RIORDAN, J.
In a consolidated appeal in docket nos. 299405, 299406, and 299407, garnishee-defendant. Empire Fire and Marine Insurance Company appeals as of right a trial court order rejecting its objections to the garnishment sought by Great Lakes Carriers Corporation and Sargent Trucking, Inc. The garnishments were made payable to plaintiffs Marie Hunt, Thomas and Noreen Luczak, and James Huber, all of whom were involved in a car accident with truck driver Corey Drielick (Corey). We reverse the decision of the trial court and quash the writs of garnishment.
Corey was driving a 1985 freightliner semitractor without a trailer when he was
Empire appealed the trial court's garnishment ruling in this Court, claiming that the named-driver exclusion and the business-use exclusion justified the denial of coverage. Id. at 4-6. Empire's policy is titled "Insurance for Non-Trucking Use," and the business-use exclusion states that Empire is not liable for "[b]odily injury or property damage while a covered auto is used to carry property in any business or while a covered auto is used in the business of anyone to whom the auto is leased or rented." (Quotation marks omitted.) While this Court held that the named-driver exclusion was invalid, we also held that the business-use exclusion
Thus, the only remaining issue in the lawsuit is whether the business-use exclusion applies and precludes coverage. At the time of the accident, Corey was driving to the Great Lakes Carriers yard in Linwood because William Bateson, who worked for Great Lakes Carriers, had dispatched Corey to haul a load to Cheboygan. Corey was only miles from the yard at the time of the accident and was not transporting any property.
After a hearing regarding the business-use exclusion, the trial court issued an opinion and order holding that neither prong of the policy's business-use exclusion was applicable. The trial court noted that Corey had yet to pick up the trailer at the time of the accident, Corey was not under orders to be at Great Lakes Carriers's yard at a particular time, Corey was free to complete personal business before arriving at the yard, and there was an oral agreement that Corey would not be paid until the cab was coupled with the trailer. The trial court also concluded that the lack of a written lease and the lack of a state identification card from Great Lakes Carriers suggested that the truck was not being used in the business of anyone who had leased the truck. The trial court held that Empire's policy was in full force at the time of the accident and rejected Empire's objections to the garnishment. Empire now appeals.
"Questions involving the proper interpretation of a contract or the legal effect of a contractual clause are ... reviewed de novo." McDonald v. Farm Bureau Ins. Co., 480 Mich. 191, 197, 747 N.W.2d 811 (2008).
Empire contends that the first part of the business-use exclusion applies and precludes coverage and garnishment by Great Lakes Carriers and Sargent.
The first part of the business-use exclusion states that coverage does not apply when bodily injury or property damage occur "while a covered auto is used to carry property in any business...." (Quotation marks omitted.) Given that there is no Michigan law directly on point. Empire cites numerous federal cases that involve the exact same exclusionary language concerning an automobile being "used to carry property in any business." One such case is Carriers Ins. Co. v. Griffie, 357 F.Supp. 441, 442 (W.D.Pa., 1973), which involved a vehicle driven by the owner but leased to a carrier. The carrier dispatched the driver to pick up a load, and, consistently with the carrier's policy, the driver first drove to a garage to have the truck inspected. Id. At the garage, the driver drove over the victim's foot, which resulted in the subsequent litigation regarding an exclusion in the insurance policy that stated coverage did not apply "while the automobile... is used to carry property in any business[.]" Id.
When interpreting this phrase, the court stated that "[t]he mere fact that no cargo was being handled at the particular moment when the accident occurred does not mean that the [truck] was not `used to carry property in any business.'" Id. The court stated that the truck "was regularly so used to carry property in the carrier's business as a trucker" and "[i]f the intent had been to extend coverage except when the [truck] was actually hauling a load, it would not have been difficult to express such an intention clearly." Id. The court ultimately held that the insurance company was not liable under the policy. Id. at 443.
Likewise in this case, the parties agree that Corey was under dispatch at the time of the accident and was only a couple of miles away from the yard. Even though Corey did not have to be at the yard at a specific time, he was not driving aimlessly, and there is no dispute that he was specifically driving to the yard to attach the loaded trailer and drive to Cheboygan. While Corey was not carrying property at the time of the accident, the exclusion does not state that the auto must be carrying property. Rather, the exclusion applies "while the covered auto is used to carry property in any business...." (Quotation marks omitted.) The term "while" is defined as "an interval of time," and the term "use" is defined as "to employ for some purpose; put into service[.]" Random House Webster's College Dictionary (2001).
We must apply the plain language of the contract as written. See Westfield Ins. Co., 295 Mich.App. at 615, 815 N.W.2d 786. If the parties had intended to draft an exclusion limiting coverage to only those occasions when cargo was actually, physically, on the truck, they were free to do so. But they did not. Instead, the language of the exclusion is "while a covered auto is used to carry property in any business," not "while a covered auto is carrying property in any business." (Quotation marks omitted; emphasis added.) To disregard the word "while" or the phrase "is used" would violate this Court's mandate to give effect to every word, phrase, and clause in order to avoid rendering terms surplusage or nugatory. See Klapp v. United Ins. Group Agency, Inc., 468 Mich. 459, 468, 663 N.W.2d 447 (2003).
Given that the first clause of the business-use exclusion applies, we need not address whether the second clause, relating to a lease or rental agreement, applies. Moreover, because the business-use exclusion applies, Empire was relieved from any obligation to provide coverage under the contract, and the trial court erred by concluding otherwise. We reverse the decision of the trial court and quash the writs of garnishment. We do not retain jurisdiction.
RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and BORRELLO, J., concurred with RIORDAN, J.