Green v. Milwaukee Mechanics' Insurance

252 P. 310, 77 Mont. 505, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 188
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1926
DocketNo. 5,973.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 252 P. 310 (Green v. Milwaukee Mechanics' Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Milwaukee Mechanics' Insurance, 252 P. 310, 77 Mont. 505, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 188 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

*509 HONOEABLE HENEY G. EODGEES, District Judge,

sitting in place of ME. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY, absent on account of illness, delivered the opinion of the court.

These causes were consolidated for trial. The actions were instituted to recover on fire insurance policies covering the same property and containing the same provisions and covenants. The issues as framed by the pleadings are identical in each case. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence the court sustained a motion for a nonsuit, and judgment was entered accordingly. The court having overruled a motion for a new trial, plaintiff appeals from the judgment.

The points to be decided are: Did the court err in sustaining defendants’ motion for a nonsuit, and did the court err in sustaining defendants’ objection to a hypothetical question propounded to an expert witness?

The complaint states that the property insured by the policy was damaged and portions thereof destroyed as a result of a *510 fire in the building, and that by reason of the fire coining in contact with a certain acetylene gas-tank and generator located on the premises, the acetylene gas-tank and generator were caused to explode, and by reason of the explosion, which explosion was caused by the fire and was a direct consequence of the fire, the building and other property insured in the policy were damaged and destroyed, and that the damage and destruction of the property were not caused directly or indirectly by any cause or causes which by the terms of the policy are excepted therefrom. A copy of the policy is annexed to the complaint and by reference made a part thereof. The policy insured the plaintiff “against all direct loss or damage by fire, except as hereinafter provided.” The exemption clause exempts the insurer from damages caused by an explosion of any kind, unless fire ensues, and in that event liability for damages attaches only when caused by fire.

A correct interpretation of the above provision where the explosion is caused by fire is stated in 26 C. J. 345, as follows: “Where, however, the explosion is caused by a preceding hostile fire during its progress in the insured premises, the insurer is liable both for the loss caused by the fire and also that caused by the explosion, since the fire is the proximate cause of the whole loss and the explosion is a mere incident.” (14 R. C. L. 1218; Rossini v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 182 Cal. 415, 188 Pac. 564; Wheeler v. Phenix Ins. Co., 203 N. Y. 283, Ann. Cas. 1913A, 1297, 38 L. R. A. (n. s.) 474, 96 N. E. 453; German-American Ins. Co. v. Hyman, 42 Colo. 156, 16 L. R. A. (n. s.) 77, 94 Pac. 27; Western Ins. Co. v. Skass, 64 Colo. 342, 171 Pac. 358.)

Plaintiff contends that the burden of proof rested on defendants to show that a fire did not exist prior to the explosion, and in support of this contention he cites authorities in all of which an action was being prosecuted to recover for loss directly caused by fire. We have no doubt as to the rule insisted upon being applicable to the issues as framed in the cases cited, *511 bnt the rule is not applicable to this case, in which the damages claimed are for losses directly caused by an explosion as an incident to a pre-existing hostile fire and no damages are claimed as a direct result of a pre-existing or ensuing fire. The establishment by plaintiff of a prima facie case could not be attained by going no further than establishing that there had been an explosion, for the plaintiff was not insured against loss caused by an explosion. The burden was on the plaintiff to show in this ease a pre-existing fire, and that the fire was the proximate cause of the injury.

The building was used as a machine-shop; the acetylene generator was located in the northeast corner of the back room and had not been used for a week or ten days immediately prior to the explosion. It was seven feet tall, cylindrical in shape, and twenty-four inches in diameter. The chamber containing carbide was the top one, twenty-four inches in depth; the lower chamber, sixty inches in depth, on the morning of the explosion had water in it to the depth of thirty-three inches in a frozen condition, leaving a space for the gas contained in the generator in depth twenty-seven inches. The generator was equipped with a filling cap on top where the carbide was put into the chamber, which chamber had a funnel-shaped bottom. A gravity motor operated by weights furnished power to a shaft rotated by a series of four butterfly valves. When the shaft revolved, the butterfly valves would pick the carbide from the pipe in the carbide chamber and drop it into the water and the gas would accumulate on top of the water. A safety valve was on top of the generator, connected with the gas spape, adjusted so that the gas would escape when the pressure reached sixteen pounds and be carried through a pipe to the atmosphere above the roof. An automatic valve shut off the supply of carbide by shutting off the motor at ten pounds’ pressure. There was an additional safety device — a butterfly trip — which of a night would be closed by the operator, so that, should the motor start, the carbide could *512 not get ont of the carbide chamber and into the gas and water chamber. This safety device was applied every night up to the time it was last used. The gas was removed from the generator through a valve. There was a flash-back chamber filled with water, through which the gas would bubble as it was released, and no fire could flash from «the torch back into the chamber of the generator. A quarter-inch pipe connected with the valve through which the gas was taken for use and carried the gas to the front room when it was used there, and when used in the back room a hose conducted the gas from the generator to where it was used. The hose was not connected with the generator at the time of the explosion. When the generator was shut down overnight, in the morning, as a rule, the pressure held about the same according to the weather; if the weather was real cold it would decrease, if it was warm the pop-off valve would take care of the heat expansion. If the machine was shut down for a week or ten days the gas pressure would gradually decrease. The back room was heated by a furnace in the basement. The room had been heated the day before, but there was no fire in the furnace the morning of the explosion; the room was cold, the outside temperature below zero, and the temperature in the room approximately the same. There was a coal pile about a foot deep next to the generator and separated from it by a board, and on top of the coal was used waste saturated with oil and grease, estimated to be from six to eighteen inches deep, in quantity from one to two bushels, and estimated by the witnesses' as being at various distances from the generator — from six inches to two feet.

A witness testified: “At the time of .the explosion I was in the alley at the rear of the building. I saw a flash, glare, blaze of light, a flame through the windows; the flash was in the vicinity of the generator, and I dropped flat on the ground and heard a report.

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Bluebook (online)
252 P. 310, 77 Mont. 505, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-milwaukee-mechanics-insurance-mont-1926.