Insurance Company of North America v. Pittser

399 S.W.2d 901, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2722
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 28, 1965
Docket7695
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 399 S.W.2d 901 (Insurance Company of North America v. Pittser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Insurance Company of North America v. Pittser, 399 S.W.2d 901, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2722 (Tex. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

CHADICK, Chief Justice.

The plaintiffs, Daniel O. Pittser and W. H. Pilcher, sued the defendant, Insurance Company of North America for windstorm damage to a building insured by such company.

The building was located on the south side of state highway No. 49 near the *902 “Y” at the eastern edge of Hughes Springs, Cass County. Construction was that generally described as concrete block on concrete slab foundation, with a flat built-up felt and tar roof. Its dimensions were 50 feet width, 30 feet depth, front or north wall 18 feet high, the back (south) wall 16 feet. The roof projected out or overhung the front wall by about five feet, and the downward slope or fall was 16 to 24 inches front to back. The building had been vacant a few weeks on August 18, 1964, but in its 10 to 12 years prior existence it housed a drive-in malt stand, an automobile body repair shop, and a domino hall.

The evidence, in its aspect most favorable to the judgment shows that from midnight until around noontime on August 18, 1964, the weather in the general area of the building was “stormy”, with rain and wind. A witness living within a one-half mile of the building characterized the early morning weather as “stormy”, and said the wind began to “get up” as he left for work about seven o’clock in the morning. A carpenter testified the wind had such force as to close down roofing work on a structure approximately a mile distant from this building because it buffeted roofing material so much it could not be handled.

The agent who wrote the insurance policy lived approximately one mile from the building. He described the wind as “blowing excessively”, that it was stormy over the general area and on inspection of the property the afternoon of August 18th he saw trees uprooted across the highway north of the building. He testified to having experience with windstorm damage and expressed the opinion that damage to the building was caused by windstorm.

One of the owners, plaintiff Pittser, testified that after receiving a communication, on August 17 or 18th he drove to Hughes Springs and arrived in the late afternoon, but before dark. About a mile east of the town, as he approached the building site, he noticed along the highway broken tree limbs, branches, and “just a conglomeration of debris and things like that — that they had considerable wind around there”. In addition, he testified as follows:

“Q. State whether or not you noticed anything, say beginning three hundred (300) yards from your building until you got to your building?
A. As I make the curve going around there at the ‘Y’,
íjí
Q. Yes.
A. * * * along the north side of the road, there are a whole bunch of bricks and blocks and things like that, and on down in front of the place of business, it was a real wreck. The roof is caved in and these bricks fell down out in front of it, and directly across the road, there were some concrete blocks for one reason or another. How they got over there, I don’t know, but they were there — limbs and things like that; little old trees around there were shook threadbare; across the field there were a couple of big old trees uprooted. I don’t know how long they had been uprooted but probably sometime— I don’t know, but I did notice one little tree or two or three— one had blown across that little fence there, in particular.
Q. Did you go out and examine that ?
A. I walked out there and it looked like it had just been blown down.
Q. Did it have green leaves on it?
A. Yes. They were.all around there like that.
*903 Q. In what direction was the little tree blown down ?
A. Toward the malt shop — toward the highway.
Q. Your building faces the north?
A. That’s right.
Q. I take it the tree was blown to the south ?
A. Yes.
Q. All right, sir, could you tell whether or not there was more debris and limbs and trash on the north as contrasted to the south side of the road ?
A. Well, like I say these bricks and things were over there on the north side of the road and the malt shop is on the south side of the road. It seems like the malt shop was more or less a stop for a bunch of trash and debris that had blown up there.
Q. That leads to my next question. Did you observe any debris and trash in front of where your building used to be?
A. A whole lot.
Q. What kind of debris and trash was that ?
A. Well, it was wood, lumber, paper and trash of all sorts.
Q. Did you notice any limbs of any kind?
A. Yes, little old trees around there that had been stripped down. It was that and leaves.
Q. Was that leaning up against your building ?
A. Well, the building had fallen to the north. * * *
Q. All right.
A. * * * and the trash and everything naturally had blown out of the road over in front of it.”

An architect who examined the building shortly after August 18 expressed the .opinion that the damage to it was caused by the wind. On the basis of his study he concluded that a strong wind struck the north front of the building, was deflected upward catching the overhang, lifting the roof and unseating it. Such action, in his opinion, caused the walls to break and the roof to drop back in an unseated position forcing the north wall outward as the roof sank to the ground over a period of hours. It was shown by other evidence that the building was sound and in good repair two to six weeks before damage was noticed August 18th.

The reasonable inferences and deductions to be drawn from the facts and circumstances recorded constitutes evidence of probative force that unusually violent wind, having the aspect of a storm, swept through the locality of the building on August 18th. The appellant does not actually dispute this conclusion, its brief contains this statement:

“It is undisputed that Appellees’ building collapsed, that the night before the collapse there was a wind blowing somewhere in the vicinity of the building and that if a windstorm caused the collapse of Appellees’ building, Appellees are entitled to recover under the terms of their policy with Appellant. However, the missing link in the proof introduced by Appellees in the trial court was the causal connection between the wind and the subsequent collapse of Appellees’ building.”

The efficient or producing cause of windstorm damage may be proven by circumstantial evidence. See McDonald v. New York Central Mutual Fire Insurance Company (Tex.Sp.Ct.

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Bluebook (online)
399 S.W.2d 901, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-company-of-north-america-v-pittser-texapp-1965.