Insurance Co. v. Leader

48 S.E. 972, 121 Ga. 260, 1904 Ga. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 12, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 48 S.E. 972 (Insurance Co. v. Leader) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Insurance Co. v. Leader, 48 S.E. 972, 121 Ga. 260, 1904 Ga. LEXIS 102 (Ga. 1904).

Opinion

Fish, P. J.

(After stating the facts.) 1. The contract of insurance must be considered as a. whole. While the policy, in its first clause, insures “against all direct loss or damage by fire, except as hereinafter provided,” the meaning of the words, “direct loss or damage by fire,” is not to be determined simply from the words themselves. There are other provisions in the policy which show the sense in which the parties to the contract understood these words and intended to use them. The policy contains the following provisions: “ These companies shall not be liable for loss caused . . by neglect of the insured to use all reasonable means to' save and preserve the property at and after a fire or when the property is endangered by fire in neighboring premises.” “If property covered by this policy is so endangered by fire as to require removal to a place of safety, and is So removed, that part of this policy in excess of its proportion of any loss, and of the value of property remaining in the original location, shall, for the ensuing five days only, cover the property so removed in the new location;” etc. “These companies shall not be liable under this policy for a greater proportion of any loss on the described property, or for loss by and expense of removal from .premises endangered by fire, than the amount hereby insured shall bear to the whole insurance, whether valid or not, or by solvent or insolvent insurers, covering such property,” etc. In view of these provisions of the policy, as well as those of our Civil Code, § 2094, counsel for the plaintiff in error have abandoned the exceptions tb the overruling of the demurrer to the plaintiff’s original petition, which was based upon the idea that loss or damage by removal of the goods from the location in which they had been insured, in order to prevent their destruction by fire, was not covered by the policy. But, making a distinction between loss or damage by removal and loss or damage by preparations for removal, they still insist upon the exceptions to- the allowance of the amendment to the petition. We will consider the objections to the allowance of this amendment in their inverse order. The second of these objections presents the question whether the defendant, under the contract of insurance, would be liable for damages to the property insured, caused by packing and preparing [265]*265the goods for removal from the premises in order to prevent their being destroyed by fire. There is plenty of outside authority for. holding that when the contract of insurance requires the insured to use all reasonable efforts to save the property from destruction by a fire which threatens to ignite and consume it, the insurer is liable to him for loss sustained in consequence of his compliance with the obligation thus imposed upon him. Mutual Ins. Co. v. Agnew, 34 Pa. St. 96; Case v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 13 Ill. 676; Talaman v. Citizens’ Mut. Ins. Co., 16 La. Ann. 426. See also Thompson v. Montreal Ins. Co., 6 U. C. Q. B. 319. The rule is so laid down in 3 Joyce on Ins. §2812. Besides, this is a Georgia contract, and must be construed in the light of the provisions of section 2094 of the Civil Code, which reads as follows: “A loss or injury may occur from fire without the actual burning of the articles or property, as a house blown up to stop a conflagration, or goods removed in imminent danger, or damage by water used to extinguish the flames.” Clearly this is equivalent to declaring that, in the instances enumerated, and others of like character, the fire is to be considered the proximate cause of the loss or injury. This is in accordance with the well-established rule deducible from the decisions of other courts and the principles announced by the leading text-writers upon the subject of fire insurance. 2 Biddle on Ins. §651; 2 May on Ins. §404; Kerr on Ins. 358; 1 Wood on Ins. § 106; Elliott on Ins. §221; 3 Joyce on Ins. §§ 2811, 2812, 2821, 2824, 2832.

Much stress has been laid by counsel for the plaintiff in error upon the adjective “direct” in the phrase “all direct loss or damage by fire,” but, in our opinion, there is no peculiar restrictive force in the adjective here used, especially when we consider that this contract was made in the light of the above-quoted provisions of our Civil Code. “ Direct,” as here used, means no more and no less-than “proximate” or “immediate.” We agree with Elliott, when he says: “‘Direct loss or damage by fire’ means loss or damage accruing directly from fire as the destroying agency, in contradistinction to the remoteness of fire as such agency. The word ‘ direct’ means merely the immediate or proximate as distinguished from the remote cause.” It was so held in Ermentrout v. Girard etc. Ins. Co., 63 Minn. 305, 56 Am. St. R. 481, which case the author cites in support of the text. In sup[266]*266porfc of a contrary view, counsel for plaintiff in error cite California Ins. Co. v. Union Compress Co., 133 U. S. 387, 416. This case was also relied on by counsel for the defendant in the Minnesota case above cited, and in reference thereto the Minnesota court said: “ Counsel for defendant cites . . some language used by way of illustration in California Ins. Co. v. Union Compress Co., 133 U. S. 387, 416, in which the court names ‘destruction'through the falling of burning walls’ as an instance of remoteness of agency. The question was not before the court, for in that case the insured property was physically burned by the direct action of fire. If the court meant what counsel claims, we can not avoid the conclusion that the illustration was, to say the least of it, an unfortunate one.” In 1 Wood on Insurance, 265, the author says: “ The insurer is liable for a loss happening to the property insured, from the peril insured against, when the peril covered by the policy is the proximate cause of the loss. He is only relieved from liability when the peril insured against is the remote cause of the loss, or the loss results from the fault of the insured, or when from his laches or fraud the contract is avoided. When the insurance is against loss by fire, the insurer is liable for any damage done to the property by reason of a fire, even though the property itself was not burned, or in anywise injured by fire, if the fire was the proximate cause of such damage, and the damage arose in consequence of efforts reasonably made by the assured or others, in view of the imminence of the peril, to preserve the property from conflagration, which must be judged of from the peculiar circumstances of each case.”

In this case, however, in addition to what has been said above, we have the construction which the parties themselves placed upon the phrase, “ all direct loss or damage by fire,” and we find that even the insurers, by a subsequent provision inserted in the contract, gave to this phrase a construction sufficiently broad and liberal to include “loss by and expense of removal from premises endangered by fire.” It is to be observed that the provision to which we now refer does not declare that, in addition to the liability expressed by the words, “all direct loss or damage by fire,” the insurance companies shall be liable for “loss by and expense of removal from premises endangered by fire,” but, in limiting the amount of any liability of these insurers in the [267]

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.E. 972, 121 Ga. 260, 1904 Ga. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-co-v-leader-ga-1904.