Home Mutual Building & Loan Ass'n v. Northwestern National Insurance

236 Wis. 475
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1941
StatusPublished

This text of 236 Wis. 475 (Home Mutual Building & Loan Ass'n v. Northwestern National Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Mutual Building & Loan Ass'n v. Northwestern National Insurance, 236 Wis. 475 (Wis. 1941).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

For the purposes of passing upon defendant’s •contentions, it suffices to note the following facts, which were found by the court upon evidence which was in part undisputed and which, in so far as it was in dispute, can reasonably be considered to warrant the court’s findings to the following effect. The dwelling and attached garage building, on which the fire insurance policies in question were issued by defendant to plaintiff, were rented by the owner to Walter T. Lentz, alias, for residence purposes, about twenty-two days before the fire on February 27, 1937. Fie and a woman represented to be his wife entered into occupancy of the premises about [477]*477February 5, 1937, and they, together with a girl about five years of age, occupied the premises continuously until February 27, 1937. They had on the first floor at least four kitchen chairs and kitchen table, an upholstered chair, a davenport or couch, a floor lamp, a quantity of dishes and kitchen utensils and some clothing; and on the second floor two beds or bedsprings. About 1:45 o’clock a. m. on February 27, 1937, a fire of undetermined origin broke out on the second floor of the premises, and largely destroyed that floor and the roof. By the time some of the nearest neighbors, who resided several blocks from the premises, which were at the outskirts of a village, and also two village police officers arrived at the premises, the occupants had escaped and disappeared. After the fire there were found in the building, in addition to the above-mentioned furniture and furnishings, a safety razor and some shaving cream, bread, milk, and sau-' sage; and it was also discovered that a large still equipment had been installed and used in the building, including a tin and sheet-copper column eighteen inches in diameter and twenty feet high, extending from the basement to the top of the second floor, another column twelve feet long, extending into a second-floor bathroom, and a six by six-feet pressure boiler in the basement. The court found further that by one or more explosions the first and second-floor windows- and window sash and a portion of the brick chimney beyond the top of the first floor and one of the gables on the northeast corner of the house were blown out; that a major explosion occurred after a hostile fire had started and was burning in the premises; that during the course of the fire an explosion occurred within the twenty-feet-high column and blew off the cover thereof, together with a connection between it and the condenser, but that this explosion or expansion of gases within the still column was not the cause of damage in the amount of $925.26, which was stipulated to have been the result of an explosion, in addition to damage amounting to $6,400, which was at[478]*478tributable to fire alone; and that prior to the fire the plaintiff did not know, or have reason to know or suspect, that the tenants intended to or had installed a still, and did not have any control of those acts. The court also found that each of the three standard fire insurance policies, insuring plaintiff against “all direct loss and damage by fire” except as provided in said policy, was issued by defendent to plaintiff with an attached standard policy form of rider pasted on to that portion of each policy containing a blank space with the words “(Space for description of property) ;” and that on this rider there was the following printed language with certain typewritten insertions (which are printed in italics in this opinion to- distinguish them from the portions which appeared in print), to- wit:

“On the following described property, all situated Cor. Summit & Pelham Parkway, Lot 7 Block 16 Continuation of Bay-side Town of Milwaukee State of Wisconsin. On the two story shingle roof brick veneered building, including foundations, plumbing, electric wiring,... also all permanent fixtures belonging to- and constituting a part of said building; occupied and to be occupied only for dwelling purposes—

and that on the second page of each of the policies are printed the “Stipulations and Conditions of Policy,” with the numbered lines of the “Standard Fire Insurance Policy of the State of Wisconsin” in the words and manner as set forth in sec. 203.01, Stats., and that among the same are the following, to wit:

“Unless otherwise provided by agreement in writing added hereto this company shall not be liable for loss or damage occurring
“Increase of (a) while the hazard is increased by any Hasard means within the control or knowledge of the insured; . . .
“Explosion (f) by explosion, unless fire ensue, and, in that event, for loss or damage by fire only.”

[479]*479The court further found that in the policies there are used in a number of places the words “while” or “only while” to state conditions which would result in the suspension of liability on the part of the insurer, and also state situations which will result in forfeiture of the policies by means of expressions such as “this company shall not be liable if (unless) . . . ;” “this policy is void if (unless) . . . “it is a condition of this insurance that . . . ;” and “all insurance shall cease if. . . .”

Upon the facts found the court concluded, in so far as material on this appeal, that when defendant issued the policies it regarded any future occupancy of the insured premises for purposes other than dwelling purposes as increasing the hazard, but that such resulting increase of hazard was not intended to, and did not, work a forfeiture of the coverage nor suspend such coverage; that the words in the policies which refer to- the premises as “occupied and to be occupied only for dwelling purposes,” and which defendant inserted in typewriting in the rider attached to each policy at the place designated therein as “(Space for description of property),” operate merely as describing the use of the premises at the time of the issuance of the policy and the intended future use thereof, and do not fix or limit the extent of the application of the insurance unless they are construed to refer merely to increase of hazard,'and are by such construction reconciled with the “increase of hazard” clause and the provision insuring plaintiff “against all direct loss and damage by fire.;” that the increase of hazard resulting from the installation of the alcohol still was not within the control or knowledge of plaintiff; and that neither such increase in hazard, nor the use or conversion of the building to purposes other than dwelling purposes only, operated to release the defendant, as insurer, from liability for the loss and damage in question. The court further concluded that since the major explosion did not precede the fire, defendant is not entitled to any deduction for explosion damage, but is liable for plaintiff’s total loss and [480]*480damage of $7,335.26 occasioned, not only by the fire, but also by the explosion which was an explosion following a “hostile” fire and within the contemplation of the policies.

Defendant contends (1) that under the contract between the parties “the policies limit coverage to the time and during the period when the insured building is ‘occupied and to be occupied only for dwelling purposes,’ ” and that this “language as thus used is not descriptive merely;” (2) that “the policy provisions defining and limiting the scope of the insurance and the coverage afforded are not inconsistent with or prohibited by the statutes, nor ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 Wis. 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-mutual-building-loan-assn-v-northwestern-national-insurance-wis-1941.