Court Opinion

ID: 9883304
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-10-06 01:39:50.97487+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:48:22.550420
License: Public Domain

*381THORNTON, J.
This action at law, brought by plaintiff insurer for declaratory relief, was tried to the court. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment determining that defendant Ryder was covered under his father’s automobile liability insurance policy.
The sole issue on this appeal is whether the trial court erred in finding that Ryder was a "relative * * * who is a permanent resident of the same household” as his father, and thus entitled to coverage under the non-owned automobile provision of his father’s "Family Automobile Policy.”1
Prior to graduating from high school, Ryder resided with his father and brother in the family home in Grants Pass. In the summer of 1975, Ryder, age 19, decided to enroll at Lane Community College in Eugene, where he hoped to gain a position on the college baseball team. Arriving in Eugene too late to begin the fall term, he returned to Grants Pass and discussed with his father the possibility of living in an apartment in Eugene in order to avoid out-of-district tuition for the winter term. Consequently, he moved to Eugene and occupied his time during the fall by practicing with the college baseball team. His father sent *382him money to help with his living expenses. In January he registered for classes at Lane and continued in school until the end of the term. Unable to find a summer job in Grants Pass, Ryder went to Wallowa, Oregon, to take a job. He intended to return to college at the end of the summer. He considered his father’s home as his residence and left his possessions there. He often returned to Grants Pass for holidays, and a bedroom was kept available for his use. In applying for the insurance policy in issue, defendant Ryder’s father listed himself as the only driver of the automobile, and listed as members of his household only his unlicensed daughter, age 16, to be excluded.
On June 18, 1976, an accident occurred in which defendant Childers was seriously injured. The automobile involved in the accident was owned by Chil-ders, but was being driven with his permission by Ryder.
The question of whether a person is a resident of the household of a named insured has continued to be treated by our Supreme Court as a fact issue to be resolved by the trier of fact. Waller v. Rocky Mtn. Fire & Casualty, 272 Or 69, 71-72, 535 P2d 530, 531-32 (1975); Schehen v. North-West Insurance, 258 Or 559, 484 P2d 836 (1971). However, the court has required that there be sufficient evidence that the person seeking coverage and the insured "dwell or live together” as members of a household, in order to survive a motion for directed verdict. Schehen v. North-West Insurance, supra at 561-62. In Schehen, a dentist moved from Eugene to Klamath Falls, where he purchased a home and practiced dentistry for four years. By so doing, he established residence in Klamath Falls. His adult daughter and her teenage children, who theretofore had lived with him, remained in his prior home in Eugene. The Supreme Court held that although Dr. Schehen visited his daughter and her teenage children and gave them financial support, this was not sufficient evidence to submit to a jury that he *383"lived, dwelled, or resided” with them in Eugene. 258 Or at 562-63.
Because there is evidence to support the finding below, we need not decide whether, under Schehen, a child who is temporarily away from home for camp, school, college, summer employment, or the like, loses protection under a "relative resident” clause of a family automobile policy the moment he ceases to physically "dwell or live” with his family.2 Yet, we note that decisions from many jurisdictions conclude that such a clause can include a child who is away from home for school, for temporary employment, or for service in the armed forces. These decisions are collected in Annotation, 93 ALR3d 420 (1979).3
It has been held that a child may be temporarily absent from the household, or indeed may have more than one residence, without necessarily losing the protection afforded to a "resident of the household” under an insurance policy. See Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Means, 382 F2d 26, 28 (10th Cir 1967); Detroit Auto. Inter-Insurance Exchange v. Feys, 205 F Supp 42 (ND Cal 1962); Travelers Indem. Co. v. Mattox, 345 SW2d 290, 292 (Tex Civ App 1961); Annotation, 93 ALR3d 420 (1979). For example, in Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Means, supra, the court, applying Oklahoma law, held that despite the fact that insured’s son was married and had his own automobile insurance policy, and despite testimony by both the insured and his son that the son was not a resident of the insured’s household at the time of the accident, evidence that the son was a minor, lived away at college, had a room and kept clothing in the insured’s house, *384used the insured’s address as his own on important papers, and received financial assistance from the insured, was sufficient to support the jury’s determination that the son was a resident of the insured’s household and was therefore covered under his automobile policy. In Beck v. Pennsylvania National Mut. Cas. Ins. Co., 429 F2d 813 (5th Cir 1970), the applying Pennsylvania law, held that a son, who kept his personal belongings at his parents’ home and returned there on every leave, was a resident of the household and therefore covered under the non-owned automobile clause of the insured’s liability policy, despite the fact that the son was in the service and stationed away from home, and despite testimony that the insured desired to lower his premium by excluding his son from coverage.
The approach taken by our Supreme Court in Waller v. Rocky Mtn. Fire & Casualty, supra, is applicable in this case. There, a 24-year-old son left home for service in the Navy. Upon his discharge he returned to his parents’ home for about a year. He then moved out-of-state and took a full-time job, but left many of his belongings at his parents’ home and visited frequently. The trial court found that the son was no longer a resident of his parents’ household entitled to coverage under a "relative resident” clause of their automobile insurance policy. The Supreme Court upheld the finding on the basis that evidence that the son was an adult, lived in another state, worked full time, and did not intend to return to his parents’ home, plus the reasonable inferences to be drawn from that evidence, supported the further inference that he did not "dwell or live” with his parents. 272 Or at 75.
In this case, there was conflicting evidence. On his insurance application form the insured did not list Ryder as a resident of his household, because Ryder had been living away at school dining the year and because the insured believed that listing Ryder would increase his premium. Ryder in fact was temporarily *385living away from home in order to go to school. However, Ryder considered his father’s home as his residence and left his possessions there. Further, he often returned for holidays, and a bedroom was kept available for his use. Ryder lived with his father prior to going away to college, and his father was giving him financial support. In the face of this evidence we cannot hold, as a matter of law, that there is no evidence to support the trial court’s finding that Ryder was a resident of his father’s household.
As the Supreme Court did in Waller, we uphold the trial court’s factual determination regarding residency within the meaning of a "relative resident” clause, because there is evidence and reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom which support that finding. Hassan v. Guyer, 271 Or 349, 352, 532 P2d 227 (1975); White v. Bello, 276 Or 931, 933, 556 P2d 1362 (1976).
Affirmed.

That policy provides in pertinent part:
"Persons Insured: The following are insureds under Part I:
******
"(b) With respect to a non-owned automobile,
******
"(2) any relative * * *
"Definitions: Under Part I;
******
" 'Relative’ means a relative of the named insured who is a permanent resident of the same household;
« * * * * *
" 'Non-Owned Automobile’ means an automobile or trailer not owned by or furnished for the regular or frequent use of either the named insured or any relative, other than a temporary substitute automobile; but does not include any automobile or trailer used without the permission of the owner.”

 We note that in Schehen v. North-West Insurance, 258 Or 559, 484 P2d 836 (1971), the insured moved away from his daughter and established residence in a distant city, while in this case the insured’s son was temporarily away from home for college and was found not to have established a permanent residence elsewhere.

 Examination of the eases discussed in this annotation reveals that while some jurisdictions treat "relative resident” questions as fact issues and others treat them as a mixed question of fact and law, all agree that such a clause can (and often does) include a child away from home.