delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case the Court is asked to construe a provision in an insurance policy, issued by appellee to appellant. The operative facts, stated briefly, are that the appellant while conveying his bank deposit to the bank inadvertently mingled it with some business letters and deposited it in a mail depository. Despite appellant’s requests, postal authorities would not grant him entrance into the depository in order to retrieve the packet. At the next sched-*306Tiled opening of the depository, the packet was not found therein, nor was it ever again accounted for except by the receipt by appellant’s bank of a portion of its contents from an anonymous sender.
Appellant claims coverage for the resulting loss of $1,500.00 under the terms of his policy with appellee. The applicable provision of this policy states:
“Coverage B — Loss Outside the Premises.
“To pay for loss of money and securities by the actual destruction, disappearance or wrongful abstraction thereof outside the premises while being conveyed by a messenger or any armored motor vehicle company, or while within the living quarters in the home of any messenger. ’ ’
Upon appellee’s denial of the claim suit was brought by appellant in Shelby Equity Court. Upon the Chancellor’s dismissal of the action, appeal was made directly to this Court upon a stipulated statement of the facts involved.
In arguments and in their briefs both parties have concentrated upon the terms “disappearance * * '' while being conveyed,” as being determinative of the case. Appellant argues, in the main, that “disappearance” was complete at the time the packet was dropped in the depository. Both parties agree that the packet was being conveyed until that time. The appellee argues, contrarily, that “disappearance” did not take place until the unknown time subsequently when the packet “disappeared from” the depository, and that the claim was rightly refused in that the packet was not being conveyed at that time. Hence, in the definition and application of the term “disappearance” rests the difference of view between the' parties and the disposition of the case.
*307Fortunately, despite the fact that no Tennessee decisions have been cited, and none have been found, to aid in the construction of this term, the Court does not have to operate in a vacuum. There exists an abundant backlog of principles of construction applicable to insurance contracts which the Court has accepted in the past.
One such principle is that, absent ambiguity, the terms of a contract of insurance are to be construed according to their plain, ordinary, popular sense unless they have acquired a technical sense in commercial usage. In re Estate of Clement, 220 Tenn. 114, 414 S.W.2d 644; Interstate Life & Acc. Ins. Co. v. Gammons, 56 Tenn.App. 441, 408, S.W.2d 397; Moore v. Life & Cos. Ins. Co., 162 Tenn. 682, 40 S.W.2d 403.
This Court has further held that the “ordinary meaning” envisioned is the meaning which the average policy holder and insurer would attach to the term. Farmers Mutual Fire Ins. Co. of Knox County v. McMillan, 217 Tenn. 125, 395 S.W.2d 798. It appearing that neither party understood the term “disappearance” to be a word of art, or it to have taken any peculiar meaning in commercial usage, it seems that the word should be defined in its ordinary, or customary sense. Standard dictionaries define the word variously as: “to cease to appear or be present from a particular vantage point.” “to pass from sight or view,” “to vanish from sight,” “to be no longer seen”, etc. There being no evidence to the contrary, it would seem that such dictionary definitions are consonant with the meaning an average policy holder would attach to the term.
Were the Court to stop here, it would be but a simple step to agree with appellant’s contention that the packet’s “disappearance” was complete for purposes of the pol*308icy’s applicability when it simply passed from sight as it vanished into the mail depository.
The Court, however, realizes that single terms within an insurance contract, or any contract, do not stand alone. This realization is manifest in the adherence of courts to the universally accepted construction rule of ejusdem generis. It is also implicit in the Court’s holdings that insurance contracts are to be construed from their four corners in such a manner as to give effect to' the intention of the parties and to their express language. Interstate Life & Acc. Ins. Co. v. Gammons, supra. It is realized that the context in which a word is used may so limit or expand the connotation of the term as to alter the meaning that the average policy holder or insurer would attach to it. In the present provision “disappearance” is adjoined by the terms “destruction” and “wrongful abstraction”, both of which contain connotations of the inability of the custodian to recover the property so lost. It might be wise to so limit the operation of the term “disappearance”. Hence, not every packaging or misplacement of money or securities which place the money out of the sight of the custodian would result in liability, but only a “disappearance” of the money in such a manner that immediate retrieval is not possible. Such a limitation, however, would not affect the outcome of the instant case, it appearing that appellant had no access whatever into the mail depository.
Appellee’s contention that this construction of the term would result in all manner of ridiculous and spurious claims is not well taken. Stated expressly within the policy provision itself is the insurer’s protection against *309such claims. It must be a “loss”, “by”, “disappearance”, “while being covweyed,” by the persons and in the manner set out. The simple limitation that loss must be occasioned by the disappearance rules out the consequences of which appellee seems so apprehensive.
A study of the cases cited by appellee, in which our sister States have considered provisions similar to the one being considered here, will serve to illustrate the amount of protection which courts have given the insurers in their construction of the term “while being conveyed” as well as demonstrating the distinguishing characteristics between those cases and the instant case. In the much cited Monteleone v. American Employers’ Insurance decision, 239 La. 773. 120 So.2d 70 [1960] the loss was occasioned by the messenger’s leaving the money in his home from which it was lost. The case was decided upon the ground, and properly so, that the messenger had ceased to convey the money, and hence had ceased to be a bona fide messenger under the provisions of the policy.
In Sansone v. American Insurance Co., 245 La. 674, 160 So.2d 575 [1964], which reaffirmed the Monteleone case, the court again disallowed recovery upon the ground that the carrier had ceased to be a messenger. There, considering a provision exactly the same in all pertinent parts as the one here being considered, the court, concerned with the ceasing to convey concept, explained: “Significant, in our opinion, is the fact that the restaurant manager had turned aside from his function as a messenger to engage in an evening of social activities.”
In Cleveland Avenue Liquor Store, Inc. v. Home Insurance Co., 115 Ga.App. 864, 156 S.E.2d 202, the mes*310senger left the packet of money in his car while eating lunch, and it was again held that the messenger was not acting in his capacity as messenger at the time of loss and hence recovery was denied. In Trad Television Corp. v. Hartford Accident and Indemnity Co., 35 N.J.Super. 36, 113 A.2d 47, the vice president of the firm lost the money while at a. party. It was held that he was not a messenger at the time of loss. Again, in J & C Drug Company v. Maryland Casualty, 298 S.W.2d 516 [Mo.App., 1957], the would be messenger had turned aside from his role as messenger to indulge in other activities, and it was upon that basis that recovery was disallowed. In all the above, there was an actual voluntary act of the carrier which resulted in his ceasing to be a messenger and ceasing to even attempt to convey, by any direct means the valuables entrusted to his care. Hence, even though these cases illustrate the amount of protection which the insurer has against claimants who fail to satisfy this limitation of the policy, they have no bearing upon the instant case, it being conceded that appellant was continually conveying the money until the time of its disappearance into the depository.
Besides the limitations appellee has written into the policy, and the protection courts have given the insurer from liability based on an application of these limitations, appellee would have this Court reject the ordinary definition of the term here and give insurer added protection by saying that ‘ ‘ disappearance ’ ’ really means something more like “mysterious disappearance.” To do so would be to add limitations not contracted for by the parties. Insurers, just as other makers of contracts, are dependent upon the fiscal attractiveness of their proposals in order to induce would be purchasers to buy. In the case of insurance, the attractiveness, neces-*311sa-ry to induce buyers, is found in the broadness of coverage, or the lack of limiting conditions. Where an insurer, with due regard to its own'financial liability, writes the contract without certain limiting conditions, and thereby hopefully enhances his selling position, the Court will refuse to then withhold from the buyer the coverage for which he has contracted by adding conditions unwarranted by a reasonable construction of terms of the policy as issued.
Hence, the Court is of the opinion that, upon these facts, when the money fell into the depository, thereby denying the messenger sight as well as access, the loss occasioned thereby was the type loss such a policy would reasonably be envisioned to cover, and was a “disappearance * * * while being conveyed,” under a proper construction of the policy. It thus appears the insurer should be liable. The Chancellor’s dismissal is hereby reversed, and judgment entered here against appellee for the $1,500.00 loss.