This was a suit brought to compel the defendant insurance company, alleged to> have been the liability insurance carrier of one H. B. Russell, against whom the plaintiff had secured a judgment on account of the negligent operation of the allegedly insured vehicle, to pay the judgment. There is attached to the petition a copy of the contract of insurance issued to H. B. Russell on May 5, 1958, for a policy period beginning June 6, 1958. The policy has attached thereto and as a part thereof an indorsement dated May 9, 1958, and by its terms made effective on June 6, 1958, which indorsement provides in part as follows: “It is agreed that such insurance as is afforded by the policy for bodily injury liability . . . with respect to the automobile described below . . . applies only while the automobile is used ... in hauling for one concern, including the return trip in connection therewith, any property for the concern designated below.” The automobile truck described in this indorsement was the vehicle involved in the collision and the “designated concern” was R. G. Foster & Company, Wadley, Georgia. The petition, together with the attached exhibits, shows that Russell, the party against whom plaintiff holds a judgment, was at the time of the collision in question hauling, not for R. G. Foster & Company, but solely and exclusively for Wilkes County, Georgia.
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1. “ ‘Insurance contracts are governed by the same rules of construction or interpretation, for the purpose of ascertaining the intention of the parties, as apply to other contracts.
Code
§ 56-815;
Golden v. National Life & Accident Insurance Co.,
2. There being no attack made in the petition upon the indorsement issued on May 9, 1958, on the. ground that it was void for want of consideration (
3. This case is clearly distinguishable from
Dunn v. Travelers Indem. Co.,
Judgment reversed.
