Harper v. City Insurance

1 Bosw. 520
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJuly 11, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Bosw. 520 (Harper v. City Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harper v. City Insurance, 1 Bosw. 520 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

By the Court. Slosson, J.

It is difficult to distinguish this case from that of St. John v. The American Mutual Fire Insurance Company, (1 Duer Rep. 371, affirmed 1 Hernán Rep. 516,) and unless the privilege contained in the policy, taken in connection with the general nature of the subject insured, to wit, a printing and book establishment, creates a distinction between the two, that case must be decisive of this.

The defence mainly relied upon is, that the fire was “ occasioned by camphene,” a risk from which, by the eighth printed condition of the policy, the Company is expressly exempted.

The conditions of the policy are, by express reference to them in the body of the instrument, made part of the contract, and it is provided in terms, that they “are to be used and resorted to, in order to explain the rights and «Obligations of the parties thereto in all cases not therein otherwise ‘ specially provided for.’”

[525]*525The eamphene was kept in open sheet-iron jars or pans, in two rooms, one on the second, and one on the third floors, expressly fitted up and arranged, and supposed to be sufficiently so, to prevent any dangerous communication between.them and other parts of the building in case of accident in the use of the article.

These jars or pans were stationary. They were nearly four Set long, and the fluid was put into them to the depth of from two to two and a half feet; they were used for dipping the rollers, used in printing, for the purpose of cleaning them.

The fire was communicated to the eamphene by one of the workmen, accidentally or carelessly, dropping or throwing a lighted paper or match into one of the open jars.

The fire spread with immediate and fatal rapidity, and the whole building, with almost its entire contents, was destroyed, producing an immense loss.

The insurance was for $10,000, on the plaintiffs’ “printing and book materials, stock, paper, stereotype plates, fixtures, printed books, and steam engine, and machinery, contained in [the premises in Cliff and Pearl streets.”] The privilege was thus expressed, “Privilege for a printing office, bindery, and book store, and steam boiler in the yard.”

The Judge, at the trial, admitted, under objection, evidence of a usage among .printers to use eamphene for fine work, in the printing of books, and of the necessity and advantage of its use.

It appears from the evidence, that the article was used by printers in cleaning rollers, wood cuts, metal plates, and type metal, where there are engravings. Most of the witnesses speak of it as a necessary article in what is called fine work.

Some of the witnesses speak of its having been in use five years; some, six or seven; some, eight or ten; and one, that it has been in use fourteen years.

One witness says, its use has been general, in all printing offices, for nine or ten years; another says, he knows of no printers, who do fine work, who do not use eamphene; another, however, says, that he cannot say that a majority of printers use it, and thinks not; another, that it is generally used by those who do fine work. The plaintiffs themselves had used it for fourteen years.

[526]*526The importance of establishing a usage, in the use of camphene, arises both from the absence of any evidence to show that when the plaintiffs applied for the insurance, they made known to the defendants that the article was used on the premises, as they were bound to have done, it being an article materially affecting the risk; and the omission of all reference to it by name in the privilege which it is contended includes its use.

The Judge submitted three distinct questions to the jury.

First—Was there a general and established usage among printers in the use of camphene for fine work in the printing of books, at the time the policy was effected?

Second—Was camphene necessary for fine work in the printing of books?

Third—If not necessary, was its use more advantageous than that of any other article for the purposes for which it is proved to have been used ?

And the jury were instructed that if they found either in the affirmative, they should find a verdict for the plaintiffs for the amount of the policy.

The jury answered each question in the affirmative, and a verdict was taken for the plaintiffs subject to the opinion of the Court at General Term.

The question of how long the usage, if the jury should find it to exist, had prevailed, was not submitted to them. They have found that the usage prevailed, and that" the use of the article was both necessary and more advantageous than that of any other for the purpose for which it was used in printing.

As the jury found all the questions in the affirmative, no question can arise as to which of the three formed the basis of the verdict.

It rests upon all, and if the charge of the Judge contained a correct exposition of the law of the contract between the parties, the verdict must stand, unless the omission to find how long the custom to use camphene had prevailed shall be considered fatal, or unless evidence of usage was inadmissible at all.

I am of opinion, considering the generality of the language employed in the clause containing the privilege, that the evidence was properly admitted, and I think the finding that there was a general and established usage among printers to use earn. [527]*527phene, especially under the evidence, which shows it to have existed several years, at the least,, quite enough, without a special •finding as to the length of time it has prevailed, to charge the defendants with knowledge of its existence.

The Judge charged, “that under the description of the subjects insured, and the privilege granted therewith, the plaintiffs are entitled to recover, although the accidental fire may have been communicated to or propagated through the camphene used and employed by the plaintiffs in their business within the description and privilege of the policy, if the jury should be of opinion that camphene is an article of usual, necessary, or advantageous use in such, the business of the plaintiffs, within the description and privilege of the policy.”

It is important here to determine what is meant by the words “occasioned by camphene,” as used in the eighth condition, for if they are to be construed in the sense of originating or causing of itself a fire, the condition becomes practically a dead letter.

The liquid itself can never physically originate fire—it is not self-combustible—it can only occasion a fire by being the immediate medium of its communication to other subjects. It is in this sense, therefore, that the words are to be understood, and thus read the plain meaning of the condition, is, that the company will not be responsible for a loss by fire which shall have been occasioned by means of camphene, as a medium of its communication, and which would not have happened but for the presence of that article on the premises.

The language of the charge, in which the fire is spoken of as “ communicated to or propagated through the camphene,” therefore correctly defines the meaning of the words in the condition “ occasioned by.”

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7 Bosw. 385 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1860)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Bosw. 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-city-insurance-nysuperctnyc-1857.