45 A.2d 385 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1945
Argued October 25, 1945. Leon Speier and his wife had final judgments on verdicts against Ayling: For the wife for personal injuries $600; for the husband for her expenses $150 and for the loss of her companionship (services) $150; and for Leon Speier $700 for damage to his automobile — a total of $1600. The jury's verdict established that the negligence of Ayling was the proximate cause of the injury and damages. Ayling at the time was driving Speier's automobile and Speier was seated by his side.
Upon these judgments each plaintiff issued an attachment execution against Allstate Insurance Company (Ayling's carrier), and similarly against Pennsylvania Threshermen and Farmers' Mutual Casualty Insurance Company (Leon Speier's carrier), each as garnishee. After interrogatories, answers and trial without a jury the court below entered judgments for the full amounts against both carriers, retaining control of any execution. Each insurance carrier appealed.
The questions involved require each carrier's liability first be determined as if no other carrier was concerned. *406
ALLSTATE LIABILITY. Allstate was carrier of Ayling, the driver and defendant in the original judgments. Its policy covered1 him while driving any automobile by paragraph 4. Allstate concedes liability on this phase of all items except the item of $700 damage to Leon Speier's automobile, which it denies under a clause reading: "EXCLUSIONS. This policy does not apply under liability — Coverage B. (property damage) . . . (f) to property owned by, . . . in charge of, . . . the insured."
Was Ayling, the driver, "in charge of" the Speier automobile at the time it was damaged? Ayling was the permissive driver of Speier, who was seated beside the driver. While Speier could control who could drive it, the actual control of the vehicle was passed by him to Ayling, and Speier had no control of the driving of the vehicle at the time of the accident. In Rodgers v. Saxton,
The judgments in the original action of Leon Speier and Matilda Speier, his wife, against Ayling are conclusive that "at the time of the negligence Speier did not share in the control of that vehicle." Were it otherwise the negligence of Ayling would be imputed to Speier, thus defeating the latter's recovery for car damage. Since Speier did not share in the control, Ayling was insole control at the time of the negligence. Being in sole control by permission of the owner, the latter's automobile (property) was "in charge of" Ayling, the insured. Cf. Sky v. KeystoneMutual Casualty Co.,
THRESHERMEN LIABILITY. It was the insurance carrier of Leon Speier, the owner of the vehicle, and its policy provided3 that the coverage of the policy "is made available" to the insured's permissive driver (Ayling). Threshermen under Coverage A — Bodily Injury Liability — covenanted "To pay on behalf of the insured [by extension, Ayling] all sums which the insured [by extension, Ayling] shall become obligated to pay by reason of the liability imposed . . . by law for *408 damages, including damages for care and loss of services, because of bodily injury . . . sustained by any person . . . caused by accident and arising out of the . . . use of the automobile." (Emphasis supplied.)
The Exclusion Clause that the extended insurance "does not include coverage for (b) any person . . . with respect to bodily injury . . . who is a named insured," does not apply because the named insured is Leon Speier. The carrier could have excluded the wife of the named insured but did not. Instead, the coverage was of damages to "any person."
As to the item of $700 damage to Speier's car Threshermen is not liable. The policy provides, "3. Definition of `Insured.' The unqualified word `insured' as used in this policy shall mean the individual . . . named in the statements of this policy." That individual was Leon Speier. Under "Exclusions" it provides "This Policy Excludes Coverage For Any Liability Of The Assured 3. For damage to property owned [by] or in charge of . . . the insured." (Emphasis supplied.)
Threshermen contends that it is not liable because Allstate appeared and defended Ayling in the original trial and thereby was estopped from denying liability under Malley v. AmericanIndemnity Company,
Therefore, Threshermen's liability (if there were no other insurance) is for $900 of the items of the judgments.
ADDITIONAL INSURANCE. Each of the policies, standing alone, covers each of the items aggregating $900, and the remaining question is what effect the "other insurance clauses have. Each policy provides "if the insured has other insurance against a loss covered by this policy, the company shall not be liable . . . for a greater proportion . . . than the applicable limit of liability [expressed] stated . . . bears to the total applicable limit of liability of all valid and collectible insurance against such loss." The applicable limit of liability is the same in each. If this were all each insurer would be liable for half the loss.
But the Allstate policy under paragraph 15 (Other Insurance) provides (in addition to a provision similar to the Threshermen policy) "that the insurance under paragraph IV (use by Ayling of another's car) shall be excess insurance over any other valid and collectible insurance available to the insured, either as an insured under a policy applicable with respect to the automobile or otherwise, against a loss covered under said Paragraph." The effectiveness of such excess insurance clause was settled inGrasberger v. Liebert Obert, Inc.,
In appeals Nos. 167 and 168 October Term, 1945 of Allstate Insurance Co., the assignments of error are sustained, the judgment is reversed at the cost of the appellee, and judgment is hereby entered in favor of Allstate Insurance Co., garnishee.
In appeals Nos. 169 and 170 October Term, 1945 of the Pennsylvania Threshermen and Farmers' Mutual Casualty Insurance Company, assignment of error No. 2 is sustained, all the other assignments of error are dismissed, the record remanded with directions to the court below to enter judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the Pennsylvania Threshermen and Farmers' Mutual Casualty Insurance Company, garnishee, in accordance with this opinion, in the amount of $900, with interest thereon, and with costs including its instant appeals.
"Coverage B — To pay . . . [exactly as above] . . . for damages . . . to property . . . caused by accident and arising out of the use of the [an] automobile."