DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 225
Judges: Bell, Brien, Consideration, Eagen, Jones, Musmanno, Roberts, Took
Filed Date: 9/26/1967
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Opinion by
The instant appeal presents a dispute between two insurance companies over the interpretation of the word “insured” in the employee exclusion of the Standard Automobile Insurance Policy. The appeal is from the grant of plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the pleadings.
The facts are as follows: Plaintiff-appellee, Pennsylvania Manufacturers’ Association Insurance Company (PMA), issued a standard automobile bodily injury liability policy to Harry B. Niehaus, Jr. (Niehaus), as well as a separate workmen’s compensation policy. Defendant-appellant, Aetna Casualty and Surety Insurance Company (Aetna) insured Delaware Valley Wool Scouring Company (Delaware) for comprehensive bodily injury liability. Aetna’s policy with Delaware provided that if the insured (Delaware) had other insurance against a loss covered by the policy, the Delaware policy should be excess insurance where the loss arises out of the use of any nonowned automobile. Since the PMA policy, if Delaware is insured under it, is sufficient to cover the claim, which does arise out of the use of a nonowned automobile, the question becomes whether Delaware is insured under the PMA policy.
The accident occurred on September 23, 1963, at Which time Clyde A. Skinner (Skinner), a driver of a Niehaus truck, was injured. He had driven the truck to Delaware’s premises, where a Delaware employee, Arthur C. Scott, in the course of his employment, negligently operated a Delaware-owned fork-lift in unloading the Niehaus truck, and thereby injured Skinner.
Both Aetna and PMA agreed that Delaware became PMA’s insured under the PMA policy’s “omnibus clause”. That clause provided insurance for bodily injury “arising out of the . . . use of the automobile.” The unloading of the Niehaus truck was an insured use of the truck.
The question for this court is limited to whether the employee exclusion clause of the PMA policy excludes liability to an employee of Niehaus, the named insured, in an action against Delaware, the omnibus-insured. Exclusion (d) provides that the policy does not apply: “. . . to bodily injury ... of any employee of the insured ...” (Emphasis added). The dispute centers upon the meaning of “insured”. Appellee, PMA, contends that the exclusion applies, pointing to the definition of insured in the policy: “III. Definition of Insured: (a) With respect to the insurance for bodily injury liability . . . the unqualified word ‘insured’ includes the named insured.”
Aetna, on the other hand claims that “insured” in the employee exclusion must be confined to mean the particular insured claiming coverage, here Delaware. Since Skinner is not an employee of Delaware, the exclusionary clause would be inoperative, and PMA would be liable under the policy.
The court below held that employees of the named insured fall within the employee exclusion and accordingly found for the plaintiff, PMA. We affirm that decision.
We are not swayed by those views, for several reasons; ■ In the; first place, it is doubtful that, these industry. spokesmen • were really placing great emphasis upon the severability of interests clause, for they had adhered to the .same interpretation even before that clause was added. We might point out here that it-is somewhat incongruous that Aetna should, rely so heavily; on authorities .for whom the severability of interests clause is practically irrelevant, and at the same time place'much emphasis .on- subtle differences of language between -the instant clause and that in Great Am. Ins. Co. v. St. Farm. Mut. Automobile Ins. Co., 412 Pa. 538, 194 A. 2d 903 (1963).
■„ .Moreover, we . have .little fear of the chambers of horrors conjured up-by Norman Risjord, Aetna’s chief authority.. - He -seems to feel that a holding here that “insured” does indeed .include the named-insured will have- serious repercussions, in several other areas of automobile insurance law. Such an ominous reading of this decision would indeed, as Aetna says, fail to give - effect to; all of the. terms and conditions of the PMA policy,. thus violating accepted criteria for contract interpretation. However,, appellant misreads the impact of the lower court decision here. “The insured”- has not .been interpreted to mean “an insured” or/“any insured”., It has merely been interpreted as the language dictates, to include the named insured.
Neither the court below nor this court is reading the Severability of Interests clause out of the policy. What we are doing is interpreting the unambiguous language of the contract. That is one more reason why the interpretation of the insurance industry spokesmen does not sway us. As appellee points out, in Topkis v. Rosenzweig, 333 Pa. 529, 5 A. 2d 100 (1939), this court said: “It is settled that where the language of the policy is clear and unambiguous it cannot be construed to mean otherwise than what it says. It must be given the plain and ordinary meaning of the terms used: ...” When the language is “the unqualified word ‘insured’ includes the named insured”, there is no room to seek the interpretation of industry spokesmen.
Furthermore, were we to go outside the four corners of the instrument, just as reasonable a place to look would be the intention of the parties to the contract. Appellee makes the compelling argument that Niehaus, the named-insured, would not intend coverage for his employee in these circumstances. Niehaus had already covered his employees with a workmen’s compensation policy. It would be unreasonable for Niehaus to pay for duplicating coverage benefiting an unknown third person (Delaware).
Nor can we distinguish Great American and Patton on the basis of slightly different “Severability of Interest” clauses in the PMA policy and the State Farm policy involved in both earlier cases. The court below has noted the similarity of attack, on the applicability of Great American, in the instant case and in Patton. Both here and in Patton, the attack is predicated on policy language. Just as there the variation in omnibus clauses was called “a distinction without a legally significant difference”, Patton at 571, so too here the variation in severability of interests clauses is such a distinction without a difference. The important thing in all cases is the unambiguous language of the policy, “the unqualified word ‘insured’ includes the named insured.”
Both policy and precedent require the affirmation of the judgment.
Judgment affirmed.
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