delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, Bradley Toler* brought the instant declaratory judgment action to determine whether injuries sustained by him while on a hunting trip with the insured, Randy Lingle, came within the terms of a personal vehicle insurance policy issued to Lingle by the defendant, Country Mutual Insurance Company (Country Mutual). Under this policy Country Mutual was obligated to pay damages caused by accidents “arising out of the *** use, including loading and unloading,” of the pickup truck owned by Lingle. The plaintiff was injured as Lingle was unloading ammunition from a rifle before loading it into his truck. The rifle discharged and caused the truck’s windshield to shatter, thereby injuring the plaintiff. After a trial upon stipulated facts, the court found that this accident came within the coverage of Lingle’s policy and directed Country Mutual to defend Lingle in the personal injury suit filed against him by the plaintiff. We affirm.
The parties’ stipulation of facts stated that on December 18, 1976, plaintiff Toler, defendant Lingle and Kelton Greer went coyote hunting in Union County, Illinois, south of Dongola. At sometime between 7 and 8 a.m., the defendant picked up the plaintiff and Greer in his pickup truck and drove to the Charles Brown farm south of Dongola, Illinois. The three men planned to hunt coyotes on the Brown farm and the adjoining farm of Don Fisher. Upon arrival at the Brown farm, the three men got out of the pickup truck of the defendant, took their rifles and began hunting. They later came back to the pickup truck and prepared to leave. Defendant Lingle spotted a coyote, got out of the pickup truck with a Remington rifle owned by Bradley Toler, which he had used on numerous occasions, and went out into the field after the coyote he had spotted. He fired at the coyote and missed it. He then returned to the pickup truck. By the time Lingle got back to the pickup truck, Greer and Toler had unloaded their guns and stored them in the back of the truck. Greer and Toler were in the cab of the pickup truck, with Greer sitting in the passenger seat and Toler sitting in the middle of the seat.
Lingle came back to the truck and opened the door. While standing outside of the truck with the door of the truck open and while in close proximity to the truck, he proceeded to begin unloading the Remington rifle owned by Toler, which had been loaded with .243 caliber shells. These shells were reloads, having been reloaded by Toler. Lingle ejected the empty shell that he had previously fired at the coyote by pulling up on the bolt and pulling it back, causing the shell to be ejected onto the seat of the pickup truck. When he pushed the bolt forward to unload the next shell, the rifle fired. At the time the rifle fired, Lingle was standing outside of the truck holding the rifle in an attempt to unload it. When the rifle fired, the bullet entered the truck through the open driver’s door and struck the glass of the windshield. This caused the windshield to shatter and injure the plaintiff.
The plaintiff brought suit against Lingle for his injuries sustained in the accident and subsequently filed the instant declaratory judgment action against Lingle’s insurer, Country Mutual. In the complaint against Country Mutual, the plaintiff alleged that Country Mutual had refused to defend Lingle under its insurance policy with him on the basis that the policy did not cover the occurrence in question. The trial court entered judgment against Country Mutual, finding that the policy did apply to the subject occurrence and that Country Mutual had a duty to defend Lingle in the suit against him and to pay any judgment that might be recovered against Lingle by the plaintiff.
On appeal from this judgment Country Mutual contends that the trial court erred in finding that the accident in question came within the coverage of the policy. In pertinent part the policy provided coverage for bodily injury “caused by accident arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use, including loading or unloading” of the insured vehicle. Country Mutual asserts that the accidental discharge of the rifle here did not arise from the use of the truck, or from the loading which is part of its use, because Lingle’s act of removing shells from the rifle occurred prior to his loading the rifle into the truck and was not part of the process of loading the truck. Country Mutual contends further that regardless of whether or not the accident occurred during the loading process, the causal relation between the accident and the use of the truck was insufficient to give rise to liability under the policy.
The applicability of the “loading and unloading” clause of a motor vehicle insurance policy to a situation such as that here involved has not been ruled upon by the courts of this State. Courts of other jurisdictions, however, have construed the pertinent policy language in analogous fact situations to hold that coverage exists for injuries resulting from the accidental discharge of firearms being loaded into or unloaded from a vehicle. (See Laviana v. Shelby Mutual Insurance Co. (D. Vt. 1963),
As a general rule an accident, in order to come within the coverage of a “loading and unloading” clause, must have occurred during the process of loading and unloading the vehicle in question and must be causally connected with the act of loading or unloading. (7 Am. Jur. 2d Automobile Insurance sec. 208 (1980).) To determine what constitutes loading and unloading under the first part of this test, courts have adopted two basic views: the “coming to rest” doctrine, under which “loading” consists of only the actual lifting and placing of an article into the vehicle, and the “complete operations” doctrine, under which “loading” includes the entire process involved in moving the article. Under the latter doctrine, no distinction is made between loading and acts preparatory to loading. (Allstate Insurance Co. v. Valdez (E.D. Mich. 1961),
In arguing that Dingle’s act of removing shells from the rifle here was not part of the process of loading it into the truck, Country Mutual urges this court to apply the narrower “coming to rest” doctrine. We note, however, that Illinois courts have adopted the “complete operations” view in construing “loading and unloading” clauses in a commercial setting. (Estes Co. v. Employers Mutual Casualty Co. (1980),
In Allstate Insurance Co. v. Valdez (E.D. Mich. 1961),
“It would appear that Valdez was fulfilling his legal obligation by ejecting the shells preparatory to placing the weapon in the trunk of his car. *** [T]he other three hunters had deposited their weapons in the trunk of Valdez’ car, the trunk lid was up, and the hunters were waiting for Valdez, who would drive them back to Detroit. Under these circumstances where Valdez was ready to ‘load’ his shotgun into the trunk but, as a preparatory step, was attempting to comply with the safety requirements of the Michigan statute, the ejection of the shells was an integral part of the ‘loading’ process ***.” (190 F. Supp. 893 , 896.)
Thus, the court concluded, Valdez’ distance from the vehicle at the time of the accident was “not per se an accurate measuring device of the extent to which ‘loading’ [had] begun. The test [was] whether the activities resulting in the injuries [were] a part of the entire ‘loading’ scheme.”
The facts of the instant occurrence present an even stronger case for finding liability under the “loading and unloading” clause than did the facts of Valdez. Here it was stipulated that Lingle was standing in close proximity to the truck with the door open as he ejected shells from the rifle onto the seat of the truck. His companions had previously unloaded their guns before storing them in the back of the truck and were waiting in the front seat for Lingle to do the same. It cannot be disputed that the three hunters were preparing to leave and that they were loading their guns into the truck for that purpose. Before physically placing the rifle into the truck, Lingle had to unload the ammunition from it to comply with statutory requirements (see Ill. Rev. Stat. 1975, ch. 38, par. 24 — 1 (unlawful to carry loaded firearm in vehicle within corporate limits of city, village or town)) and to conform to sound safety practice. Thus, while the term “loading” in the policy must be given its plain and ordinary meaning (see Viani v. Aetna Insurance Co. (1972),
Our judgment in this regard is not altered by Country Mutual’s assertion that such an application of the “complete operations” doctrine could lead to absurd results in other hypothetical cases involving the loading of firearms into a vehicle. As with the application of any doctrine or test, each case must turn upon its particular facts. (Travelers Insurance Co. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. (Tenn. 1973),
Country Mutual argues additionally that the causal connection between the accident and the insured’s use of the vehicle here was insufficient to give rise to liability under the policy. This argument is closely related to the question of whether Lingle’s act of removing shells from the rifle came within the loading process, since loading necessarily constitutes a use of the truck (see Western Casualty & Surety Co. v. Branon (E.D. Ill. 1979),
It is well settled that some causal relation is necessary between an injury and the use of a motor vehicle for there to be coverage under the “arising out of the use” clause of a vehicle insurance policy. Proximate causation in the strict legal sense is not required, however, and the loading or unloading which constitutes the vehicle’s use need not be the sole cause of the accident, as “but for” causation is sufficient to satisfy the policy provision. (7 Am. Jur. 2d Automobile Insurance sec. 207, at 721-22 (1980); 1 R. Long, Law of Liability Insurance sec. 1.22, at 1 — 56 through 1 — 58 (1981); see Morari v. Atlantic Mutual Fire Insurance Co. (1970),
Applying these rules to the instant case, we note initially that under the relevant standard of causation, there is no requirement of any actual physical contact between the vehicle and the instrumentality that was the immediate cause of the injury, here, the rifle held by defendant Lingle. (McDonald v. Great American Insurance Co. (D. R.I. 1963),
Under the facts of the instant case, the insured’s vehicle was being used to transport the young men and their weapons on a hunting trip. This was a proper use of the truck and could be expected. (See Travelers Insurance Co. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. (Tenn. 1973),
Because of the relation here between the accident and the use of the insured’s truck, the instant case is distinguishable from those cases in which the vehicle involved was the mere situs or location of the injury. In National Union Fire Insurance Co. v. Bruecks (1966),
The case at bar can likewise be distinguished from cases cited by Country Mutual in which coverage was denied because the use of the vehicle giving rise to the injury was not a use of the vehicle as such. In Hutchins v. Mills (Fla. App. 1978),
Country Mutual further cites the case of Glen Falls Insurance Co. v. Rich (1975),
Finally, in Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Safeco Insurance Co. (1980),
For the reasons stated in this opinion, we hereby affirm the judgment of the trial court for the plaintiff and against the defendant Country Mutual.
Affirmed.
WELCH, P.J., and EARNS, J., concur.
