Gunther v. Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance

134 U.S. 110, 10 S. Ct. 448, 33 L. Ed. 857, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 1952
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 3, 1890
Docket1367
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 134 U.S. 110 (Gunther v. Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gunther v. Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance, 134 U.S. 110, 10 S. Ct. 448, 33 L. Ed. 857, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 1952 (1890).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Gbay

delivered the opinion of the.court.

This was an action brought by a citizen of New York against a British corporation on two policies of fire insurance, datéd November 16,1877, and extended to July 15,1880, the one on buildings, and the other on fixtures, furniture and other personal property in and about the same.

Each policy described the principal building as follows: “The two-story frame hotel building, with one-story frame kitchen and two-story frame pavilion adjoining’ and communicating, situated on Gravesend, Bay of Bath, Kings County, 'Long Island; (it is understood that the above property is to be occupied by a family when not in use as a hotel; ) privilege to use gasoline gas, gasometer, blower and generator, being under ground about sixty feet from main building in vault,- no heat employed in process.”

Among the printed conditions of each policy were the following :

“ If the assured shall keep gunpowder, fire-works,' nitroglycerine, phosphorus, saltpetre,- nitrate of soda, petroleum, naphtha, gasoline, benzine, benzole, or benzine varnish, or keep or use camphene, spirit gas, or any burning fluid or chemical oils, without written permission in this policy, then and in every such case this policy shall be -void.”
“ Petroleum, rock, earth, coal, kerosene or carbon oils of any 'description, whether crude or refined, benzine, benzole, naphtha, camphene, spirit gas, burning fluid, turpentine, gasoline, phosgene or any other inflammable liquid are not to be stored, used, kept or allowed on the above premises, temporarily or permanently, for sale or otherwise, unless with written permission endorsed on this policy, excepting, the use of refined-coal, kerosene or other carbon oil for lights, if the same is-drawn and the lamps filled by daylight; otherwise this- policy .shall be null and void.”

Attached to and pasted on the face of each policy at the *112 time of its issue was a-printed slip, signed by the defendant’s agents, and' in these words: “ Privileged to use kerosene oil for lights, lamps to be filled and trimmed by, daylight only.” And on the margin of the first policy were written and signed by the defendant’s agents these words : September 17, 1878, Privileged to keep not exceeding five barrels of oil on said premises.”

At the first trial, a verdict w;as returned for the plaintiff, which .was set aside and a new'trial ordered by this court. 116 ü. S. 113.

Afterwards the plaintiff died, and the action was revived in the name of; his executors ; and the answer was amended by leave of court, so as to set up, among other defences, as a breach of the second .condition above quoted, “ that kerosene, ■carbon oil or other inflammable liquid, so stored, used, kept or allowed on said premises as aforesaid, was drawn, not by daylight, but at'or after dusk or dark and with a lighted lamp or lantern near, in violation of the express terms of. the said condition, and that the fire which destroyed said premises was caused by such proximity of said lighted lamp; and the defendant further avers that it is advised and believes that the said' policies thereby became and were null: and void.”

• A second verdict for the plaintiffs was set aside by the Circuit Court, for the reasons stated in its opinion reported in 34 Fed. Pep.. 501. .

At the third trial, the plaintiffs introduced in evidence the policies, and renewal receipts continuing them in force until July. 15,. 1880, and proved the assured’s ownership of the property insured; and the parties agreed that it was destroyed by fire on August 15, 1879, and that the amount of the loss, with interest, was $41,116.64..

The defendant, proved by nncontrádicted evidence that .a barrel "of about fifty gallons of kerosene was bought by Walker, the lessee of . the premises, on August 13,1879, and on the next day put by him in the oil room under the pavilion, which was a low room about twelve feet square, with doors opening into other, rooms only. There was conflicting evidence upon the question whether any- gasoline, naphtha or'benzine was kept in *113 the oil room at the time of the fire. ' It was admitted that in 1878 the pavilion had been lighted by gasoline generated in a gasometer under the privilege in the first clause of the policy, but that its use was discontinued in the fall of 1878, and it was not used in 1879.

The only testimony introduced as- to the cause of the fire was in substance as follows:

The defendant proved that the assured testified at the first trial, that on August 15, 1879, about dusk, he was seated on the piazza of the hotel, in sight of the pavilion, and saw some men with pails and a light; that his attention was attracted by shouts of children playing about in front, and he immediately looked back again and saw the men come out “ as though they were on fire,” and it did not occur to him that there was a fire in the oil room, although he saw it: that he called to the men to roll in the high grass, and one of them did so, and another ran into the water, and in another instant he saw the oil room burning, and the building immediately caught fire. and in an hour or less was level with the ground.

The defendant called as- witnesses the two men last mentioned, who testified that they had' been sent from another hotel a mile off with two ordinary wooden pails to get five gallons of gasoline : that Walker directed one Schuchardt, a man in his employ, to let them have the oil ■; that Schuchardt, carrying a lighted glass stable lantern with small holes around the top, took them into the oil room, and drew the oil from a barrel, through a piece of pipe used as a faucet, into the pails, one-of which leaked, and much oil was spilled upon the floor; that the lantern was very near the barrel, and presently there was a blue flame across the floor, and the whole room was in a blaze of fire; that Sohucháfdt got out first, and died of his burns; that one of the witnesses rolled in the grass and was little injured, and the other, who ran into the water; was. so severely burned as to be obliged to keep his bed for three months.

The defendant moved the court to direct a verdict for the defendant, “ on the ground that, as th.e established cause of the fire was the drawing in the oil room of the insured prem *114 ises about dusk, in the vicinity of a lighted lamp, of a fluid product of petroleum under the circumstances shown by the evidence, not for filling lamps on the insured premises, but for another and different purpose, this of itself, and irrespective of other questions in the case, constitutes a violation of the several contracts of insurance in force at the time of the fire, as contained in the policies respectively, thereby rendering the said policies and each of them void, and defeating the right of the plaintiffs to recover in this action.”

The plaintiffs requested the court to submit to the jury the questions “ whether there was any naphtha, gasoline or benzine on the insured premises at the time of the fire,” and “whether the fluid which was drawn from a barrel in the oil room at the time of the fire was so drawn in the presence of a lighted lamp.”

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Bluebook (online)
134 U.S. 110, 10 S. Ct. 448, 33 L. Ed. 857, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 1952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunther-v-liverpool-london-globe-insurance-scotus-1890.