Caledonian Insurance Company v. Naifeh

16 S.W.2d 1046, 229 Ky. 293, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 725
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 22, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 16 S.W.2d 1046 (Caledonian Insurance Company v. Naifeh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caledonian Insurance Company v. Naifeh, 16 S.W.2d 1046, 229 Ky. 293, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 725 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

*294 Opinion ok the Court by

Judge Rees

Reversing in part and affirming in part.

About 3:30 o’clock in the morning of April 9, 1927, a building located in Hickman, Ky., and owned by appellee, S. M. Naifeh, collapsed, and the building and its contents were destroyed. The building and its contents were insured in 15 insurance companies against loss by fire, and against direct loss or damage caused 'by lightning. The appellee filed with each of the 15 insurance companies proofs of loss, in which he claimed the insured property had been destroyed by lightning. Each of the insurers denied liability on the ground that the building-collapsed -because of structural defects and as a result of being undermined by flood waters from the Mississippi river. These 15 suits were then filed, the total amount claimed being $27,000. All of the cases were tried together in the lower court, and on this appeal have been consolidated under the caption, Caledonian Insurance Company v. S. M. Naifeh, and will be disposed of by one opinion.

The building was located on the corner of Clinton and Union streets, and fronted south 44 feet on Clinton street,1 and extended back north along Union street 83 feet. It was a double brick building, the west half being-three stories high, and the east half two stori'es high, with a 13-inch brick division wall running north and south through the center of the building and extending from the basement to the roof of the three-story building. Under the building was a basement 7 feet deep. The Mississippi river approaches Hickman from the north, but just east of the town it turns sharply to the west. Clinton street runs east and west parallel to the river. Immediately north and back of the Naifeh building is the right of way of the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis R. R., and north of the railroad right of way is the river. At the time the loss occurred the Mississippi river was at flood stage, and water from the river covered Clinton street to a depth of 2 feet. The basement of the Naifeh building was flooded, and the water was 12 to 14 inches over the first floor. As hereinbefore stated, the cases were tried together. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and from the judgments entered thereon the defendants have appealed.

The principal ground relied on by appellants for a reversal is alleged error of the trial court in refusing *295 to sustain a motion to peremptorily instruct the jury to find for the defendants. They earnestly insist that there is absolutely no evidence tending to show that the loss was caused by lightning. A large number of witnesses were introduced, and the record before us is a voluminous one, although practically all of the evidence is directed to the single' issue, was there a direct loss by lightning?

The plaintiff, S. M. Naifeh, was informed of the collapse of his building, and arrived on the scene about 4 ■o’clock in the morning. The street lights were out, and he could only see the ruins by aid of flashes of lightning. It was then raining, and an electrical storm was in progress. He testified that after the water receded he examined the foundation of the building and found it in good condition, and there was no indication that it had been undermined by action of the flood waters. The west wall fell to the west, the north wall to the north toward the river, some of the brick being some 40 or 50 feet from the building. The south wall fell into Clinton street, and some of the bricks broke windows and doors in the buildings across the street. He further testified that the building was erected about 1860, and had been flooded five or six times within a period of 20 years. The plaintiff endeavored to prove by a number of witnesses that the building was struck by .lightning just before it collapsed. The testimony of these witnesses on this point, reduced to narrative form, is as follows:

C. A. Glazier: ' “I was up in my room over the Starks furniture store across the street from the Naifeh building. I woke about 3:25 o’clock on Saturday morning and looked out of the window. An electrical storm •was going on. I had been to bed and bad gotten up. I was scared to' death any way. I sat up and took a smoke about that time of the morning and it was thundering and lightning right one after another. So all at once there was a clap, a heavy clap of thunder and lightning-together, then that quick (snapping fingers) that building fell. Then I went to the window and looked out and I thought it was a storm, a wind storm, but the wind ■wasn’t blowflng- at all more than it is now, but it was thundering and lightning alad raining. However, I didn’t see the building when the lightning hit it. I saw out the window and thought it struck where I was rooming. The report seemed to be right opposite. It hit right there close to me, right in the direction of the *296 Naifeh building. It kind o’ blinded me. I couldn’t see, you know. It kind o ’ shocked me, you know, when that building fell.”

Charles A. Lattus: “I was engaged in the business of running a ferry boat and was staying at the River-view hotel. I was about half asleep and half awake. I was studying about my boat. It was thundering and lightning and I didn’t have my boat tied up good and I was afraid it would come up a storm. It was thundering and lightning all the time. All of a sudden a building Avent to fall doAvn and it fell at two different times—part of it fell the first time and the second part—they came close together. It was thundering and lightning all the time. The lightning struck from toward the river. I looked out the window about the time when it first struck and knocked part of it. I couldn’t say for sure the lightning done it. I looked out of the window there and it was just constant lightning, just a flash of lightning all the time. I had heard the report of lightning when it struck other objects and this sounded just like lightning striking in the direction of that building. There was no wind blowing but just an electrical storm.”

. D. Webb: “On the night that the Naifeh buildng was destroyed I was down on the levee walking and guarding the levee. I noticed it being- a bad night and lightning lots and I heard the lightning. Seemed like it struck something. I knew it was bad. Of course I was looking after the levee and I never paid much attention. I had heard lightning strike objects before and this report sounded like the lightning had struck something. I was in West Hickman and the report Avas to the east in the direction of the Naifeh building. It was kind o’ a keen hit, like a clap. It w*as about 3:30 o’clock in the morning. ’ ’

John Sexton: “I was on the way round on the other street to my boat. I had my boat tied at the Starks furniture store right on the corner. The only thing I heard was a quick flash of lightning, just like some one had thrown a flash light in my face and it blinded me and there was a quick pop and flash right OAmr this Naifeh building. You heard something like a rebound, you know, first one and a second one like a freight train hits then rebounds. I have heard lightning strike trees and stuff like that and I would say it hit the Naifeh building. It was right out in front of me the way I was going, right over the Naifeh building. ”

*297

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 1046, 229 Ky. 293, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caledonian-insurance-company-v-naifeh-kyctapphigh-1929.