Opinion by
The defendant insured the contents of the plaintiffs’ garage building against fire and, by an extended coverage endorsement, against direct loss by vehicles. The complaint avers that when one of the plaintiffs’ employes was removing а wheel from a jeep in the garage, it fell from a floor jack and struck their motor tester, damaging it to the extent of $580.
The court below sustained a demurrer to the complaint upon the ground that the accident was not covered by the extended coverage provision. The pertinent paragraph of the endorsement, entitled Provisions Applicable Only to Loss by Aircraft and Vehicles, reads as follows:
“The term ‘vehicles’, as used in this Endorsement, means vehicles running on land or tracks but not aircraft. Loss by aircraft or by vehicles shall include only direct loss resulting from actual physical contact of an aircraft or a vehicle with the property covered hereunder or with the building сontaining the property covered hereunder, except that loss by aircraft includes direct loss by objects falling therefrom. This Company shall not be liable, however, for loss (a) by any vehicle
The court below held that the first sentence of this paragraph unambiguously excluded coverage for damage resulting from contact with a vehicle which, at the time, was not running on land or tracks. The question raised оn this appeal is whether this sentence is merely descriptive of the kind of vehicle against which the plaintiffs are insured with regard to property damage or whether it is part of the description of the event they are insured agаinst, to wit, loss by physical contact with a vehicle which is running on land or tracks at the time.
At first blush it might seem when the policy says that “the term ‘vehicles’ . . . means vehicles running on land or tracks . . .” nothing is insured against except damage from a vehicle running at the time on land or tracks. The court below adopted this view and held that “running” as used in this sentence was not equivalent to “which runs” and to so construe it would be to rewrite the policy. Further consideration indicates that this is not so and that thе policy should not be construed as the lower court did here.
We know of no other case in which a court has so construed such a clause. On the contrary, in St. Nicholas Ins. Co. v. The Merchants’ Mutual Fire and Marine Ins. Co.,
In Moffitt v. State Automobile Ins. Ass’n,
In Davis v. Petrinovich,
These cases, and the highly respected lexicographers upon whom they rely, indicate that the fact that the present participles, “running77 or “moving77, literally denoting a state of being in motion, are commonly used by the highest authorities in defining the word “vehicles77, when a purist might well insist on the use of some phrase such as “capable of running or moving77. This makes clear thаt the use of the word “running77 rather than a clause such as “which runs77 or a phrase such as “capable of running77 is not a sufficient reason for holding that the clause defining “vehicle77 is intended, not merely to define that word, but to describe the evеnt which is insured against. It indeed suggests that
“Where the terms of a policy are susceptible, without violence, of two interpretations, that construction which is most favorable to the insured, in order to indemnify him for loss sustained, should be adopted”. Koser v. American Cas. Co.,
It is to be noted that the paragraph we are considering excludes injury by vehicles “to any . . . vehicle . .. other than stocks of . . . vehicles in process of manufacturing or for sale.” In Golding-Keene v. Fidelity-Phenix Fire Ins. Co.,
The insurance policy construed in Hildebrand v. Washington Nat. Ins. Co.,
We conclude that when the policy says that “vehicles . . . mean vehicles running on land or tracks”, it intends by this to describe the kind of vehicle which runs on land or tracks and that under the next sentence in the policy the plaintiff is insured against damage to the contents of his garage by physical contact with such a vehicle. Whether or not this unusual type of accident was contemplated by the insurance company whеn it drew the policy, it has not definitely excluded it. An automobile does not cease to be a vehicle in any ordinary sense when it is brought into a garage and jacked up for repairs. Certainly a truck full of merchandise being transpоrted which has some difficulty on the road and is brought into a garage for repairs and jacked up is a vehicle. To exclude coverage for damage from such a vehicle falling from the jack would require clearer language than that which appears in this policy.
Order reversed. The case is remanded to the court below for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
