Opinion
The Travelers Indemnity Company (Travelers) issued its “new easy-read type” liability insurance policy to Fall River Joint Unified School District (Fall River). In this action it seeks a declaration concerning the application of the policy to an automobile accident in which the driver, Tonya Gallion, was a Fall River student and a Sonia Swearinger, a passenger who was injured, a visiting student. Travelers admits an obligation to defend and indemnify Fall River but claims that neither Tonya nor her father (who owned the auto) are insureds. Travelers named as defendants Sonia Swearinger, Sonia’s parents, Sonia’s school district (Princeton Joint Unified School District), Tonya Gallion, her father and another passenger.
Travelers obtained a summary judgment against all defendants. It recites: “there is no liability coverage nor any other coverage available under the policy of The Travelers Indemnity Company herein which is Policy No. 650-226A636-A-IND-80 and . . . plaintiff herein has no obligation to investigate the facts concerning or to defend or indemnify defendants Tonya Ann Gallion, Rudy Gallion, or any other defendants against the claims arising because of the [subject automobile accident].”
Sonia and her parents appeal. We will reverse the judgment.
Introduction
This is a related case to Swearinger v. Fall River Joint Unified School Dist. * (Cal.App.). In that action Sonia Swearinger and her parents sued the other defendants to this action and Fall River for injuries caused by the automobile accident. We held that the personal injury action against Fall River was not absolutely barred by sections 35330 and 44808 of the Education Code and remanded the case for trial. This coverage dispute is fueled by the possibility that the policy may indemnify Tonya Gallion for the accident if she is found negligent notwithstanding that Fall River is found not liable.
Facts
The Accident
The facts are contained in the summary judgment papers. Sonia and another visiting student were assisting their school basketball team by keeping *782 statistics. The tournament extended for several days and the visiting participants were lodged with families of Fall River students who volunteered to do so. The host families would provide meals, sleeping quarters, bathing facilities and transportation to and from the school. The only tangible reward for serving as a host family was free tickets for the parents to the first night of the tournament. Some proceeds from the tournament ticket sales were returned to the school and used to defray expenses of the athletic programs.
The driver of the automobile in which the accident occurred was Tonya Gallion, a Fall River student. The Gallion family had served as hosts “every year” in the past. It was “understood” that when a host family provided hospitality they would also provide the transportation to their home. Families without cars “wouldn’t be a host because they couldn’t get them in or out.” In past years the Gallion parents had always driven during transportation of the guests. The school “encouraged” that transporting chores be performed by the host family parents. Bus transportation of the visiting students would have been “very expensive.”
The relations between Fall River and the host families were not elaborate. The prospective hosts were screened by school personnel and if the family was acceptable little explicit direction was provided concerning accomplishment of the hosting chores. Host students were told not to take the guests out partying, dancing, or drinking. If problems arose with host families, the guests were removed and a new host provided. In past years host family status had been terminated and the host family stricken from the rolls when drinking problems had come to the attention of the school officials and once when a student assumed host responsibilities at a time when his parents were not in attendance at the home.
The Insurance Policy
The material portions of the Travelers’ policy are contained in its automobile accident provisions. The policy insures for general liability for bodily injury or property damage but excepts bodily injury arising out of the ownership, maintenance, operation, or use of an automobile. Thus the automobile accident provisions of the policy govern this case. The pertinent ones follow.
The policy provides that Travelers “will pay all sums the insured legally must pay as damages because of bodily injury or property damage to which [the policy] applies, caused by an accident and resulting from the ownership, maintenance or use of a covered auto. ”
*783 The policy defines nine classes of covered autos of which one, “any auto,” is made applicable by the endorsements. The Gallion automobile, being such, is a covered auto. That is material to the definition of “insured,” which reads:
“D. Who Is Insured.
“1. You [i.e. Fall River] are an insured for any covered auto.
“2. Anyone else is an insured while using with your permission a covered auto you own, hire or borrow except:
“a. The owner of a covered auto you hire or borrow from one of your employees or a member of his or her household.
“b. Someone using a covered auto while he or she is working in a business of selling, servicing, repairing or parking autos unless that business is yours.
“c. Anyone other than your employees, a lessee or borrower or any of their employees, while moving property to or from a covered auto.
“3. Anyone liable for the conduct of an insured described above is an insured but only to the extent of that liability. However, the owner or anyone else from whom you hire or borrow a covered auto is an insured only if that auto is a trailer connected to a covered auto you own.”
Discussion
The Travelers’ policy provides that it “will pay all sums the insured legally must pay as damages because of bodily injury or property damage to which [the policy] applies, caused by an accident and resulting from the ownership, maintenance or used of a covered auto.” Since “covered auto” means any auto the dispositive issue is whether Tonya Gallion is an insured.
The policy defines “insured” (other than the named insured) as “[a]nyone . . . while using with your [i.e. Fall River] permission[ 1 ] a covered auto you own, hire or borrow . . . .” Tonya Gallion comes within this provision if the Gallion automobile was borrowed by Fall River from the Gallions for *784 its use in the ferrying of visiting students to and from Fall River High School.
The parties advance differing meanings of “borrow.” The Swearingers focus on the vehicle’s use in service of Fall River. They claim that “borrow” encompasses the use of a third party’s vehicle by the third party in the service of the borrower. Travelers focuses on the dominion and control of the vehicle and implies that one cannot borrow another’s vehicle unless the lender gives up the physical possession of the vehicle. Thus, Travelers argues that the Swearingers’ definition is unreasonable.
That tenders a question for resolution by the court. “It is . . . solely a judicial function to interpret a written instrument unless the interpretation turns upon the credibility of extrinsic evidence.”
(Parsons
v.
Bristol Development Co.
(1965)
Absent an audience of technical language users, “[t]he policy should be read as a layman would read it and not as it might be analyzed by an attorney or an insurance expert.”
(Crane
v.
State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.
(1971)
“[BJorrow” is not explicitly defined in the Travelers’ policy. But the context in which the term is used does shed grammatical light on its meaning. “Borrow” appears both in the definition of “insured” and in an exception thereto, The definition, as we have seen, makes an insured out of any person using, with Fall River’s permission, a covered auto which has been borrowed by Fall River. The exception excludes from this definition the owner of an auto “borrowed [by Fall River] from one of [Fall *785 River’s] employees . . . .” 3 We get from this example a paradigmatic usage of “borrow” which informs us (by the elementary principle of consistent usage) of its meaning wherever it is used in the policy. We explore the semantic consequences of this usage. Fall River, as an entity, can operate only through individuals, including (quite likely) its employees. Thus, the exception implicitly recognizes a case in which the employee may act in a dual role, as a representative of Fall River and as owner of the vehicle. This implies that a borrowing can occur if Fall River permits the employee’s use of his or her vehicle on its errand. If that is so, Fall River can borrow a vehicle whenever it properly gains the use of a third party’s vehicle for its purposes whatever may be said of the employee’s dominion over the vehicle (by ownership) or physical possession of it (by driving it).
This conclusion gains support from usages of “borrow” to which the layman is privy. The Oxford English Dictionary (1933) (O.E.D.) defines “borrow” as “[t]o take (a thing) on pledge or security given for its safe return” and as “[t]o render oneself indebted for; to make temporary use of (something not one’s own) . ...” (1 O.E.D. p. 1006.) The first of these definitions emphasizes the possession of the thing and is linked to the law of bailment which concerns, e.g., the risk of loss, degree of care, and permissible uses of the chattel. (Cf. Civ. Code, §§ 1884-1896.) These matters are not at issue in the Travelers’ policy because it is not the chattel as such which is its concern. Rather it is the injurious consequences of the use of the vehicle which it is the purpose of the policy to indemnify. That invokes the second shade of meaning of the O.E.D., to make temporary use of something not one’s own.
The meaning of “borrow” can be come at from yet another direction. In the Travelers’ definition of insured the terms “borrow” and “hire” are juxtaposed. That is so, we think, because they have a natural affinity. Borrow has a venerable usage in which it is distinguished from hire only by the absence of remuneration. (See 2 Blackstone’s Commentaries 453.) “Hire” is used in a sense which excludes physical possession altogether when remuneration is involved. We say, for example, that one hires a taxicab, even though the taxicab owner drives it. This usage is found in insurance policies.
*786
A “hired automobile” is there defined as one used under contract in behalf of, or loaned to, the named insured. (See, e.g.,
Fratis
v.
Fireman’s Fund American Ins. Companies, supra,
In Fratis this court held that an automobile owned by an independent contractor and used by him to solicit newspaper subscriptions for a newspaper company in return for a mileage allowance was a “hired automobile” within the meaning of the newspaper’s insurance policy. (Id., 56 Cal.App.3d at pp. 342, 343.) Travelers ignores Fratis. It argues that “borrow” does not apply here because Fall River never had dominion and control of the Gallion vehicle because it never had possession or custody of it. This argument is founded upon a question-begging view of dominion and control which, as we have shown, is inconsistent with the implications of the contract’s use of “borrow. ” To support it Travelers relies upon Monolith, a case that is not helpful to Travelers’ claim.
In
Monolith, supra,
Travelers also relies on
Indemnity Ins. Co.
v.
Pacific Clay Products Co.
(1970)
The only analysis advanced in the case is that “[a] loan of property creates the relationship of lender and borrower; involves a grant by the lender of the custody and use of the property loaned to the borrower on condition the property be returned; and does not arise from an exercise of control pursuant to a right of control.”
(Pacific Clay Products, supra,
The remaining California case tendered by Travelers is
Home Indemnity Co.
v.
King
(1983)
It is unnecessary to discuss the out-of-state precedents proffered by Travelers. They lie within the scope of our analysis. The trial court erred in holding that Tonya Gallion could not be, on the facts tendered, an insured under the Travelers’ policy. In view of that conclusion none of the remaining arguments of the parties need be addressed.
The judgment is reversed.
Sparks, J., concurred.
Regan, Acting P. J., concurred in the result.
Notes
Reporter’s Note: Review granted, July 18, 1985 (S.F. 24908). Cause dismissed, November 1, 1985.
The parties tender no issue whether Tonya Gallion had permission from Fall River to use the Gallion vehicle on Fall River’s mission independent of the issue of borrowing. Ordinarily the issue of borrowing subsumes the issue of permission. (Compare
Fratis
v.
Fireman’s Fund American Ins. Companies
(1976)
A Gresham’s Law of meaning might be said to derive from this rule; broad meanings of terms of coverage drive out narrow ones when both are reasonable in the context of an insurance policy. (Cf. “vulgarization” in Fowler, Modern English Usage (2d ed. 1965) pp. 684-685.)
The exception does not apply to Tonya Gallion because she is apparently not the owner of the auto. Nor would it apply unless Tonya Gallion is an employee of Fall River, a matter at issue in the principal litigation. Mr. Gallion is excepted in any event because of another policy provision which excludes all owners from coverage. We note that if a school district were not to insure against the liability of its employees it would run afoul of Education Code section 35208, subdivision (a)(2) which requires that a school district insure against the “personal liability of the . . . employees of the district for damages for death>injury to a person, or damage or loss of property caused by the negligent act or omission of the . . . employee when acting within the scope of his . . . employment.” We are not called upon to consider the consequences of such a violation.
Monolith
distinguished
Governmental Employees Ins. Co.
v.
St. Paul Fire etc. Ins. Co.
(1966)
