Home Ins. Co. v. P'pool

92 S.W.2d 79, 263 Ky. 224, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 161
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 13, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 92 S.W.2d 79 (Home Ins. Co. v. P'pool) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Ins. Co. v. P'pool, 92 S.W.2d 79, 263 Ky. 224, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 161 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Morris, Commissioner

Reversing.

Appellee, prior to and on February 8, 1932, was ■operating a general store in Caldwell county, and in April, 1931, took out a one-year policy with appellant, insuring his furniture and fixtures to the amount of $600; on December 12, 1931, a one-year policy insuring his building for $600, and on February 1, 1932, another policy insuring the stock of goods for $1,500. It is admitted that on February 8, 1932, all the policies were in effect, and it seems to be beyond dispute that there was a total loss of the insured property on that ■date. Each of the policies contained the following ■clause:

“This Company shall not be liable for loss caused *225 directly or indirectly by; * * * or (unless fire ensues and in that event for the damages by fire only) explosion of any kind. * * *’’’

Appellee filed his petition in February, 1933, and alleged a total loss of the insured properties by fire, and sought to recover the aggregate of the three policies. Appellant answered, denying the allegations of the petition, pleading affirmatively the conditions of the policies above set out, and further pleading that the alleged losses set up in the petition were solely the result of an explosion and that no fire ensued.

The cause was submitted to a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of appellee for $1,750, with interest, though the property was insured for $2,700. Motion for a new trial being overruled, judgment was entered in accord with the verdict, and appellant prosecutes-this appeal, insisting that it was entitled to a peremptory instruction and that the instruction given for appellee was faulty and prejudicial. These presentations require some attention to, and recitals of, the proof.

The appellee says that at about 10 minutes after 11 o’clock on the day above stated he had waited on a customer who was about to and did leave. They noticed some smoke coming out from under the side room at the front door and through the cracks of the side room. He says that he went off the porch and looked under the room to see if he could tell where the fire was. He was out there, as he says, “possibly two minutes trying to discover where the fire was.” He then said that he believed the fire was in the side room, and went first into the main building and saw no smoke in there, and, walking to the door which opened from the store into the side room, “opened the door to the side room and there was a flash of fire hit me in the face and that is the last I remember.”

He described the building as having been a one-story frame, metal roof, the store 60x22, and the side room 60x14, facing west on one of the crossroads, one side being flush with the road on the north side. There appears to have been a porch on the front, extending the entire width of the store and the side room. The building was set on stone pillars, and was 18 inches from the ground level in front and about 2 feet from the level in the rear. As indicated, the merchan *226 dising and merchandise was in the main store. In the side room was kept coal oil, lubricating oil, axle grease, and trash such as may be found around a general store. The stove was in the main room, but neither appellee nor any one testifying recalls whether or not there was a fire in the stove. There is no suggestion that there was a place for a fire in the side room.

Persons who were near-by and came to the store shortly after an explosion was heard and felt found appellee in the debris, unconscious and suffering severely. He was taken to a hospital and remained there until March 30th, or thereabout.

Harold McNabb, a witness, was at the store when appellee was waiting on a customer. "When witness started out of the store, he noticed smoke coming from under the porch of the main store. Appellee and his customer were also out there, and appellee went around back of the house to try to find “where the smoke was coming from and then went into the front door.” Witness was then on the ground looking under the porch. Witness says: “When I seen the smoke after Mr. P’Pool went back in the building, after he started in the store, ever what it was went off.” The explosion blew witness “across the road somewhere.” He describes the noise resulting from the explosion as being “just like a blast,”' and he says he thought he heard “two noises,” and describes the smoke as being “black.” He thinks that from the time he first noticed the smoke until the “thing blew up” was perhaps three or four minutes.

Prank Jones was at the store, and had just left before “anything unusual happened.” Curt Townes was with him, and they were in a car. They had driven for some four or five minutes when they heard a noise and felt a jar of the car. They immediately turned and went back to the store and found it “afire and all torn down.” “A fire was up in the top of the pile of kindling.” It appeared to him the fire was “back from the front door, and kind of back toward the door that went in the side room.” He describes the fire as being in “just a great big pile of kindling, about two and a half feet high.” He heard appellee groaning, and, after throwing one bucket of water on the fire, went with others to his rescue, and found him with two feet of kindling stuff piled over him.” *227 He could not say whether appellee was burned or not. He also says he drove hurriedly after the explosion and noticed black smoke, but when he left the store he noticed nothing unusual, and detected no smell of smoke and saw no fire. He further states that, when he heard the noise and looked back, “there was no store building where it had just been.” This witness also says he saw a hole in the ground between where the'stove was in the main store and the road on the north side; the hole looking like a crater about 4 feet across and something like 2 feet deep, apparently freshly made.

The doctors who were called to attend appellee describe his condition as being “all torn up, unconscious, his clothing torn off, his face skinned, and covered with dust, dirt and stuff.” There was some evidence of a parched condition of the skin on both sides of his face.

Curt Townes, who was with witness Jones in the car when the explosion occurred, testifies in the main as did his companion, so much so that it need not be recounted.

King Oliver lived near the crossroads and was at the store just before the “occurrence took place.” He heard the noise, went at once to the store and found it when he got there “just all up in a pile where the store was”; that he saw some fire about 20 feet fromthe front door near the side door leading into the side room “aright smart little fire, something like 2 feet. I broke after water to put it out.” Three or four others were there, and it took them fifteen or twenty minutes to put the' fire out.. On cross-examination he said that he had gotten only two or three hundred yards from the storé when it blew up. He noticed no smoke or anything unusual when he left the store “just a mighty few minutes” before the explosion.

Hugh Hart went by appellee’s store and saw a fire “something like two feet high” near the side room where Mr. P’Pool was lying. Ño evidence of fire save at the point indicated.

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.W.2d 79, 263 Ky. 224, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-ins-co-v-ppool-kyctapphigh-1936.