This action was regularly moved at a jury term of the court. At the conclusion of the testimony it was apparent
Plaintiff as insured seeks to be reimbursed by defendant as insurer for moneys expended for attorneys’ fees in the defense of several actions based upon claims which have been adjudicated groundless. Defendant declined to defend, claiming non-coverage under the policy.
Plaintiff is a junk dealer engaged in the purchase and sale of scrap metal. Plaintiff is not a building contractor or wrecker engaged in the construction, demolition or alteration of buildings, and no such coverage was included in the policy. The Genesee Building Company in Buffalo entered into a general contract with the Westinghouse Elevator Company to demolish and remove its old elevators and construct and install new ones. To that contract plaintiff was not a party, nor in any way interested, nor had plaintiff any contractual relations with the Genesee Building Company. Plaintiff, however, did contract with the Westinghouse Elevator Company to purchase steel arches after the latter company had removed them from the elevator shafts. Ordinarily the arches would have been removed to the junk yard of plaintiff in Lackawanna and there cut up for resale. But in order to remove them more advantageously, plaintiff’s employee, one Welch, cut them on the premises into smaller pieces with " a blow torch furnished to plaintiff’s employee by the plaintiff. The employee was regularly employed by plaintiff on an hourly wage and received from plaintiff additional compensation for the use of a truck owned by the employee. His hourly wages were included in the estimate and adjustment of plaintiff’s payroll upon which the premium upon the policy was determined.
1 Plaintiff’s employee, after cutting and removing arches which the Westinghouse Elevator Company had taken from the elevator shafts, delivered them to the plaintiff’s junk yard in Lackawanna. Plaintiff’s employee Welch thereafter, at the request of the Westinghouse Elevator Company, and without the knowledge of plaintiff, engaged with the blow torch in the work of demolishing the old elevators. Plaintiff’s regular employee, while so engaged, was not the employee of plaintiff but of the Westinghouse Elevator Company. It was claimed that while so engaged in the work of the Westinghouse
“ (a) The locations of all Factories, Shops, Yards, Buildings, Premises or other workplaces of the Assured to which this Policy shall apply, by Town or City, with street and numbers, are as follows: 500 Ingham Ave., Lackawanna, New York.
“ (b) In addition to coverage as respects such accidents upon the Assured’s premises this Policy shall also cover as respects such accidents occurring elsewhere if caused by employes (who are members of the Assured’s working force at said premises and are included in the premium computation provided for in Statement 5) while performing elsewhere their duties in said business operations.” Defendant disclaims liability and obligation to defend upon the ground that the accidental fire was-not in a location coming within that clause. This contention is without force. For while plaintiff’s regular employee was not working for plaintiff at the time of the fire, still the basis of the actions brought against plaintiff was that plaintiff’s employee was performing his duties elsewhere in the business operations of plaintiff at the Genesee Building Company. The fact that the actions proved to be groundless because plaintiff’s regular employee was not at the exact time of the fire doing plaintiff’s work relieved defendant insurance company from liability but did not excuse it from defending the claims and actions.
Defendant insurance company also disclaimed and refused to defend or protect plaintiff upon the basis of an exclusion clause in the policy. This clause, contained in section I, headed “ Agreements,” subdivision 6, headed “ Exclusions,” is as follows: “ This Policy does not cover as respects: * * * (4) accidents caused by reason of: * * ■* (c) the existence, maintenance or use of any watercraft or aircraft or of any hoisting device * * * or elevator or the well or hoistway of either.”
The plaintiff did not in any way engage in the demolition, construction, repair or alteration of the elevators or well or hoistway of the Genesee Building Company. Had it done so, then, of course, the exclusion clause would have been effective. In the absence of proof that plaintiff had engaged in such work, the defendant insurance company’s liability is not excluded, even though the plaintiff’s employee was working in an elevator well and the fire occurred while he was so engaged. Here, as in many instances, the non-liability of the insurance company by reason of an exclusion clause
The law would be very clearly defined if the determination of the application of the exclusion clauses rested upon the conduct of the insured in respect thereto. Then if the assured fulfilled the terms of the policy himself, and the actual facts disclosed that the accident was within the terms of the policy, the duty of the insurance company to defend would be clear.
Under its policy the insurance company agrees “ To defend, in the name and on behalf of the Assured, any claim or suit against the Assured, even if groundless, to recover damages on account of bodily injuries, including death resulting at any time therefrom, suffered or alleged to have been suffered by any person or persons not in the employ of the Assured, as the result of accidents occurring while the policy is in force, upon the Assured’s premises designated in Statement 4 or elsewhere as provided in said statement by reason of the Assured’s business operations, described in Statement 4 conducted on said premises.”
The assured buys his protection from the negligence or wrongdoing of his servant while the latter is engaged in the master’s work. Why should the assured, who has done no wrong, lose that protection because the servant has done some act which the policy forbids the assured from doing? If the insurance company declines to defend because the allegations of the complaint
The authoritative decisions reach this conclusion but some only by circuitous routes bolstered up by the rather frequently applied principle that any ambiguity must be resolved against the insurance company which prepared the policy. The following decisions are illustrative of this point. In Gerka v. Fidelity & Casualty Co. (
The case of S. & E. Motor Hire Corp. v. New York Indemnity Co. (
In Grand Union Co. v. General Accident, Fire & Life Assurance Corp. (
Cases cited by defendant’s counsel are clearly distinguished. In Daniel v. State Farm Mutual Ins. Co. (
In the case at bar the question is not one of liability but obligation to defend, as the claims have already been established as groundless; the insured was not at fault; the careless act of the employee of assured while beyond the scope of his work was committed upon premises within the coverage of the policy and while he was engaged in the business operations of the assured; the obligation of the insurance company to defend was clearly defined, even though the claims were groundless. The reasonable value of the attorney’s services was stipulated upon the trial as $750, and plaintiff is entitled to judgment in that amount.
