Transport Indemnity Company (Transport) appeals from a declaratory judgment holding it liable to defend and indemnify certain parties against claims arising out of an automobile accident. Finding that the district court correctly interpreted the relevant insurance contracts in the light of controlling state law, we affirm.
I.
Transport brought this action for declaratory relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201, 2202 to determine the duties of Transport and Liberty Mutual Insuranсe .Company (Liberty) to defend and indemnify certain parties against claims arising out of a June 5, 1974 automobile accident. Jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship.
A vehicle operated by Simons or Rice was involved in a collision with a vehicle operat
Hill’s estate claims damages in excess of $250,000 and claims that Simons, the estate of Rice, SWF and Carolina Pacific are each liable. Transport, as the issuer of a liability and damage policy which listed Sоuthwest Forest Industries, Inc. and “all divisions and subsidiaries” as the named insured (which includes both SWF and Carolina Pacific), called on Liberty, the issuer of a similar policy which named SWF as the insured, to participate in settling Hill’s claim. Liberty declined, contending the policy it had issued to SWF did not cover any of the named defendants for liability arising from this accident.
Transport contends that the district court erred in concluding that (1) Liberty had no potential liability in this case bеcause the facts fell within the range of the joint venture exclusion clause of SWF’s policy with Liberty and (2) Transport’s policy extended coverage to Rice, Simons, and SWF. We will address each issue in turn.
II.
The district judge held that Rice, Simons, Carolina Pacific and SWF were not covered by Liberty’s primary policy because of the following exclusion provision:
This insurance does not apply to bodily injury or property damage arising out of (1) a non-owned automobile used in the conduct of any partnership or joint venture оf which the insured is a partner or member and which is not designated in this policy as a named insured.
(Emphasis added.) Transport claims that the district judge erred in finding that (1) Rice and Simons used a “non-owned” rather than a “hired” automobile, and (2) the automobile was being used in the conduct of a “joint venture.” It is clear that this exclusion would not apply if Carolina Pacific and SWF were not engaged in a joint venture or if the automobile was a “hired” rather than a “non-owned” automobile.
Before we resolve the substantive issues, however, we must set forth our standard of review and the law we are to apply. First, the dispute between the parties concerns the correct interpretation of the exclusionary contract provision rather than the correct application of the facts of this case to an accepted definition. We are thus primarily faced with a question of law subject to our de novo review.
See United States v. Haas and Haynie Corp.,
Second, in this diversity case we apply the case law of Oregon.
Owens v. White,
A. Joint Venture
Transport, in support of its claim that no joint venture existed, contends that an essential element in the legal definition of a joint venture is a joint, shared, or mutual profit.
E. g, Elliott v. Murphy
In response, Liberty relies on cases that speak of a “community of interest” or “mutual benefit or profit,” as the requisite element.
West v. Soto,
Apart from standard legal definitions, the real question is what the parties intended when they contracted to exclude coverage of non-owned automobiles used in the conduct of a “joint venture.” None of the cases cited by the parties deal with the meaning and scope of “joint venture” as it is used in this type of insuranсe clause. The district judge, applying the law of Oregon, found that a joint venture existed. We cannot say he was clearly wrong. We agree with Liberty that the purpose of the exclusion was to prevent the insured from engaging in a cooperative venture with another party, thereby incurring additional liability for injury caused by an automobile belonging to the uninsured party. We believe that such provisions contemplate the broader concept of joint venture.
See Sprow v. Hartford Ins. Co.,
SWF and Carolina Pacific were engaged in a joint operatiоn, including the sharing of management personnel and certain expenses; it is such a joint enterprise that was contemplated by the exclusion. We thus hold that there is no ambiguity to be construed and that SWF and Carolina Pacific were engaged in a joint venture.
B. Non-Owned Automobile
Under the policy, a “non-owned” automobile is defined as “an automobile which is neither an owned nor a hired automobile.” A “hired automobile” is
[ 1] an automobile not owned by the namеd insured [2] which is used under contract in behalf of, or loaned to, the named insured, [3] provided such automobile is not owned by or registered in the name of (a) a partner or executive officer of the named insured or (b) an employee or agent of the named insured who is granted an operating allowance of any sort for the use of such automobile.
While Transport argues that the contract between SWF and Carolina Pacific to share the cost of operating the automobile obviously fits the above definition, it is clear that not all contracts contemplating the use of an automobile imply that the automobile is used “under contract in behalf of” the insured.
Courts have, for example, attempted to draw a line between mere service contracts, involving independent contractors, and “truck and driver” situations in which the insured is viewed as having contracted for the use of the automobile. It has thus been stated that “for a vehicle to constitute a hired automobile, there must be a separate contract by which the vehicle is hired or leased to the named insured for his exclusive use or control.”
Sprow v. Hartford Ins. Co., supra,
These cases reflect the efforts of courts to extend coverage to situations in which the insured is fairly viewed as having augmented his automobile fleet to meet his business needs, without expanding coverage to every contract that might literally fit the definition of a hired automobile. They teach that our concern is not merely with a literal application of the language but with a sense of the underlying purpose of the parties. We acknowledge, however, that the “separate contract” and “control” tеsts are not completely decisive on the facts before us. There is no separate lease of the automobile here. Thus, it might be inferred that SWF bargained for the benefits of the joint venture rather than for the use of an automobile.
See Sprow v. Hartford Ins. Co., supra,
Nevertheless, we cоnclude that the district judge was not clearly wrong in concluding that under Oregon law an agreement to share automobile expenses as part of a joint venture should not be treated as a contract of hire so as to bring the automobile within the hired automobile coverage of the insured’s policy. The same conclusion was reached in Sprow. The hired automobile provision and the joint venture exclusion should be read togethеr, if possible, so as to make sense of the purposes of the parties. The joint venture exclusion was designed to prevent the insured from gaining the systematic bonus coverage that would come from utilizing vehicles owned by a partner or joint venturer. If every contractual arrangement between joint venturers for sharing automobile expenses were viewed as a contract of hire, so that even an automobile used in the сonduct of the joint venture was considered a hired automobile, the purpose of the joint venture exclusion would be largely undermined.
The fact that the automobile here was being used in the conduct of the joint venture, rather than uniquely on behalf of SWF, distinguishes this case from
Miller v. National Farmers Union Prop. & Cas. Co.,
III.
We now address Transport’s contеntion that the district judge incorrectly found that its policy covered Rice, Simons, and SWF.
A. Coverage of Rice
Transport asserts that the district court’s decision should have been limited to determining the purely legal question whether Rice was covered only if he was in the course and scope of his duties as Executive Vice President at the time of the accident. Instead, the district judge not only decided this legal question, but also found that Rice was in fact acting within the scоpe of his duties as Executive Vice President and that Transport was therefore liable. We conclude that the district judge was within his bounds to rule on Transport’s own contention that it had “no duty to defend David Rice or . . .to pay any resulting judgment . . .” The district judge was not limited to determination of the purely legal question as Transport contends.
In addition, Transport argues that the district judge inappropriately relied on the factual findings of
Simons v. SWF Plywood Co.,
This conclusion is strengthened by the fact that the parties are not in dispute as to the pertinent facts. Transport does not deny that Rice was Executive Vice President of SWF and Carolina Pacific. Evidence in the record indicates that he was riding in a vehicle owned by his corporate employer and assigned to him. It is also agreed that Rice and Simons had attended a top-level business meeting in Albany the day of the accident, and had returned to Medford together. Indeed, Transport acknowledges that Rice was driving Simons to Grants Pass at the end of this business day.
Transport argues before us not that the district judge incorrectly found these facts, but that he drew an unwarranted legal conclusion from them. Indeed, Transport appears to acknowledge that Rice was acting in the course of his employment with the company, but denies that Rice was acting “as an executive officer” at the time of the accident. In support of its position, Transport cites cases holding that directors and officers may also act in separate capacities as employees of the corporation.
Wharton v. Fidelity-Baltimore Nat’l Bank,
B. Coverage of Simons
Transport contends that the district court erred in concluding that Simons was an “executive officer” for the рurposes of this contract. The district judge found that Simons was a general manager of production in charge of supervising plant managers, that he reported directly to Rice, and that on the date of the accident he attended a meeting on budgeting with “top management.” He relied on
Guillory
v.
Aetna Ins. Co.,
Transport distinguishes this case from
Guillory
on grounds that this is an arm’s length manuscript contract to which the rule of construing insurance contracts against the carrier does not apply. But it fails to offer any reason for concluding that something more restrictive was intended by the use of “executive officer” here. Moreover, in contrast to Transpоrt’s reliance on a single case generally distinguishing “officers” and “agents,”
Vardeman v. Penn Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
C. Coverage of SWF
Finally, Transport contends that the district judge erred in refusing to consider an alleged oral agreement between Transport and Southwеst Forest Industries providing that Transport would be liable as an excess insurer of SWF only. The district judge based his ruling in part on an Oregon statute which requires that “every contract of insurance shall be construed according to the terms and conditions of the policy.” O.R.S. 743.045. Transport argues that the district judge should not have applied Oregon substantive law because Oregon courts would have applied the law of California or Arizona, as states with signifiсant contacts which would uphold the validity of the oral agreement. In the alternative, Transport argues that the Oregon statute is merely a statutory embodiment of the parol evidence rule, the proper analysis of which would uphold the contract.
As to the choice-of-law issue, we cannot say that the district judge erred in applying Oregon law. Transport does not deny that Oregon has significant contacts with the transactions аt issue here, but argues that the so-called rule of validation should be applied so as to uphold the al
Moreover, Transport failed to demonstrate that a different result would have been required under the law of Arizona or California. The full extent of its legal authority was the citation to one Arizona case holding that parol insurance contracts are valid under Arizona law. Beyond that, however, Transport simply argues that the alleged agreement should be viewed as collateral to the written policy or as an aid to its construction. We agree with Liberty, however, that the alleged oral agreement contradicts the face of the policy, which lists SWF as a named insured to receive its primary coverage. It is equally clear that the oral agreement goes far beyond aiding in construction of the policy’s terms; rather than merely clarifying the identity of one of the named insureds, it varies the nature of the coverage provided. Finally, Transport’s argument that the parol evidence rule does not apply where one of the parties to the proceeding is a stranger to the contract is also without merit. See 4 Williston on Contracts § 647, at 1161-67 (1961).
The district judge correctly applied Oregon law. We reject Transport’s contention that the statutory provision in question is merely a codification of the parol evidence rule. This provision is part of the insurance code of the State. Under such statutes, “the policy . constitutes the sole contract, to the exclusion of all anterior or contemporaneous agreements not contained or expressed in the poliсy . . . Couch on Insurance 2d § 3:21, at 144 (1959).
See, e. g., Spain v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In
Miller,
the Eighth Circuit held that a delivery truck was a hired automobile when it was loaned to the insured as part of an informal arrangement in which two firms occasionally exchanged the use of such vehicles. The discussion focused mainly on the court’s finding that the reciprocal loans satisfied the hornbook law requirement that the loan be for consideration.
In
Fratis,
a California appellate court held that an automobile was hired when an independent contractor was paid a mileage allowance for travel in his own car to solicit subscription sales.
