Source: http://courts.mrsc.org/appellate/005wnapp/005wnapp0871.htm
Timestamp: 2019-04-22 04:32:24+00:00

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JOAN KIECKER et al., Respondents, v. PACIFIC INDEMNITY COMPANY, Appellant.
 Appeal and Error - Oral Decision and Memorandum Opinion - Consideration on Appeal. When there are no factual findings in support of a trial court's conclusion, a reviewing court may look to other sources in the record, such as the oral opinion, to ascertain the factual basis for the conclusion.
 Insurance - Construction of Policy - Rules of Construction. Insurance contracts are to be construed liberally in favor of the insured.
 Insurance - Aviation Insurance - Flight by Certified Pilot - During Repair. For purposes of a policy of aviation insurance, flight by a "properly certified pilot in the course of employment by a repair station" encompasses a pilot, whether an employee or an independent contractor, flying at the instance of a repair station.
 Judgment - Res Judicata - Identity of Parties. A judgment is not res judicata nor is a party collaterally estopped by a judgment in an earlier case if there is no identity or privity of parties in the same antagonistic relation as in the decided action.
 Civil Procedure - Pleading - Amendment - Review. Once a responsive pleading has been served a motion to amend a pleading or to seek additional relief under CR 15(a) is entrusted to the discretion of the trial court and will only be set aside for an abuse thereof.
Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court for King County, No. 703259, F. A. Walterskirchen, J., entered April 27, 1970. Affirmed.
Action on an insurance contract. Defendant appeals from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs.
DeGarmo, Leedy, Oles & Morrison and David L. Ashbaugh, for appellant.
Hilyer-Levinski, by Gale P. Hilyer, Jr., for respondents.
an adverse judgment determining it to be liable for damages sustained to an airplane under a hull insurance policy. A $3,466.50 judgment was entered for plaintiffs.
This litigation had its genesis in a small plug which was used prior to each flight to drain sediment and condensation from the fuel tanks of a 1947 Navion airplane. On July 12, 1968, one Pieter Blood, a pilot and mechanic who had been working on the airplane, desired to take it up for 'a test flight. Blood had done some work on the retractable landing gear which had not been working properly and wanted to ascertain if it had been fixed. Since he was not familiar with the 1947 Navion, he requested Bruce Haskins, who owned and was familiar with a Navion, to pilot it on the test flight and at the same time check Blood out in the airplane.
Once aloft, after a careful preflight check, the landing gear was put down and then was put into the up position (i.e., cycled). It was discovered that the gear was still not functioning properly. In an effort to ascertain what was wrong, or to correct it, the gear was cycled many times. Meanwhile, as indicated by a post-accident examination of the airplane, unknown to Haskins or Blood, the plug in the bottom of the fuel tanks had shaken loose, and fuel was steadily streaming out of the underside of the plane. Shortly thereafter, the engine quit and Haskins, after a fruitless attempt at restarting the engine, elected to force land the airplane in a blueberry patch where it suffered extensive damage.
The airplane was owned by the late husband of Mrs. Kiecker. After her husband's death, Mrs. Kiecker attempted to sell it. Mrs. Kiecker of San Diego, California, is the sister of Laverne Simmons of Seattle. Simmons, along with Albert Levinski and William Christie, both Seattle lawyers, expressed interest in jointly buying the airplane under a corporation to be formed and named Zero Happy, Inc. Pieter Blood was also to be given an ownership interest in return for doing work on the plane.
buyers and checked out personally by Blood. Mrs. Kiecker had at that time tentatively been offered $4,500 for the craft, apparently on the condition that it checked out properly. Subsequent to the airplane leaving California, but prior to the crash, a petition and order confirming the private sale of the airplane for $4,500 was entered by the California court in probate proceedings. It does not appear that respondents were given notice of or were in any way parties to this proceeding. Mrs. Kiecker claimed the order was obtained by her attorney without her knowledge or consent.
After the airplane had been in Seattle for 2 weeks, but before the crash, Simmons, Levinski, and Christie put $4,500 in escrow with a Seattle attorney to placate Mrs. Kiecker's concern about the money and to show that they were "solid people." However, according to the testimony of all the buyers, the sale had not yet been finalized, as they were still in the process of checking out the mechanical soundness of the airplane. After the crash, the buyers took an assignment of Mrs. Kiecker's cause of action against the insurance company and released the $4,500 to her.
«1» The policy provided that no coverage is afforded "[t]o any aircraft subject to any lien, conditional sale, mortgage . . . not specifically declared and described in this policy." The policy also provided that no assignment of the policy should bind the company until its consent thereto was given.
basis for providing a remedy. RCW 62A.2-204. A sale occurs and ownership transfers in the traditional sense upon passage of the title under the provisions of RCW 62A.2-401. See RCW 62A.2-106. However, the risk of loss may pass to the purchaser prior to the time title passes. RCW 62A.2-509.
It is implicit in both RCW 62A.2-401 and RCW 62A.2-509 that neither the title nor risk of loss can pass prior to the time there is a contract of sale. Since the trial court could have found, and we think did find, no contract of sale was created, we need not decide whether it is the creation of a contract of sale, passage of title, or the shifting of the risk of loss that controls the existence of coverage under the insurance policy.
The fact that Mrs. Kiecker was paid off by these three gentlemen without any demurrer or anything, is no indication that they had elected to purchase.
This was a matter of a brother dealing with a sister and his two friends going along with him. The court, in effect, found there was no contract of sale, and we think this is supported by substantial evidence. Thorndike v. Hesperian Orchards, Inc., 54 Wn.2d 570, 343 P.2d 183 (1959).
malfunction might cost $2,000 to correct. The testimony does not compel a finding that a contract of sale existed as a matter of law.
The policy provided that for coverage to be afforded, the plane should be piloted by a private or commercial pilot with a minimum of "1,000 hours logged solo flying time or pilot in command," or by any properly certified pilot in the course of his employment by a repair station "provided that such in-flight operations are solely in connection with inspections or repairs to be or that have been performed and are specifically authorized by a mechanic properly certified by the FAA to make said inspections and repairs."
It appeared from the evidence that Haskins, the pilot in command at the time of the crash, did not have 1,000 hours of flight time which he had logged. Appellant contends that Haskins was not flying the plane in the course of employment by Blood, but, rather, that Haskins was an independent contractor under the tests set forth in Hollingbery v. Dunn, 68 Wn.2d 75, 411 P.2d 431 (1966), and that consequently there was no coverage because the pilot did not qualify under any of the provisions of the contract.
relationship. Consequently, we believe there is no question substantial evidence of an employment relationship exists.
[2,3] However, even if there were no substantial evidence of an employment relationship, the trial court's determination that the policy covered the airplane at the time of the crash would still be proper. Insurance contracts are to be construed liberally in favor of the insured. Davis v. North American Accident Ins. Co., 42 Wn.2d 291, 254 P.2d 722 (1953); Hamilton Trucking Serv., Inc. v. Automobile Ins. Co., 39 Wn.2d 688, 237 P.2d 781 (1951). In the instant case, we do not think "employment" as used in the contract must take on the technical meaning given to that term for purposes of vicarious liability; if the contract were interpreted in this manner no coverage would be provided if a repair station contracted out test flying to an independent contractor. Neither policy nor common sense supports such a result, so we are constrained to view the policy most strongly in favor of the insured, and construe the reference to flight by a "properly certified pilot in the course of his employment by . . . a repair station," to encompass a pilot, whether an employee or independent contractor, flying the craft at the instance of a repair station for purposes "solely in connection with inspection or repairs." Such a construction, it seems to us, would be most consistent with the intent to provide coverage during test flights by repair facilities irrespective of the total number of hours the pilot in command had logged. While the plain, explicit language of the policy cannot be disregarded (Davis v. North American Accident Ins. Co., supra), we do not think that construing "employment" in its generic nonlegal sense, rather than in its technical legal sense, does so.
As a related matter, appellant contends the flight was not solely in connection with "inspections or repairs" since one of the purposes of the flight was to check Blood out in the aircraft. The court was entitled to infer that checking out Blood, the mechanic, in the airplane so he might pilot the craft on later test flights was solely in "connection with inspections and repairs."
 It is argued that the assignment of Mrs. Kiecker's cause of action was invalid inasmuch as language in the policy prohibited an assignment of an interest in the policy without the company's consent endorsed On the policy. Davis v. Oregon Mut. Ins. Co., 71 Wn.2d 579, 429 P.2d 886 (1967). While this may be proper law in some factual circumstances, it does not apply to this case. After a loss has occurred and rights under the policy have accrued, an assignment may be made without the consent of the insurer, even though the policy prohibits assignments. That assignment is not treated as a transfer of the policy itself, but rather as a chose in action. Davies v. Maryland Cas. Co., 89 Wash. 571, 154 P. 1116, 155 P. 1035, 1916D L.R.A. 395 (1916), rev 'd on other grounds; Luger v. Windell, 116 Wash. 375, 380, 199 P. 760, 37 A.L.R. 641 (1921); 7 J. Appleman, Insurance, Law & Practice § 4269 (1962); G. Couch, Insurance § 63.2 (2d ed. 1966).
final decree. Under these circumstances, the court held he was bound by the decree. While our court has recognized that decrees of superior courts, exercising jurisdiction in probate matters, are to be accorded the same full faith and credit as judgments in law or decrees in equity, they have premised their action on the fact that the parties bound are parties to the probate proceedings. Wagner v. Alderson, 91 Wash. 157, 157 P. 476 (1916); In re Estate of Rynning, 1 Wn. App. 565,462 P.2d 952 (1969). There is no such showing in this case, and the decree of the California court is of no effect as to respondents.
 Appellant next contends it was error for the trial court to enter a declaratory judgment to the effect that Blood and Haskins were not negligent. The appellant had filed a third party complaint against Blood and Haskins alleging their negligence and seeking subrogation of appellant's liability, if any. At trial, the appellant took a voluntary nonsuit, and respondents then moved to amend the complaint to include a declaratory action to determine Blood's and Haskins' negligence. The motion was granted, and judgment was later entered declaring the pilots not negligent. It is contended by appellant the trial judge erred in allowing the complaint to be amended so as to pray for declaratory relief. However, a motion to amend a pleading or to seek additional relief is entrusted to the discretion of the trial court and will only be set aside for an abuse thereof. CR 15(a); Quackenbush v. State, 72 Wn.2d 670, 434 P.2d 736 (1967); General Indus., Inc. v. Eriksson, 2 Wn. App. 228, 467 P.2d 321 (1970). We cannot say the trial judge abused his discretion in allowing the complaint to be amended, thus settling the dispute and avoiding the possibility of another lawsuit.
and received $4,500), and that the policy, by its own tens, provided no coverage for the remainder of its term (roughly 6 months).
Respondents request damages be awarded them under CAROA 62 for appellant's "delaying tactics" and "obvious bad faith." An examination of the record fails to establish bad faith. Garcia v. Moran, 194 Wash. 328, 77 P.2d 988 (1938).
HOROWITZ, C.J., and WILLIAMS, J., concur.

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