American Family Mutual Insurance v. Grim

440 P.2d 621, 201 Kan. 340, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 373
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 11, 1968
Docket45,033
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 440 P.2d 621 (American Family Mutual Insurance v. Grim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Family Mutual Insurance v. Grim, 440 P.2d 621, 201 Kan. 340, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 373 (kan 1968).

Opinion

*341 The opinion of the court was delivered by

O’Connor, J.:

This is a subrogation action by the American Family Mutual Insurance Company (plaintiff) to recover from a thirteen-year-old boy (defendant) a portion' of a fire loss paid to the Derby Methodist Church, the company’s insured, as the result of a fire occurring August 16, 1965. Following a trial without a jury, the lower court entered judgment in favor of the insurance company, and defendant has appealed.

The issues raised on appeal relate to the sufficiency of the evidence and the liability of the defendant as a joint tort-feasor.

On the evening of August 15, 1965, the defendant and three companions, ages thirteen and fourteen, gathered at the home of one of the boys to spend the night. They planned to sleep in the backyard in sleeping bags, as they had done several times previously during the summer. About ten o’clock the four lads decided to go downtown to a filling station to get some Cokes. They left the yard through a back gate and proceeded down the alley. The home was located about three houses south of the church, and as they passed the church, one of the boys remarked that Cokes were kept in a refrigerator in the kitchen and maybe they could get some there.

The boys entered the building through the unlocked door of the main entrance to the sanctuary, which is the east wing of the church. The kitchen is located in the north part of the west wing. Finding the doors to the kitchen locked, the boys attempted to find another way to gain entry via the attic and down through the kitchen ceiling. The four of them went through the sanctuary to a storeroom located behind the stage. The defendant remained in the storeroom while his three companions gained entry to the attic through a trap door in the ceiling. In the attic the trio’s way was illuminated by one of the boys turning on a socket-type electric light that hung from one of the rafters. The wires to the socket were contained in a metal conduit pipe, and whenever one of the three youths touched the pipe, the light flickered off and on. When the boys discovered that a cement wall extended to the roof along the west side of the east wing, thus blocking their way into the west wing, they left the attic, turning off the light as they departed.

The defendant and his three companions then went back through the sanctuary, entered the west wing of the church by going down a hallway, and went into the furnace room located on the south *342 side of the west wing. From here two of the boys went up into the attic through a trap door that opened into the area above the hallway. The defendant and his other companion remained behind. Upon entering the attic, the two boys found some paper material which, without the defendant’s knowledge, they rolled up, lighted with a match, and used as torches to light their way. Solid, masonry walls running the full length of the building and extending nearly to the roof divided the attic into three general areas: the center area above the hallway, an area to the north directly over the kitchen, and an area to the south over the furnace room. As the torches burned down during the search in the attic, the two boys extinguished one over the hallway area and the second over the area north of the hallway into which they had gained admittance through a small opening in the wall. One torch was extinguished by “stomping” it on a board lying across the rafters; the other burned rapidly and was permitted to fall between the rafters onto the ceiling. Having literally “run into a stone wall,” the two youths, believing the torches to be fully extinguished, left the attic and descended to the furnace room. From the time the two boys entered the attic until they returned to the furnace room the defendant was in the hallway obtaining a drink at the water fountain. Upon returning to the furnace room, defendant found his three companions attempting to extinguish another torch which, in his absence, the third boy had lighted. The boys stamped the torch out on the floor and finally dumped the balance of it into a sink in the furnace room.

The four youths then left the church through the same door by which they had entered and proceeded to a filling station where they drank Cokes. After walking around for a while, they returned to their sleeping bags around midnight. A half hour later one of the boys heard a noise in the vicinity of the church. The four boys arose and observed a light burning in the church attic in the same area where the light they had used was located. They heard some talking, the hitting of a window of the church, and saw four or five boys run across the south side and around the southeast corner of the building.

In the early morning hours of August 16 the church was discovered to be on fire, and the local fire department was called to the scene. When the firemen arrived they found extensive fire, with smoke coming out from under the eaves of the building and through the roof at one point on the south side of the west wing. Defendant *343 and his three companions were awakened about 5:00 a. m. by the fire alarm activity and went over to the church to help remove Boy Scout equipment from a storage room located in the southeast corner of the east wing.

Although the chief of the local volunteer fire department was unable to determine the cause of the fire, he concluded the fire had originated on the south side of the south partition of the west wing near the furnace room and had been burning three or four hours at the time it was discovered.

The trial court found that the fire was started as a result of the torches, either one or both, that were lighted in the attic; that the cause of the fire was the lighting of the torches and the attempt to extinguish them; that defendant knew nothing about the lighting of the torches, but that he and the other three boys were in the church, and two of the boys were in the attic, for the purpose of attempting to find an entrance into the kitchen in order to get, or attempt to get, Cokes therefrom. The court concluded that defendant was jointly and severally liable, and entered judgment for the plaintiff insurance company in the sum of $25,000.

Defendant challenges the court’s finding that the fire was caused by the torches. The gist of his argument is that its finding is not supported by substantial, competent evidence, in that inferences different from that reached by the trial court might have been drawn from the evidence. Defendant points out that other boys were later seen in the vicinity of the church, and that the electric light in the east wing apparently had a short circuit in its wiring—all of which tended to show other possible causes of the fire which the trial court erroneously disregarded. The fallacy of defendant’s argument is that in order for circumstantial evidence to be sufficient to sustain a finding in a civil case, such evidence need not rise to that degree of certainty which will exclude any and every other reasonable conclusion. (Casey v. Phillips Pipeline Co., 199 Kan. 538, 431 P. 2d 518; Thomas v. Kansas City Southern Rly. Co., 197 Kan. 747, 421 P. 2d 51; Sternbock v. Consolidated Gas Utilities Corp., 151 Fan, 81, 98 P. 2d 162; Railway Co. v. Perry, 65 Kan. 792, 70 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
440 P.2d 621, 201 Kan. 340, 1968 Kan. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-family-mutual-insurance-v-grim-kan-1968.