Aileen James, plaintiff in the District Court, recovered a judgment against State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company on a policy of insurance whereby Blanche Kessler, the owner of an automobile, was insured against the perils arising from the ownership, maintenance or use of the car, including legal liability from accident on account of bodily injury suffered by any person “other than the assured or persons in the same household as the assured or those in the service or employment of the assured.” The plaintiff had previously obtained a judgment against Mrs. Kessler for injuries suffered while riding in the car when driven by Mrs. Kessler’s daughter-in-law. Execution on this judgment had been returned unsatisfied, and the pending suit was brought to recover under a provision of the policy that in case execution against the assured should be returned unsatisfied because of insolvency in an action brought by an injured party, then an action might be maintained by the injured person against the company for the amount of the judgment not exceeding the amount of the policy.
A number of questions are raised by the company on this appeal, but it is necessary to notice only the contention that the plaintiff was a person “in the same household as the assured,” and therefore was excluded from the coverage of the policy by its express terms. In such a case, the injured person stands in the shoes of the assured and is subject to the restrictions and exceptions in the policy. Peeler v. U. S. Casualty Co.,
Upon this evidence, the company moved for a directed verdict in its favor, but it was refused. We are of the opinion that it should have been granted, for it is clear that Miss James answered the description of “a person in the same household as Mrs. Kessler.” The phrase is not limited to persons related by blood or marriage, nor has it the same meaning. The term “household” is customarily used to mean a number of persons who dwell together as a family. It was used in this sense by the Supreme Court in Arthur v. Morgan,
The decisions upon automobile liability and indemnity policies cited below are in harmony with this result. Clauses in these policies relating to members of the household of the assured have been used to provide for coverage against theft except by any person in the assured’s household, as in Rydstrom v. Queen Insurance Co.,
If in accord with the general rule of interpretation, the meaning of the word “household” in the policy under consideration is determined in the light of the situation in which it was used, there can he no doubt that it was intended to embrace such a person as the plaintiff in this case. Obviously the exception was intended to restrict the company’s liability, and the specific purpose was to safeguard the company against the natural and inevitable partiality of the assured to an injured person if he should happen to be a member of the same family circle. This purpose, manifest to any reasonable person, was well described in Cartier v. Casualty Co., supra,
Reversed.
