Case v. Hartford Fire Insurance

13 Ill. 676
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 13 Ill. 676 (Case v. Hartford Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Case v. Hartford Fire Insurance, 13 Ill. 676 (Ill. 1852).

Opinion

Trumbull, J.

This was an action of assumpsit brought by Case against the Hartford Eire Insurance Company, on a policy insuring the plaintiff against loss or damage by fire, to the amount of §3,000 on his stock of goods in brick store No. 88, Lake Street, Chicago.

By the terms of the policy, the company agreed to make good to Case all such immediate loss or damage, not exceeding the amount insured, as should happen by fire from October 6, 1849, to October 6, 1850.

Annexed to the policy, and forming part of it, is the following condition: “ In case of fire, or loss or damage thereby, or of exposure to loss or damage thereby, it shall be the duty of the insured to use all possible diligence in saving and preserving the property; and if they shall fail to do so, this company shall not be held responsible to make good the loss and damage sustained in consequence of such neglect. And it is mutually understood that there can be no abandonment to the insurers of the subject insured.”

The testimony shows that the building containing the goods was what is called in Chicago a fire-proof building, though not strictly so; that in the evening of the 10th of August, 1850, the buildings in the rear of the Mansion House, a large wooden building east of, and immediately adjoining, the store of the plaintiff, took fire; that the rear of the Mansion House was burned out, and it seemed almost impossible at one time, with the greatest exertions of the fire department, to save the main building; that the fire was a very hot one, the flames at times extending quite over and enveloping at least half the store of the plaintiff; that at one stage of the fire the firemen raised their hose to the top of plaintiff’s store and threw water from there upon the burning buildings; that water was also thrown on the store, and came down into the building in considerable quantities; that the store itself was filled with heated air and smoke, and the doors ordered to be thrown open by the fire department, so as to allow the hose to pass through to the rear, but the order was countermanded while the hose was being introduced, for the purpose of taking it to another point; that the wind at the time was from an easterly direction, and, had the main building of the Mansion House burned, no exertions of the fire department could have saved plaintiff’s store from destruction, nor could the goods have been removed after the fire had caught in front; that a portion of the goods were damaged by the water and smoke, and most of them removed across the street, to other buildings, about the time the store doors were thrown open; that the fire, after raging some half hour, was subdued without burning the main building of the Mansion House, or any portion of plaintiff’s store, though the heat was so great as to crack many of the panes of glass in the windows and scorch the window-frames, through the iron shutters, also as to burn off the’ paint on the roof, and that the damage to the goods from smoke, water, &c. was appraised at $64.57.

The plaintiff also offered to prove the amount of goods he had on hand in the month of April preceding the fire, by the bills of purchase, books of account, and clerks; then to show the amount of purchases since that time, also the amount of sales and the inventory taken immediately after the fire, to ascertain the amount of goods lost by the removal. All this evidence was objected to by the defendant and excluded by the court, to which decision the plaintiff at the time excepted. The jury returned a verdict of sixty-nine dollars and seventeen cents for the plaintiff.

The only point in the case arises upon the refusal of the Circuit Court to admit the evidence tending to show that some of the goods had been lost in the removal occasioned by the fire; and this raises the question, whether the insurers are liable for the loss of the goods resulting from their removal under the particular circumstances of this case.

On behalf of the defendant, it is insisted, that the policy only insures against immediate loss or damage by fire, and that there can be no fire without ignition.

Such is the law as stated in 2 Greenleaf’s Evidence, § 405. The author says, “ The proof of loss must show an actual ignition by fire; damage by heat alone, without actual ignition, not being covered by the policy”; and he refers to the case of Austin v. Drew, reported in 4 Camp. 360, and 6 Taunt. 436, as his authority. By referring to that case, it will be seen that it does not support the position. The case was this: The premises insured were used as a manufactory, and were heated by a stove on the ground floor. A flue went from the stove through each story, seven or eight in number, to the top of the building. There was a register in the flue with an aperture into the rooms, whereby more or less heat might be introduced at pleasure. One morning the fire being lighted as usual below, the servant whose duty it was to have opened the register in the highest story forgot to do so. The consequence was that the smoke and heat were completely interdicted in their progress through the flue, and came into the rooms, doing some damage, but there never was more fire than was necessary to carry on the manufactory, and the flame never got beyond the flue. Gibbs, C. J., said, “ There was no fire except in the stove and the flue, as their ought to have been, and the loss was occasioned by the confinement of heat. Had the fire been brought out of the flue, and any thing had been burnt, the company would have been liable. But can this be said where the fire never was at all excessive, and was always confined within its proper limits ? This is not a fire within the meaning of the policy, nor a loss for which the company undertake. They may as well be sued for the damage done to drawing-room furniture by a smoky chimney.”

The principle upon which this case turned was, that there had been no fire except in the usual and proper place where a fire ought to have been, and that the parties never contemplated insuring against a loss occasioned by the ordinary fire kept up in the stove; but had the same injury resulted from the burning of an adjoining house, or from heat proceeding from any other than the ordinary fires in the building, the decision would have been very different. Suppose some of the wares and merchandise of the plaintiff in this case, as lead pipe, for instance, had been of a fusible character, and that they had been melted by the heat from the burning of the adjoining building, would it be pretended for a moment that he could not recover for the damage because the articles were not actually ignited? Had the store actually burned down, it no doubt contained many articles which the fire would have ruined, and yet were not susceptible of ignition. The idea that there can be no loss by fire without actual ignition, is so, unreasonable to my mind, that, but for the respectable authorities that have been vouched for the position, I should not have thought it worthy a moment’s consideration.

The case of Hillier v. The A. M. Insurance Company, (3 Barr, 470,) is also relied upon by the defendant. The court in that case do say, that where the peril insured against “is fire, the instrument of destruction must be fire,” but the case itself was a very different one from this.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ill. 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-v-hartford-fire-insurance-ill-1852.