Camden Fire Ins. Ass'n. v. Daylight Grocery Co.

12 So. 2d 768, 152 Fla. 669, 1943 Fla. LEXIS 999
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 30, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 So. 2d 768 (Camden Fire Ins. Ass'n. v. Daylight Grocery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Camden Fire Ins. Ass'n. v. Daylight Grocery Co., 12 So. 2d 768, 152 Fla. 669, 1943 Fla. LEXIS 999 (Fla. 1943).

Opinion

BROWN, J.:

This is a proceeding under Section 62.09, Florida Statutes, 1941, wherein a declaratory decree construing a policy of fire insurance is sought. The facts, as stated, in the bill and ad *670 mitted in the answer, are as follows: On February 12, 1941, plaintiff insurance company issued a fire insurance policy to defendant covering (1) goods, wares and merchandise; (2) store, office and warehouse furniture and fixtures, and (3) machinery incidental to stores and warehouses. The policy also contained an “Exclusion Clause,” section (B) of which stated that the policy did not cover “property in any manufacturing building owned or controlled by the assured.”

In July, 1941, assured leased a manufacturing plant located in A.C.L. Warehouse No. 13, in Jacksonville, Florida, together with all machinery and equipment therein, and there engaged in the manufacture of stock and poultry feed.

On September 15, 1941, by endorsement or rider attached to the policy, said section “B” of the exclusion clause was deleted from the policy and declared null and void and a new location was added to the coverage of the policy in these words: “It is also understood and agreed that the following location is added to the coverage under this policy: A.C.L. Warehouse N. 13, near Riverside Viaduct, in Jacksonville, Florida.”

In December, 1941, the assured purchased and installed in said manufacturing plant a Diesel motor which was used solely in the manufacture of stock and poultry feed, or more specifically, it was used to drive a hammer mill for grinding grain. Said Diesel motor was a machine incidental to manufacturing plants and not a machine incidental to stores and warehouses.

On January 23, 1942, a fire of unknown origin destroyed the entire stock of goods, and also the Diesel motor, located in said manufacturing plant. The plaintiff paid the defendant for said stock of goods, and all other property claimed by defendant to be covered by said fire insurance policy except the aforesaid Diesel engine.

The decree of the circuit court was favorable to the defendant and held:

“That inasmuch as Section “B” of the Exclusion Clause hereinabove set forth was deleted by endorsement and the policy of fire insurance issued by plaintiff to defendant was endorsed so as to add to its coverage the A.C.L. Warehouse *671 No. 13 in Jacksonville, Florida, without describing the nature of the property in said warehouse insured under the terms of said policy, all machinery incidental to said manufacturing plant belonging to the defendant and located in said warehouse came within the' coverage of said policy of fire insurance, and specifically said Diesel motor described in the bill of complaint herein.”

It will be noted from the above statement of facts that the only machinery insured by the policy is “machinery incidental to stores and warehouses.” The fact as alleged in the bill and admitted by the answer is that “said Diesel Motor was a machine incidental to manufacturing plants and not a machine incidental to stores and warehouses.” Thus the policy as originally written did not cover the loss of defendant’s Diesel motor. The contention of the defendant below, appellee here, is that the effect of the rider or endorsement attached to the policy after the defendant had assumed control of the said manufacturing business in A.C.L. warehouse No. 13, was to extend the coverage of the policy to all property of the defendant at the new location.

The policy as originally written covered only machinery incidental to stores and warehouses, and if manufacturing machinery became covered by the policy by reason of the rider subsequently attached it must be because the rider specifically extended the coverage of the policy to manufacturing machinery. Appellant’s contention is that the plain reading of the terms of the rider discloses that the coverage of the policy was not extended to a new type of property or to another class of machinery; that it only extended the coverage of the policy to a new location.

The policy as originally written covered goods, wares and merchandise incidental to stores and warehouses. And it contained an exclusion clause to the effect that the policy did not cover property in any manufacturing building owned or controlled by the assured. The subsequent rider attached to the policy deleted section (B) of the Exclusion Clause which provided that the policy did not cover “property in any manufacturing building owned or controlled by the assured.” The exclusion clause thus stricken did not specifically mention *672 machinery in any manufacturing building owned by the assured, and thus both before and after the striking of section “B” of the exclusion clause the coverage of the policy, insofar as machinery is concerned, was confined to machinery incidental to stores and warehouses. Nor does the additional language in the rider add anything to the coverage under the policy. It merely provided that: “It is also understood and agreed that the following location is added to the coverage under this policy: A.C.L. Warehouse No. 13 near the Riverside Viaduct, in Jacksonville, Florida.” Now what was the coverage under the policy which was extended to the new location? According to its language, it was goods, wares and merchandise; store, office and warehouse furniture and fixtures, and machinery incidental to stores and warehouses.

Can it be that the subsequent deletion of section “B” of the Exclusion Clause could have extended by implication the coverage of the policy so as to embrace manufacturing machinery? We think not. The word “machinery” did not appear in the exclusion clause which was thus deleted, and the word “property” as used therein could hardly have been intended to cover machinery of any sort, because as to machinery there was an explicit coverage by the policy of “machinery incidental to stores and warehouses.” and no' other kind of machinery is anywhere referred to. And if this exclusion clause had been left out of the original policy, to begin with, the coverage of such policy would not have embraced machinery incidental to a manufacturing plant, but -only “machinery incidental to stores and warehouses.” Thus the coverage of the policy is made quite plain and it was only this coverage of the original policy which was extended to the new location. We do not see how the adding of said rider to the original policy could be considered to have expanded the coverage of the policy beyond its express terms. Certainly it did not specifically extend the coverage of the policy to an entirely different type of machinery from that expressly named in the policy. But when section “B” of the Exclusion Clause was deleted and the coverage of the policy extended to the new location, it left the policy covering “property” of the assured located in *673 the manufacturing building which the assured had acquired, that is, property of the classes specifically described in the policy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 So. 2d 768, 152 Fla. 669, 1943 Fla. LEXIS 999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camden-fire-ins-assn-v-daylight-grocery-co-fla-1943.