Our opinion and judgment of November 8, 1974, is withdrawn and the following opinion is substituted therefor.
Hans and Henriette Bischofs, as next friends of their daughter, Nancy, filed suit against Lamar Gustafson and Wayland Bailey seeking damages for personal injuries sustained by Nancy as a result of her left hand being struck by the blades of an airplane propeller. Gustafson and Bailey were joint owners of the airplane and were covered by an aircraft liability policy issued by National Insurance Underwriters. The insurance company was called upon to defend the Bischofs suit and it refused.
Gustafson and Bailey filed this suit against the insurance company seeking a declaratory judgment that the company was obligated to defend and pay on their behalf all sums .which Bischofs recovered against them. The insurance company filed an amended motion for summary judgment and asserted the following:
“In this connection, the defendant and cross-plaintiff would show that the policy of insurance issued by it does not provide liability insurance with respect to claims or suits by passengers; that a passenger is defined in said policy of insurance as follows:
‘Definitions Under Part I: (c) Passenger means any person in, on or enter*416ing the aircraft for the purpose of riding or flying therein or alighting therefrom following a ride, flight or attempted flight therein;’ (Emphasis added)
that Nancy Teresa Bischofs was, in fact, alighting from the aircraft at the time she was injured and was a passenger; that, therefore, the insurance policy does not afford coverage as to the plaintiffs on the occasion wherein Nancy Teresa Bischofs was injured.
IV.
Defendant and cross-plaintiff would further show that the policy of insurance issued by it provides as follows:
'Exclusions — This policy does not apply under Part I.A. (2) While carrying passengers unless pilot has a valid Private Pilot Certificate rating or higher.’
Plaintiff Wayland Bailey, pilot of the aircraft on the occasion in question, did not have a private pilot certificate rating or higher so that the insurance policy upon which this suit is founded does not afford coverage as to the plaintiffs at the time and on the occasion wherein Nancy Teresa Bischofs was injured.” (emphasis added)
The court granted the insurance company’s motion for summary judgment and entered its order holding that the insurance company had no duty to defend nor any liability under the policy. Plaintiffs have appealed.
The liability insurance company’s duty to defend has been defined by our Supreme Court in Argonaut Southwest Insurance Company v. Maupin, 500 S.W.2d 633 (Tex.1973), as follows:
“The petitioner’s duty to defend is determined by the allegations of the petition when considered in the light of the policy provisions without reference to the truth or falsity of such allegations. Heyden Newport Chem. Corp. v. Southern Gen. Ins. Co., 387 S.W.2d 22 (Tex.1965) ; Maryland Casualty Co. v. Moritz, 138 S.W.2d 1095 (Tex.Civ.App. 1940, writ ref’d.) ; Kahla v. Travelers Insurance Company, 482 S.W.2d 928 (Tex.Civ.App. 1972, writ ref’d n.r.e.).”
“. . . The duty to defend does not depend on what the facts are, or what might be determined finally by the trier of the facts. It depends only on what the facts are alleged to be.”
The only matter before this court is the proper construction of two unambiguous instruments. We are not concerned with what the facts are or what the facts might be finally determined to be. Our concern is what the words in the insurance contract and the pleadings of Nancy Bischofs mean. Our Supreme Court in Argonaut, supra, has announced the rules to be applied to determine the duty of an insurance company to defend. Our issue is to determine if the two instruments as a matter of law establish that Nancy Bischofs was alighting and thus a passenger as that term is defined in the policy.
There can be no dispute that a passenger was excluded from coverage. The contract defines “passenger” and, therefore, it is unnecessary to consider court definitions of “passenger.”
An examination of the pleadings of Nancy Bischofs reveals that it is replete with express references to Nancy Bischofs as a “passenger” at the time of the injury. More importantly, each of the four grounds of negligence alleged as the basis of recovery, constituting the very heart of the cause of action, are based upon express allegations that plaintiff was a “passenger” at the time of the injury and that the duties allegedly breached by the insured were duties owed to the plaintiff because of her status as a passenger.
The definition of “passenger” as set forth in the policy means any person in, on, or entering the aircraft or alighting therefrom. Nancy Bischofs alleges:
“ . . . She was not aware of the fact that the propeller was still whirling *417adjacent to where she jumped from the wing of the aircraft. After landing on the ground, said Plaintiff regained her balance, and lifted her left hand to wave to her friends. When she did so, her left hand was struck by the whirling blades of the plane’s propeller.’’ (Emphasis ours.)
Such allegations establish she was not in, on or entering the aircraft. Effect must, however, be given to every part of the insurance contract and that includes the term “alighting therefrom.” City of Stamford v. King, 144 S.W.2d 923 (Tex.Civ.App.—Eastland 1940, writ ref.). The terms used in the policy are to be given their plain, ordinary, and generally accepted meaning. Western Reserve Life Insurance Co. v. Meadows, 152 Tex. 559, 261 S.W.2d 554 (1953). We must, therefore, determine if it was alleged she was “alighting therefrom” as defined in the policy.
We have found a limited number of cases which have construed the term “alighting”. Most of such cases involve the construction of the term as contained in automobile insurance policies.
The Supreme Court of Mississippi in Saint Paul-Mercury Indemnity Company v. Broyles, 230 Miss. 45, 92 So.2d 252 (1957), while construing the term “alighting” in an automobile policy, held the plaintiff was “alighting” and resolved that the term should not be limited to simply the physical act of stepping out of the car and on the ground. In the cause the plaintiff had stepped out of the car, closed the door and was walking close to the car in the process of getting away from it when the brakes slipped and car began rolling into her.
The Supreme Court of South Carolina in Whitmire v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, 254 S.C. 184, 174 S.E.2d 391 (1970), stated:
“ . . .If the phrase ‘alighting from’ is limited to the physical act of descending from the automobile, it would be meaningless because a person would still be in contact with it and within the coverage afforded under the terms ‘in’ or ‘upon’. Alighting from must, therefore, extend to a situation where the body has reached a point when there is no contact with the vehicle.”
In a Connecticut case, Carta v. Providence Washington Indemnity Company, 143 Conn. 372, 122 A.2d 734 (1956), a driver had gotten out of the car, closed the door, and walked to front end of the automobile when she noticed the automobile was rolling toward her. She moved backward until she fell and was struck and injured by the automobile. The court held her injury was not covered by a policy affording coverage for an injury caused by accident while “alighting” from an automobile. In so holding, the Supreme Court of Errors of Connecticut stated:
“ . . .A person is not in the process of alighting if, at the time, he has completed all acts normally performed by the average person in getting out of an automobile under similar conditions and if he has embarked upon a course of conduct entirely distinct from acts reasonably necessary to make an exit from the car.”
The cases suggest various factors to be considered in a determination of whether a person is alighting from a vehicle: continuity of movement, lack of interruption of act of alighting from vehicle and leaving it; proximity to vehicle; elapsed time from a position of being in or on the vehicle and having no contact with it. The allegations in the petition of Nancy Bischofs allege she was in very close proximity to the airplane, and a minimum of time had elapsed from her being on the plane and the accident. Nancy Bischofs’ allegations in her petition establish conclusively that she had taken no action to leave the proximity of the airplane, nor completed the acts normally performed by an average person in getting away from an airplane.
We hold the allegations in the petition of Nancy Bischofs establish as a matter of *418law she was alighting and thus was a passenger as that term is defined in the policy.
The motion for rehearing of the appellee is granted, the judgment is affirmed.