Kattelmann v. Fire Ass'n

79 Mo. App. 447, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 305
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 3, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 79 Mo. App. 447 (Kattelmann v. Fire Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kattelmann v. Fire Ass'n, 79 Mo. App. 447, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 305 (Mo. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

SMITH, P. J.

This is a suit on a lightning insurance policy.

By the terms of the policy the defendant contracted to insure plaintiff against any “direct loss or damage caused by [450]*450lightning to an amount not exceeding eighteen hundred dollars, on his two story brick, gravel roof building occupied as a store and dwelling house, and to an amount not exceeding two hundred dollars on the shelving, counters and furniture in said building.” There was a trial to a jury. At the conclusion of all the evidence the defendant unsuccessfully interposed a demurrer thereto. The first question which we are required to' decide is whether or not, under the evidence, the plaintiff was entitled to a submission of the case to the jury; or, stated in another way, whether or not there was any evidence tending to prove that lightning was the agency thac caused the damage to the plaintiff’s building, and his trade fixtures therein?

statkmmt. The undisputed evidence showed that the plaintiff’s building had been erected only a few months before it was damaged; that the footings of the foundation of the walls of the building were two feet thick; that the second course of brick in the foundation walls was narrowed three inches find each successive course was likewise so narrowed until it reached the height of two and a half feet where it was thirteen inches thick, and from there this thickness was maintained to the top. Prior to the time of the damage to the building there were no known cracks or other defects in any of its walls; that about 3 o’clock on May 16, 1896, and just before the plaintiff’s building was damaged, a heavy storm cloud was observed to be approaching from the southwest, and shortly thereafter everything became enveloped in utter darkness; next was seen two vivid flashes of lightning quickly followed by thunder and rain; that the flashes of lightning were instantaneously succeeded by the breaking and falling of the plastering from the ceilings in the rooms of the second story, and the leaking of the roof; that a carpenter who was then engaged in hanging a screen door to the east entrance of the building was “stunned” and rendered almost insensible by the concussion [451]*451occasioned by the discharge of the lightning; that the west do o:^ of the building, it was found, would not open or close without lifting, though it had previously swung easily both ways; that the south wall of tire building was found to be cracked and shoved in, and the brick in the footings of the foundation walls, which were lower than the bottom of the cellar, were turned up at an angle of about 45 degrees; that the building settled until the plate glass in the windows was driven into the sash. •

The evidence further tended to show that as soon as the storm was over the mechanic who had erected the building at plaintiff’s request came and inspected its condition and pronounced it unsafe; that the plaintiff immediately moved out of the same; that some eight days thereafter it fell down; that in removing the wrecked materials it was discovered that the brick in the southeast corner of the foundation of the wall which had not been disturbed by the fall of the building, were shivered and broken into “spalls;” that there was an air flue in the wall extending from the cellar upwards in which there was a vertical crack, and at the bottom of which flue there was a pile of broken brick and mortar which was not there before the storm; that the brick in the foundation of the wall near the flue were split and shivered without disturbing the cement in which they were laid.

It further appears that a dwelling house across the street from the plaintiff’s building was struck by lightning during the storm.

lightning isuffidence: jury question. Now if it be true, as defendant insists was the case, that there were no visible marks of a stroke of lightning on the walls of the plaintiff’s building, yet was not the jury authorized to infer from the facts, which the evidence tends to prove, that the x ? direct damage to the plaintiff’s building was caused by lightning. No witness was introduced who had or professed to have such scientific attainments as would [452]*452authorize him, as an expert, to testify his opinion as to whether or not, if lightning in manifesting its disruptive energy had encountered the walls of plaintiff’s building, it would have left thereon some kind of a visible mark of its presence. It is true that defendant introduced one or more witnesses who had some practical experience with electricity and the generation thereof as an illuminator, but beyond this their qualifications as experts were shown to be so limited as to entitle their opinion to little or no weight. It seems to us that from all the evidence the jury might have very well inferred that the wreck and collapse of the plaintiff’s building happened from the cause alleged, in his petition. Evidence that is insufficiept to justify a submission would, of course, not support a finding for the plaintiff therein by the ■«jury.

The rule is that an objection that there is no evidence to support a finding is not well taken, if it appears there is evidence from which the facts necessary to be shown might have been inferred by the jiiry, even though such facts would afford the basis of diverse inferences. In such cases it is conclusively presumed that the jury drew that inference which would support their finding. Buesching v. Gas Light Co., 73 Mo. 219; Leeright v. Ahrens, 60 Mo. App. 118. Upon a careful consideration of all the facts and circumstances which the evidence conduces to show we are unable to reach the conclusion that there was no substantial evidence tending to prove that the plaintiff’s building was struck by lightning, as alleged in his petition. The plaintiff was, as we think, entitled to go to the jury on the evidence.

_;_¡plead-mg. instruction, The defendant objects that the plaintiff’s first instruction is erroneous in expression. It declared that if the jury should "believe from the evidence that there was a discharge of lightning or electricity * * * and that the shade caused by said electrical discharge ang injureg walls of the plaintiff’s building” that plaintiff was entitled to recover. [453]*453It is quite difficult to understand how “the shock caused by said electrical discharge” could have struck and injured the walls of plaintiff’s building. We may presume that the plaintiff intended by this instruction to have the court declare that, if the discharge of lightning or electricity referred to encountered or struck the walls of plaintiff’s building, and thereby disrupted the same, then the plaintiff, under' the terms of the policy, was entitled to recover, etc. If the electric discharge in question caused a concussion or shock of such violence as to injure the walls of plaintiff’s building, this did not entitle plaintiff to recover, for the reason that the allegation of his petition is that his building was struck by lightning and the walls thereof shattered, etc. If the discharge caused a jarring of the ground and the latter caused the damage to the building, then, in such case, the policy provides no indemnity for such damage or loss. It provides indemnity only for direct loss caused by lightning.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 Mo. App. 447, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kattelmann-v-fire-assn-moctapp-1899.