Supreme Court of Canada
Stevenson v. Reliance Petroleum Ltd., [1956] S.C.R.
936
Date: 1956-10-24
R.C. Stevenson, C.A., as Attorney in Canada
for the Non-Marine Underwriters at Lloyds (Defendant) Appellant;
and
Reliance Petroleum
Limited (Plaintiff) Respondent.
and
Reliance Petroleum
Limited (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
Canadian General
Insurance Company (Defendant) Respondent.
1956: May 8, 9; 1956: October 24.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Insurance—Automobile liability policy—Loss
arising from “ownership, use or operation” of vehicle—Tank truck delivering
gasoline at service station—Negligence of driver.
Insurance—General liability policy—Express
exclusion of “claim arising or existing by reason of…any motor vehicle”—Meaning
and effect—Delivery of gasoline by tank truck—Negligence resulting in damage to
third persons.
A company engaged in the distribution of
petroleum products employed in that business tank trucks with which gasoline
and other products were delivered to service stations. While gasoline was being
delivered from one of these tank trucks it escaped as a result of the
negligence
[Page 937]
of the driver of the truck and caught fire,
and the fire caused extensive damage to the service station and to property of
other persons then on the premises. The company paid the claims of the persons
damaged, and then sought indemnity under two policies of insurance.
Held: The
company was entitled to recover under one policy, but not under the other.
The first policy, an automobile liability policy,
expressly insured against liability “arising from the ownership, use or
operation” of the vehicle, and the loss clearly arose from the “use” of the
tank truck within the meaning of the insuring clause. That term included not
only the transportation of the gasoline from the company’s premises to the
service station but also its delivery into the tanks at the service station. (Per
curiam.)
The second policy, however, was a general
liability policy, and specifically excluded “any claim arising or existing by
reason of... Any motor vehicle”. This must be taken to be an exclusion of
liability arising in any way from the ownership, use or operation of an
automobile, or precisely what was covered by the other policy. The exclusion
extended even to the finding that the truck driver had been negligent in not
ascertaining the quantity of gasoline already in the tank before starting to
deliver it, since this was merely a circumstance annexed to the act of
delivery. (Per Kerwin C.J. and Taschereau, Rand and Cartwright JJ.;
Locke J. contra.)
Per Locke J. (dissenting
in part): The loss was covered in part by the second policy as well
as the first. The risk covered by this policy was not defined by statute, and
the policy was to be construed contra proferentem. Anderson v. Fitzgerald, (1853), 4 H.L. Cas. 484 at 507, applied. The liability for the
negligent act of the driver fell squarely within the insuring clause and was
not excluded by the special exclusion, construed, as it should be, in the sense
in which the insured person might reasonably understand it; if the insurer had
intended to exclude this risk it should have done so in clear and unambiguous
terms, which admitted of no doubt. Life Association of Scotland v. Foster et al., (1873), 11 M. (Ct. of Sess.) 351 at 371; Provincial Insurance
Company, Limited v. Morgan et al., [1923] A.C. 240 at 250, referred to. The
insurer had therefore committed a breach of its contract in declining to
investigate the claims made against the insured, to conduct the defence of the
litigation and to pay the judgments up to the limits in the policy. The action
against this insurer was one for damages for breach of contract, and the
insurer’s conduct amounted in law to a waiver of its right to insist upon
compliance by the insured with the provisions of the contract as to admitting
liability or settling claims. Jureidini v. National British and Irish
Millers Insurance Company, Limited, [1915] A.C. 499 at 505, 507, applied.
APPEALS from the judgment of the Court of
Appeal for Ontario, on appeal from the
judgment of Spence J. in two
actions tried together.
[Page 938]
B.J. Thomson, Q.C., for the defendant
Stevenson, appellant.
W.G. Burke-Robertson, Q.C., for the
plaintiff, appellant and respondent.
R.F. Wilson, Q.C., for the defendant
Canadian General Insurance Company, respondent.
The judgment of Kerwin C.J. and Taschereau J.
was delivered by
THE CHIEF JUSTICE:—In the action by Reliance
Petroleum Limited against R.C. Stevenson, C.A., in his capacity as attorney in
Canada for the Non-Marine Underwriters at Lloyds, Spence J., the trial judge2
considered that the liability of Reliance for the negligence of their employee
Anstey arose out of the use of the tank truck and, therefore, the claim fell
within the following clause of the policy of insurance issued by Lloyds to
Reliance:—
The Insurer agrees to indemnify the
Insured...against the liability imposed by law upon the Insured. for loss or
damage arising from the ownership, use or operation of the automobile.
We are not concerned with the legislation
respecting automobile insurance, to which counsel for Lloyds referred, but with
the terms of the policy. There is no doubt on the evidence that Anstey was
negligent and that a liability was imposed by law upon Reliance for the loss or
damage detailed in the reasons for judgment in the Courts below. The tank
trucks, which admittedly were covered by the policy, were stated, in the
application therefor, to be used in the business of the insured, which was that
of distributing oil and gasoline. These tank trucks were not merely to
transport those products to service stations, but they were equipped so as to
permit the discharge of gasoline into the tanks in such stations through
faucets and hose. In the Court of Appeal
Roach J.A. considered that what was done in the present case fell as well
within the “operation” as the “use” of the tank truck and, in fact, that these
two terms were synonymous. With respect, I am unable to agree, as it must be
taken that the two words were inserted to denote different things and I am not
satisfied that “operation” by itself would be sufficient to cover the cir-
[Page 939]
cumstances with which we are dealing. However,
the liability imposed upon Reliance was for loss or damage arising from the
“use” of the tank truck and that is sufficient to warrant the dismissal of
Lloyds’ appeal with costs.
The appeal by Reliance against the dismissal by
the Court of Appeal of its action against Canadian General Insurance Company
raises different problems, only one of which, however, I find it necessary to
consider. That company had issued to Reliance what is called a “GENERAL PUBLIC
LIABILITY POLICY” and it is not suggested that the claims advanced by Reliance
fall within the terms of the policy itself, because it covered merely the liability
of Reliance for damages caused by bodily injury, sickness, or disease. In a
“PROPERTY DAMAGE ENDORSEMENT” attached to the policy it was stated that the
endorsement was issued “In consideration of an additional premium”, but the
body of the document shows that the additional premium was included in that
prescribed for the policy. By para. 1 of this endorsement the company agreed:—
To PAY on behalf of the Insured all sums
which the Insured shall become obligated to pay by reason of the liability
imposed upon the Insured by law, or assumed by the Insured under contract as
set forth hereinafter, for damages because of injury to or destruction of
property caused by accident occurring within the Policy Period and while this
Endorsement is in force.
However, this agreement was “subject to the
Statements, Exclusions and Special Conditions of the Policy” and in the policy,
under the heading “EXCLUSIONS”, appears the following:—
This Policy shall have no application with
respect to and shall not extend to nor cover any claim arising or existing by
reason of any of the following matters:
* *
*
3. Any motor vehicle (including trailer or
semi-trailer) that is required by law to have a license or permit, and which is
off premises owned, rented or controlled by the Named Insured, or which is
owned, hired or leased by the Insured, and, except with respect to operation by
independent contractors, the ownership, maintenance or use, including loading
or unloading, of any (a) watercraft while away from such premises or (b) aircraft.
Differing from Lloyds’ policy, which was a
standard automobile insurance policy, the “PROPERTY DAMAGE ENDORSEMENT” of
Canadian General Insurance Company when read, as it must be, subject to
exclusion no. 3, was not to cover the insurance of automobiles, but other forms
of
[Page 940]
public liability. In fact the very kind of
insurance covered by Lloyds for “loss or damage arising from the ownership,
use, or operation of the automobile” is clearly and specifically excepted from
the risk undertaken by Canadian General Insurance Company.
The appeal by Reliance should be dismissed with
costs.
RAND J.:—The questions on this appeal are
whether the loss suffered is within the general public liability policy of the
respondent Canadian General Insurance Company, or within the motor vehicle
liability policy of the appellant Lloyds, or both; but notwithstanding
Mr. Thomson’s comprehensive argument I am of the opinion that the judgment
of the Court of Appeal was
right.
His first contention is that the damage did not
arise from the “use” of the automobile as that word appears in Lloyds’ policy:
The Insurer agrees to indemnify the
Insured...against the liability imposed by law upon the Insured...for loss or
damage arising from the ownership, use or operation of the automobile within Canada...
The main ground is that what was present was not
negligence in any function attributable to an automobile: it was negligence in
a function added to but distinct from that of an automobile, that is, the
discharge of gasoline into the tank of a service station: the want of care of
an employee in the course of work dissociated from operation or use of the
truck. He classified what was being done with a number of examples of similar
non-automobile uses of such a vehicle: receiving visitors on a home trailer
while stationary; using spray-painting equipment set up on and moved from place
to place on a truck; a circus truck carrying a cage from which a lion escapes
and does mischief; a peanut or like familiar stand set up in a truck and
disposing of its wares at different places. These can, no doubt, be described
as separate and distinct in their nature and purpose from that of the
automobile; the use of the truck can properly be differentiated from the
function of the apparatus or means conveyed; but the question is whether we
have here such a severable activity.
[Page 941]
Was the negligence of the employee in the course
of work other than that of his operation or use of the truck? What was the
undertaking entered upon by means of the truck? It was to carry gasoline
products for delivery at filling stations, not merely to carry; delivery was as
much a part of what was being done by means of the truck as the carriage.
Did the fire, then, result from negligence in
delivering the gasoline? I cannot see how that can be seriously doubted. For
negligence we must have human action: the truck is not “self‑operating”
or “self-using”; “use” implies human direction and utilization of a means; it
is the combination of the two that constitutes the act to which innocence or
negligence is to be imputed. That is the act intended to be embraced by the
language of the clause. Here the overflow was physically the direct result of
the pressure from the oil in the tank truck which was then under the control of
the driver. His failure to ascertain the capacity of the underground tank and
to remain at the truck faucet or closing valve constituted negligence in
relation to the use of the truck in discharging the gasoline. That was part of
the function of the tank truck and does not come within the class of
differentiated uses mentioned.
An analogous “use”, as distinguished from
“operation”, is exemplified in the case of a bus. The undertaking in such a
case includes the entrance and exit to and from the bus of passengers. If the
steps are defective and a passenger is injured, could it be said that injury
did not arise out of the “use”? The expression “use or operation” would or
should, in my opinion, convey to one reading it all accidents resulting from
the ordinary and well-known activities to which automobiles are put, all
accidents which the common judgment in ordinary language would attribute to the
utilization of an automobile as a means of different forms of accommodation or
service. It may be said that in these instances “use” and “operation” are
equivalents: but the statute uses both words and meaning can be given to each
in this manner where the “use” is that in fact of the automobile.
[Page 942]
Canadian General Insurance Company claimed
exemption on two grounds, but I find it necessary to deal with one only. Its
general contract is to indemnify the insured against liability imposed by law
for damages to property “caused by accident”. The exclusion is in this
language:
This Policy shall have no application with
respect to and shall not extend to nor cover any claim arising or existing by
reason of any of the following matters:
* *
*
3. Any motor vehicle... which is owned,
hired or leased by the Insured.
I agree with Roach J.A. that damage from
accident arising by reason of “any motor vehicle” includes the damage done
here. That phrase contemplates damage done by such a vehicle in use or
operation within the scope and course of its ordinary functions. Here the
insured is engaged in selling gasoline and other automobile supplies and in
delivering them by means of tank trucks, a commercial activity that has become
of wide dimensions. What the clause aims at is to exclude from its coverage the
area of automobile insurance and to embrace public liability arising from other
causes than automobiles. It is expressed in broad but unambiguous language
which is to be interpreted in the light of the common knowledge of this new
feature of our social condition.
But “use”, it is argued, is to be distinguished
from “operation”; that the condition of this exclusion, being in derogation of
the general language of liability, must be confined to the narrowest common
function of automobiles which the trial judge found to be “operation”. The
words can, obviously, be given distinct meaning by limiting the scope of
“operation” to the mere locomotion of the vehicle, and attributing to “use” the
discharge of the gasoline. But this limitation must be rejected because of the
associated language and because of its overriding implication involving all
liability related to an automobile. The fact that in the statutes of Ontario
automobile insurance is dealt with in a most particularized manner must be kept
in mind when we are dealing with insurances against public liability and the
presence of such an exclusion.
I have not overlooked the finding of the Court
of Appeal that the truck driver was negligent in not measuring the depth of
gasoline in the tank before commencing to deliver.
[Page 943]
But, just as the failure to remain at the truck
during the discharge, that was merely a circumstance annexed to his act of
delivery; the cause of the disaster was the unattended discharge into an
unexamined tank, a composite negligent act in the operation of the truck.
I would, therefore, dismiss the appeal with
costs.
LOCKE J. (dissenting in part):—These two
appeals were heard together and were taken from two judgments of the Court of
Appeal for Ontario, one of
which dismissed the appeal of the appellant Stevenson from the judgment of
Spence J. at the trial, the
other allowed the appeal of the respondent Canadian General Insurance Company
from a judgment of that learned judge delivered at the same time. As the
evidence as to the occurrence which gave rise to the claims was equally
applicable to both actions, they were, by consent, tried together.
The actions were brought upon policies of
insurance issued by the Non-Marine Underwriters at Lloyds and by Canadian
General Insurance Company, and the questions to be determined are as to the
construction of the language of these policies. It is, however, necessary to
consider the evidence to assist in determining these questions of construction.
Reliance Petroleum Limited is a distributor of
oil and oil products in London, Ontario, and makes its deliveries of gasoline
to service stations in that vicinity in tank trucks. On September 1, 1951,
Ronald Riddell, the operator of a service station rented by him from the
Reliance company, ordered by telephone a quantity of standard and ethyl
gasoline. Anstey, an employee of the Reliance company, drove one of its
gasoline trucks, which carried five tanks, to the service station to make the
delivery. The tanks carried on the truck were each equipped with faucets to
which a hose might be connected for delivering the gas into underground tanks.
These faucets were operated by a spring mechanism so designed that it was
necessary to hold them open while gas flowed from the tank by the force of
gravity. After delivering the 200 gallons of ethyl gasoline which had been
ordered, Anstey connected the hose to the faucet of
[Page 944]
a tank carrying standard gasoline, of which,
according to him, Riddell had ordered 400 gallons. Without measuring the
quantity of gasoline in the underground tank to which the delivery was being
made, he then, instead of remaining at the faucet, as required by the
regulations made under The Gasoline Handling Act, R.S.O. 1950, c. 156,
placed a stick, carried by him on the truck for the purpose, in such a manner
as to keep the spring mechanism of the faucet open, and left the truck
apparently for the purpose of obtaining payment for the gasoline being
delivered. While he was thus absent, due to the fact that the underground tank
already contained more gasoline than Anstey had thought, it overflowed.
Gasoline spreading into the garage on the service station property and then
igniting caused extensive damage.
Actions to recover damages for loss sustained
were brought against the Reliance company by five persons who had personal
property on the premises, by the owner of the service station property and by
Riddell, and judgments were recovered which, with costs, totalled $15,498.40.
In addition, the company incurred legal costs in connection with the actions
totalling $934.70.
Both Lloyds and Canadian General Insurance
Company took the attitude that the Reliance company was not insured against
this risk by their respective policies. Lloyds, while disputing liability,
entered into the usual non-waiver agreement with the Reliance company and took
part in negotiations for settlement of the claims and in the defence of the
actions that were brought. Canadian General Insurance Company, however,
declined to take any part in the matter, preferring to stand upon the ground
that its policy did not insure risks of this nature.
While the learned trial judge did not
specifically so find, it is implicit in the reasons for judgment delivered by
him that he considered Anstey’s conduct negligent and as having at least
contributed to the loss sustained. The judgment of the Court of Appeal,
delivered by Roach J.A., found in terms that Anstey had been negligent in
allowing the gasoline to spill out on the surface of the area and in failing,
as required by regulations made under The Gasoline Handling Act, to
remain in constant, uninterrupted control of the spring faucet at the rear of
the tank truck. Apart
[Page 945]
from the regulations, the learned judge said
that a common law duty rested upon Anstey to use consummate care in handling
the gasoline and that he had failed in that duty.
The policies differ in their nature and must be
considered separately. The policy issued by Lloyds had originally been issued
through their representative in Canada to McManus Petroleums Limited of London
on October 27, 1948, and continued by renewal certificates in the name of
Reliance Petroleum Limited. The last of these which continued the policy in
force was dated October 27, 1950.
The policy as originally issued was the standard
owner’s form of automobile insurance approved by the Superintendent of
Insurance for use in Ontario, and by the renewal certificate, all its terms,
provisions and conditions were continued in force for the period of a year.
Apparently no new application was taken from the Reliance company, the renewal
certificates stating that the insured, by accepting the certificate, renewed
and reaffirmed as of the date of the renewal the statements in the signed
application in the policy that was renewed. The business of McManus Petroleums
Limited was described in the application made by it as gas and oil
distributors, and in answer to the question as to the purpose to which the
insured automobiles would be chiefly used, the answer made was “Incidental to
Insured’s Business”. No description of the vehicles intended to be insured
appears in the material filed at the trial, the application referring to a
“fleet schedule attached”. It is, however, common ground that the insured
vehicles described in the schedule included tank trucks of the nature of the
one driven by Anstey and that it was one of those intended to be covered.
The policy, as required by s. 207 of The
Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1950, c. 183, insured, inter alia, the owner
against the liability imposed by law upon it for loss or damage arising from
the ownership, use or operation of the automobile within Canada resulting from
damage to property. The question is as to whether the liability of the Reliance
company for Anstey’s negligent act is covered by this language.
[Page 946]
Spence J. was of the view that it arose out of
the use of the tank truck and so the risk was insured. Roach J.A. considered
that it fell within both the words “use” and “operation”.
The argument addressed to us on behalf of
Lloyds, put briefly, is that the history of the Ontario legislation regarding
automobile insurance since it was first referred to by that name in c. 30 of
the statutes of 1914, and the changes made since that time by the introduction
of the financial responsibility provisions in 1930, when the words “ownership,
maintenance, use or operation” first appeared, show that it was the intention
to provide the forms of policies designed to insure against an automobile
accident in the commonly conceived sense of that expression and to provide
indemnity which would be available to persons injured or for damage occasioned
by the operation of the automobile as a means of transport on the highways and
elsewhere. This, it is contended, indicates that neither the expression
“operation” nor “use” was intended to apply to an occurrence such as this where
the vehicle was stationary and the negligence was in the operation of the
faucet designed to permit the discharge of gasoline from the tanks.
This contention has been most ably advanced by
Mr. Thomson but I am unable to accept it. It is the insuring contract and
not the statute that we are required to construe. The meaning of these words is
not to be considered standing alone but in the context in which they are
employed in the contract and effect is to be given to the intention of the
parties collected from their expression of it as a whole.
The policy was issued in acceptance of the
application and the application was, by its terms, made part of the contract of
insurance. The tank trucks insured were, as stated in the application, to be
used in the business of the insured, which was stated to be that of
distributing oil and gas. These tank trucks were designed both as a means of
transporting, inter alia, gasoline to filling stations and also
discharging the material into tanks through the faucets and connecting hose. In
my view, the operation of manipulating the faucets for the purpose of
permitting the gasoline to flow from the tank truck to the underground tank at
the
[Page 947]
filling station was a use of the truck, within
the meaning of the insuring clause in the contract, equally as the transport
from the premises of the insured to the filling station was within that
expression.
Canadian General Insurance Company’s policy,
described on its face as a “General Public Liability Policy”, was issued to the
Reliance Company on June 22, 1950. By the policy itself, as distinct from the
property damage endorsement attached to it, the insurer agreed to indemnify the
insured to the extent provided against damages because of bodily injury,
sickness or disease as set forth in the insuring agreements, subject to certain
exclusions and special conditions. One of the exclusions read:—
This Policy shall have no application with
respect to and shall not extend to nor cover any claim arising or existing by
reason of any of the following matters:
* *
*
3. Any motor vehicle (including trailer or
semi-trailer) that is required by law to have a license or permit, and which is
off premises owned, rented or controlled by the Named Insured, or which is
owned, hired or leased by the Insured, and, except with respect to operation by
independent contractors, the ownership, maintenance or use, including loading
or unloading, of any (a) watercraft while away from such premises or (b)
aircraft.
By the policy, the insurer further agreed to pay
on behalf of the insured all sums which it should become obligated to pay by
reason of the liability imposed upon the insured by law for damages because of
bodily injury, sickness or disease, including death, at any time resulting
therefrom caused by events occurring within the policy period and suffered or
alleged to have been suffered by any person or persons, to serve the insured by
the investigation of any such claims and to defend in its name on its behalf
any suit claiming damages on account of such injuries. By the special
conditions the insured was required to give the insurer notice of any such
claim and the insurer was entitled to determine whether it should be settled or
litigated. It was further provided that the insured should not voluntarily
assume or acknowledge any liability or interfere in any negotiation or legal
proceeding conducted by the insurer on account of any claim, nor, except at its
own expense, settle any claim. Compliance with these conditions was stated to
be a condition precedent to the obligation of the insurer to indemnify the insured.
[Page 948]
The property damage endorsement made “subject to
the Statements, Exclusions and Special Conditions of the Policy” obligated the
insurer to pay all sums which the insured should become obligated to pay
by reason of the liability imposed upon the
Insured by law for damages because of injury to or destruction of property
caused by accident occurring within the Policy Period and while this
Endorsement is in force.
The obligation of the insurer to serve the
insured by the investigation of claims and to defend actions against the
insured, as contained in the policy itself, was repeated. A further clause in
the endorsement, so far as it concerns the present matter, read:—
This Endorsement shall have no application
with respect to and shall not extend to nor cover any claim for injury to or
destruction of (a) property owned or occupied by or leased to the Insured.
The property occupied by Riddell as a service
station was in November 1950, owned by John J. Gardiner and Leona Gardiner and
leased by them to the Reliance company for a term of 5 years. The property,
together with the buildings erected upon it and certain equipment used in the
operation of the filling station, was in turn sublet by the Reliance company to
Ronald E. Riddell by a lease which was in effect at the time the fire occurred.
The actions brought were compromised by the
Reliance company, with the approval of Lloyds but without the approval of
Canadian General Insurance Company, for amounts which were found by the learned
trial judge to have been reasonable. In some of the cases, evidence was taken
at a trial and liability found. In others, apparently liability was admitted
and judgment entered for the amount agreed upon. These judgments were paid by
the Reliance company before the present actions were commenced.
It is contended by Canadian General Insurance
Company that the insured did not comply with the conditions of the policy above
referred to, requiring it to refrain from acknowledging any liability or
interfering in any negotiations for settlement of claims and from paying claims
the extent of which had not been finally determined by judgment after an actual
trial of the issue of negligence. The learned trial judge considered that this
defence was not open to the insurance company, a conclusion with which I
respectfully agree.
[Page 949]
While Canadian General Insurance Company did not
repudiate the policy by contending that the risk had never attached, it took
the attitude that the damages caused or contributed to by Anstey’s negligence
did not fall within the terms of the contract. In my opinion, this position is
untenable. If, as I think to be the case, the risk was insured, the insuring
company committed a breach of its contract in declining to investigate the
claims, to conduct the defence of the litigation and to pay the judgments to
the extent the policy provided. The action is one for damages for breach of the
contract and, in my opinion, the conduct of the insuring company amounted in law
to a waiver of its right to insist upon compliance by the insured in these
respects with the terms of the contract, as was found in similar circumstances
by the Supreme Court of the United States in St. Louis Dressed Beef and
Provision Company v. Maryland Casualty Company. The legal consequences of the action of
the insuring company in this matter do not differ in this respect, in my
opinion, from that resulting from the repudiation of liability based upon
charges of fraud and arson considered in Jureidini v. National British and
Irish Millers Insurance Company, Limited.
I refer to the judgments of Viscount Haldane L.C. at p. 505 and of Lord Dunedin
at p. 507.
The language of exclusion 3 has quite
understandably given rise to a difference of opinion. Spence J. considered that
the purpose of the policy was to insure losses due to accidents in the general
conduct of the business of the insured and that a loss due to the exploding or
igniting of petroleum products was a loss within the contemplation of both
parties. Roach J.A., saying that there could never be an accident “caused by”
the mere existence of a motor vehicle, considered that what was intended to be
excluded was an accident caused by the negligent use or operation of a motor
vehicle and that this was such an accident.
It is to be remembered that, unlike the form of
policy issued by Lloyds, the risk to be insured by this policy was not defined
by statute. The wording of the policy is that of the insurance company and it
is to be construed, in my opinion, contra proferentem: Anderson v.
Fitzgerald.
[Page 950]
The language of the property damage endorsement
forming part, according to the company’s own designation, of a general public
liability policy whereby it agreed to pay on behalf of the insured all sums
which the latter should become obligated to pay by reason of the liability
imposed by law because of injury to or destruction of property caused by
accident, is clear. The exclusion is expressed in a most unfortunate manner. It
refers to a claim arising “by reason of any motor vehicle, required by law to
have a license, which is owned by the Insured”. Here, as found by the Court of
Appeal, Anstey was negligent in allowing the gasoline to spill out on the
surface of the area, in failing to remain in control of the spring faucet and
in failing to use consummate care in handling the gasoline. It was shown by the
evidence that before opening the faucet he failed to ascertain by the use of a
dip-stick the quantity of gasoline already in the tank, and it was his failure
to do this which apparently led him to think that he could leave the spring
faucet held open by a piece of wood and go into the service station to discuss
business with Riddell. This act of negligence was one of the causes of the
accident: the breach of The Gasoline Handling Act was another.
The liability for this negligent act appears to
me to fall squarely within the insuring clause in the endorsement and not to be
excluded by exclusion 3, which is an exception from liability and is to be
construed in the sense in which the insured person might reasonably understand
it: Life Association of Scotland v. Foster et al. In Provincial Insurance Company,
Limited v. Morgan et al., Lord
Russell of Killowen said that the printed forms which insurance companies offer
for acceptance to the insuring public should state in clear and unambiguous
terms the events upon which the insuring company will escape liability under
the policy, and that these exceptions should be expressed in words which do not
admit of doubt. It would, in my opinion, be giving a strained and quite
unwarranted construction to the words “any claim arising by reason of any motor
vehicle” as including negligent acts such as
[Page 951]
failing to ascertain the amount of gasoline in
the tank in advance of opening the faucet and in failing otherwise to exercise
the requisite degree of care, as found by Roach J.A.
In view of the conclusion of the Court of Appeal
that the risk was not insured by reason of exclusion 3, the question as to whether
any of the claims were affected by the provision of the endorsement excluding
claims for destruction of property leased to the insured was not considered.
The learned trial judge was of the view that this should be construed as
referring only to property occupied by or under the control of the insured and
that, as the service station had been sublet to Riddell, this did not apply. I
am unable, with great respect, to agree with this. The claim of Gardiner which
was compromised for a total payment of $7,112.50 was for the damage caused to
the property leased to the Reliance company for a term of 5 years from November
1, 1950, and the fact that it was thereafter sublet to Riddell does not, in my
opinion, affect the matter. The language of the endorsement appears to me to be
clear and unambiguous.
I would allow the appeal of the Reliance company
as against Canadian General Insurance Company and direct that judgment be
entered for the amounts found payable at the trial in respect of the claims
other than that of Gardiner, with costs throughout against that company. I
would dismiss the appeal of Lloyds with costs.
CARTWRIGHT J.:—The nature of these appeals and
the facts relevant to their determination are set out in the reasons of my
brother Locke. I agree with the conclusion, which has been reached in the first
appeal by my brother Locke, the Court of Appeal and the learned trial judge,
that the liability imposed by law upon Reliance Petroleum Limited for the
losses sustained by the seven persons set out in para. 5 of the statement of
claim arose from the use of the insured tank truck, and I do not find it
necessary to decide whether it arose also from its operation. I agree that the
appeal must be dismissed with costs.
[Page 952]
In the appeal of Reliance Petroleum Limited
against Canadian General Insurance Company I find it necessary to consider only
one of the defences raised, i.e.,that the appellant’s claim is excluded
by the terms of exclusion 3 contained in the policy.
The relevant words of the policy setting out the
respondent’s agreement to pay are as follows:—
...the Insurer...subject to the Statements,
Exclusions and Special Conditions of the policy...agrees with the Insured…
To PAY on behalf of the Insured all sums
which the Insured shall become obligated to pay by reason of the liability
imposed upon the Insured by law...for damages because of injury to or
destruction of property caused by accident occurring within the Policy Period
and while this Endorsement is in force.
The words relied upon as excluding the
appellant’s claim are as follows:—
This Policy shall have no application with
respect to and shall not extend to nor cover any claim arising or existing by
reason of any...motor vehicle...owned...by the Insured.
I have already indicated my agreement with the
unanimous opinion in the Courts below that the liability of the appellant for
which it claims indemnity under the policy arose from the use of the tank truck
owned by it. The tank truck is a motor vehicle. But for the fact that contrary
opinions have been expressed in this case I would have thought it clear that
the words “any claim arising or existing by reason of any motor vehicle” in
their ordinary sense include a claim arising from the negligent use of a motor
vehicle. Indeed the words quoted seem to me to be at least as comprehensive as
those of the insuring agreement in the standard form of owner’s policy,
“arising from the ownership, use or operation of the automobile.” I do not
think that in ordinary speech it would be said that a claim arising from the
ownership or from the use or from the operation of a motor vehicle did not
arise or exist by reason of a motor vehicle. So to hold would, I think, render
the clause meaningless, and it is a fundamental rule that in construing an
instrument effect must as far as possible be given to every clause.
[Page 953]
The rule expressed in the maxim, verba
fortius accipiuntur contra proferentem, was pressed upon us in argument,
but resort is to be had to this rule only when all other rules of construction
fail to enable the Court of construction to ascertain the meaning of a
document.
It was suggested that one of the grounds on
which Reliance Petroleum Limited was found liable for the damages caused was
the negligent failure of its employee to measure the depth of gasoline in the
tank before commencing delivery and that a claim resulting from such negligence
does not fall within the words of exclusion quoted above. As to this I agree
with the view expressed by my brother Rand that this omission and the omission
to remain at the truck during the discharge of gasoline were merely
circumstances annexed to the delivery. They were the circumstances which
rendered the use made of the tank truck a negligent one.
A motor vehicle was the instrument by the
negligent use of which the damages were inflicted and in my opinion the claims
for those damages arose by reason of the motor vehicle.
As already mentioned, the conclusion at which I
have arrived as to the construction of the exclusion makes it unnecessary for
me to consider the other grounds submitted by Mr. Wilson in support of the
judgment of the Court of Appeal.
I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
Appeals dismissed with costs, LOCKE J.
dissenting in part.
Solicitors for the plaintiff, respondent
and appellant: Ivey, Livermore & Dowler, London.
Solicitors for the defendant Stevenson,
appellant: Haines, Thomson, Rogers, Benson, Howie & Freeman, Toronto.
Solicitors for the defendant Canadian
General Insurance Company, respondents: Day, Wilson, Kelly, Martin & Morden,
Toronto.