JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge:
A multi-party, multi-claim, multi-court Donnybrook
Finding that the Judge's hunch, see Hutcheson, J., The Function of The "Hunch" In Judicial Decision, 25 Ga.B.J. 127 (Nov.1962), on Florida law became an Erie-fact about the time he ruled on his own, we affirm on the basic claim but reverse as to the counter-claim of its not-so-friendly rival insurer for attorneys fees.
In The Beginning
The genesis of our problem starts, of course, with the collision of February 18, 1971 between a tractor rig owned by Fargo, driven by one of its employees, but under lease-contract to Kennelly, when it crossed the center line on the highway to Punta Gorda more than 50 miles from Miami and crashed into the Kessler-Vollmer car. Nothing would have engaged the eight Judges,
Fargo, a household carrier certificated by the Florida Public Utility Commission (PUC) with geographical authority limited to specified Miami area of Dade County, entered into a contract with Kennelly which had wider PUC operating authority by which Fargo's equipment would in effect be leased to Kennelly with Fargo supplying the driver. As to be expected among knowledgeable businessmen, this relationship and the contract posed legitimate insurance problems complicated, as also to be expected, by the overriding demands of Florida law and PUC regulations to assure protection to the public and property owners.
For the movement occasioning this accident Fargo could not haul the shipment under its own certificate so it used Kennelly's operating authority, relying on the interrelation agreement
Fargo's Lay-Off On Underwriters
Fargo had earlier obtained a liability policy from Penn with Penn filing the required certificate of insurance with PUC.
The result was that Fargo was in that unusual, and enviable, position of having two insurers for the same liability. This may account for the fact that Fargo is presumably happy with all that has occurred and is neither a party or a supplicant to this appeal.
The Fargo-Kennelly Agreement
The "Independent Contractors Agreement" between Kennelly and Fargo, after reciting that Kennelly was a certificated intrastate household carrier in Florida and that Fargo is engaged in the business in connection with which it owns or has at its disposal motor vehicle equipment and employees competent and qualified drivers, set forth a number of obligations. Although it described the relationship as "independent contractor"
The contract did have an indemnity agreement running from Fargo to Kennelly but it was limited
Litigation Sets In
With all of these potential defendants it was not surprising that litigation broke out on all fronts.
The Kessler-Vollmer State Court Suit
On August 13, 1971 the Kessler-Vollmers filed a damage suit for the accident in the Florida state court against, Fargo, National, its insurer, Kennelly and Reliance, its insurer,
The state trial judge ruled in favor of National because the accident took place beyond the 50-mile radius limitation (see note 10, supra) and entered a final judgment to that effect on January 18, 1973.
Kesslers-Vollmers being unhappy with the judgment letting National out on the 50-mile radius coverage defense appealed this judgment to the Florida District Court of Appeals.
Another Day Another Court
On April 9, 1973 Kesslers, but not Vollmers filed in the Federal District Court a declaratory suit against Penn to effectuate payment of the $100,000 settlement between Kesslers and Fargo (see note 23, supra) in the hopes of getting some blood out of the turnip, see U. S. v. Carmichael, 5 Cir., 1974, 497 F.2d 36, 39. True to form this case soon got snarled up by Kennelly and Reliance ranging on the side, of all things, the damage claimant Kesslers.
The Federal Trial Judge, unimpressed by Penn's plea of stare decisis on a state trial judgment as the Erie-indicator, cf. Ford Motor Company v. Mathis, 5 Cir., 1963, 322 F.2d 267, 269 and unwilling at Penn's urging to postpone consideration of the 50-mile coverage question in the Penn policy (see note 9, supra) pending the soon-to-come authoritative decision of the Florida District Court of Appeals, proceeded on his own to interpret and uphold,
Thus, the Kesslers so far had failed in both forums on substantially the same Florida issue of the 50-mile exclusion. For some reason not yet disclosed no appeal was taken from this October 25 judgment so it became for the parties and for all time the law of the Medes and Persians which altereth not.
As for the intramural contest between Fargo's supposed insurers the battle continued to rage. Penn moved for summary judgment against Kennelly and Reliance and on March 14, 1974 the Federal District Judge granted it
The Fog Lifts The Erie Beacon Burns Brightly
Between the October 25, 1973 judgment in favor of Penn and the rulings of March 1974 on counterclaims of Penn-Kennelly-Reliance the word came down from on high—as high as a federal court frequently has to go. For on January 8, 1974 the District Court of Appeals basing its judgment on Rule 25-5.31(5) of P.U.C.,
But the Florida court did not stop there. By language so emphatic that it relieves us even of a momentary temptation to certify this decisive question of Florida law to the Supreme Court of Florida as we often but sparingly do
Kennelly-Reliance Lose The Main Appeal
Were it not for the tag end attack on the judgment entered by the District Court in favor of Penn on its crossclaim against Kennelly-Reliance for what turns out to be, at most, the prospect of recovering attorneys' fees
We, as did the District Judge in overruling Kennelly-Reliance's motions for reconsideration (see note 27, supra), are of the clear opinion that whether as a matter of stare decisis or merely as a positive indicator of Florida law, Vollmer was of no help whatsoever in the controversy between Kennelly-Reliance and Penn. The efforts of Reliance to cloak itself in the more appealing garb of Kennelly won't do.
First, on the assumption that Reliance can somehow latch onto subrogation
But more importantly, the only other right on which Kennelly, or for that matter Reliance, can rely is the provision in Kennelly's contractual obligation to provide insurance for the benefit of itself and Fargo (see note 18, supra). But the trouble with this is that this limitation applies only to insurance "over and above any valid and collectible insurance carried by Fargo, see General Insurance Co. of America v. Western Fire and Casualty Co., 5 Cir., 1957, 241 F.2d 289. Applying Vollmer it is now clear for our Erie purposes—until the Supreme Court of Florida rules otherwise—that as between the insured and insurer the 50-mile exclusion radius exclusion is valid.
This means that as between Penn and Reliance, or Reliance in the subrogated garb of Kennelly has no claim against Fargo and without a claim against Fargo there is no claim against Penn since there is no possible legal relationship between these two supposed liability insurers whose insurance contracts were entered into at separate times and with no indication from the policies that this was some sort of dovetailed arrangement by which either of the insurers, apart from subrogation, could obtain the benefit of the others policy.
Nor do either Kennelly or Reliance get any mileage of the typed-in undertaking by Fargo para. 4(h-1) (see note 17, supra) for, as the District Court held with the imprimatur Florida law soon to come in Vollmer, the obligation to procure the insurance to be covered by the certificate of insurance was confined to "minimum coverage as required by law," and this thereby brought into play the very limited geographical scope of Fargo's PUC certificate. Not being authorized to operate beyond the geographical limits of the certificated operating authority there was no obligation imposed by Florida statutes or PUC regulations to procure insurance protecting members of the public and third party property owners for operations for which it was not certificated.
The District Judge was therefore completely right in denying Kennelly-Reliance's counterclaim against Penn.
Penn Must Lick Own Wounds
But for reasons which the Judge never articulated he granted indemnity in favor of Penn against Kennelly-Reliance. The argument revealed that this may be much-a-do-about-nothing since Penn has not been required to pay out a dime to anyone. The only possible factual basis for anything more than a theoretical claim is the hope of recovering attorneys' fees for Penn's successful defense vis-a-vis its own insured, Fargo and the damage claimants. Whether Florida would transport into this land-based relationship, as we have done in WWLP
In the first place, whatever rights Reliance might have through Kennelly under the contract, has to be against Fargo, not its insurer Penn, with whom, apart from subrogation, there is no relationship, correlative rights or duties. Next, on the record which so far as we have been able to sift it out, is barren of Reliance's policy, for all we know—and there is a pretty good likelihood that our guess is a good one—the policy of Reliance is similarly limited to bodily injury/death and property claims growing out of operations, not contractual agreements.
The District Judge was, therefore, wrong in allowing Penn to recover against Kennelly-Reliance, or either of them.
Penn, therefore, loses this inning, but it comes out quite a winner, first, against the Kesslers,
We accordingly reverse the March 14, 1974 judgment which declared Kennelly and its insurer, Reliance, primarily liable for indemnification to Penn and we also deny attorneys fees to Penn.
Thus, at the end of a long and sometime rocky journey this case comes to an end.
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART.
FootNotes
Penn's attempt in cancellation for nonpayment of premiums aborted for the simple failure, as required by PUC regulations of Penn, to give simultaneous notice to PUC.
Although all of the other provisions we have identified are in the printed form this paragraph appears to have been typed in specially giving it, we can assume, some special significance. Interlineated matter, either typed or written, in an otherwise printed contract generally denotes a matter of particular concern added and specifically negotiated by the parties. When a form contract is altered by interlineation which conflicts with printed portions, interlineation prevails. See Allegheney Mutual Casualty Co. v. State (Fla.App.1965), 176 So.2d 362.
When this District Court entered summary judgment in favor of Penn on March 14, 1974, Kennelly and Reliance had filed nothing in opposition to the motion for summary judgment, with the Court.
Of course an express indemnity in the sweeping terms used in the contract (see note 15, supra) is not one "incidental" to the relationship. See Canal Insurance Co. v. Dougherty, 5 Cir., 1958, 247 F.2d 508.
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