes the permittee outside coverage of the clause. Ibid. We pointed out that the rejected rules make coverage turn on the scope of permission in the first instance, render coverage uncertain in many cases, foster litigation as to the existence or extent of deviations, and inhibit achievement of the legislative goal of providing certain and maximum coverage to effectuate the policy of encouraging collectibility of damages wrongfully inflicted in the operation of motor vehicles. Id., at pp. 495, 496.
Under the initial permission rule only two questions must be answered to determine coverage. Was there permission to use the car initially? Did the subsequent use, while possession was retained, constitute theft or the like?
In the present case the Appellate Division held that since the purpose for which Wagner was given the car was solely for Weidel‘s benefit, the use of the car was never given to Wagner. Use was retained by Weidel and only possession was transferred to Wagner. 80 N. J. Super., at p. 104. We believe that this construction of the word use is too narrow. Whether permission to use is granted for a purpose which will benefit the owner, the permittee, or both is immaterial under the initial permission rule, which is not concerned with the scope of use for which permission is
Quite plainly, the use of the car for the trip to New York did not constitute theft, as there is no suggestion that Wagner intended to deprive the owner permanently of the car. Nor is there any evidence that the use of the car was tantamount to criminal conduct of any kind on the part of Wagner or Schuncke. The initial permission rule as expressed in Matits contemplates a situation in which the subsequent use
Pennsylvania argues that its policy provides coverage if the actual use was with permission and that that phrase has a more limited meaning than the unmodified word use. It is contended that actual use refers to the time of the collision, and that the actual use at that time must be that for which permission was granted. The clause, read as a whole, does not require or suggest such a meaning of the adjective actual and we believe it should not be so construed. The clause requires only that permission for actual use be given, not permission for any specific purpose, deviation from which would vitiate coverage. We note that the omnibus clause construed in Matits required that actual use be with the permission of the named insured. 33 N. J., at p. 490. The initial permission rule would be wholly inconsistent with the construction of the clause urged by Pennsylvania. Such a construction would call for the adoption of the strict conversion rule which we rejected in Matits. The meaning urged by Pennsylvania has been considered and rejected by other courts. See Couch, op. cit. supra, § 45:328, and cases cited therein.
For the reasons stated above, we hold that Schuncke was an additional insured under the omnibus clause of Pennsylvania‘s policy at the time of the collision.
Pennsylvania contends that if Schuncke was entitled to coverage under its policy, as we have held, the trial court nevertheless erred in allowing interest from December 16, 1958, on the $20,000 payment made by Liberty on that day.
Interest is in contemplation of law damages for the illegal detention of a legitimate claim or indebtedness. Fidelity Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Wilkes-Barre, etc., Co., 98 N. J. L. 507, 510 (E. & A. 1923). And in practice a court
The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed, and the judgment of the trial court is reinstated.
HALL, J. (concurring). The court‘s opinion decides that the holding of Matits v. Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co., 33 N. J. 488 (1960), here dictates extension of the car owner‘s insurance coverage to his nephew‘s friend who was driving the vehicle at the time of the accident in New Jersey in the course of a week-end junket to New York with the nephew, when the uncle had given the nephew possession of the car so that the latter might do family errands in Baltimore for the former while he was confined to the hospital. This deviation was indeed a much more aggravated one than that in Matits and the views expressed in my dissenting opinion there, 33 N. J., at p. 498, seem even more pertinent. See also the comprehensive discussion of the field and its difficulties for the judiciary in Cohen and Cohen, Automobile Liability Insurance: Public Policy and the Omnibus Clause in New Jersey, 15 Rutgers L. Rev. 155 (1961). But since the initial permission rule—more aptly described as the hell or high water doctrine—was settled as the law of this state by Matits, I am constrained to join the court‘s opinion.
HALL, J., concurring in result.
For affirmance - None.
