Keystone Paper Mills Co. v. Pennsylvania Fire Ins.

139 A. 627, 291 Pa. 119, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 370
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 12, 1927
DocketAppeals, 103-5
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 139 A. 627 (Keystone Paper Mills Co. v. Pennsylvania Fire Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keystone Paper Mills Co. v. Pennsylvania Fire Ins., 139 A. 627, 291 Pa. 119, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 370 (Pa. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Kephart,

The action in the court below was based on five policies of insurance against separate companies to recover damages to machinery occasioned by a fire at the Keystone Paper Mills. The fire broke out at midnight and burned with terrific intensity throughout the night. It started in the waxing room where many tons of ordinary paper, large quantities of wax paper, and many thousand pounds Of paraffin were located. The heat was so intense that glass windows were melted in adjoining rooms. The particular machine about which this action centered is described as a paper machine located in the room next to the waxing room. It was a large machine, made up of thousands of parts, consisting of many rolls of different designs and sizes, and would require the labor of eight or ten men about two months to assemble on its foundation plates. It was a hundred feet long and nine feet wide and weighed about a hundred tons. The paper stock in fluid form was carried into and through the first section by a wire mesh. This section is comprised of a series of rolls referred to as breast rolls, couch rolls and a number of table or tube noils. From, *123 the first section the paper was carried on a belt through a series of press rolls, during which process some of the moisture was pressed out of it. From the last press roll the paper was passed to what is referred to as the “dry’’ part of the machine, making its way on canvas belts over eighteen “dryers,” a series of steam filled rolls, one above the other; and thence to the finishing apparatus, which consisted of two series of “calendar” rolls and from them to the reel and slitter which slit the different sizes for the market; and from there to the winders. It was driven by.gears with large wooden cogs, with the aid of pulleys. The machine had to be precisely level, the rolls in perfect alignment and absolutely round, and some of the parts true to the extent of from one to two one-thousandths of an inch. It made an exceptionally difficult and high grade of paper and had a daily average capacity of ten tons.

The flames from the waxing room, through openings in the wall, swept directly across the paper machine. It was subjected to a continuous hot fire for three hours, so hot it melted babbit bearings. This could be done only when exposed to a temperature of about 600 degrees. An overhead sprinkling system and a fire hose' pushed through a hole in the roof plied water on it in constant flow for hours.

The question before the jury was the value of the machine before and after it had been damaged by the fire. Plaintiff’s evidence, if believed by the jury, showed that it was, for all practical purposes, useless. This was contested by defendants. We do not propose to review the evidence as it is a matter of importance to the parties only. The questions raised were solely for the jury, under proper instructions from the court.

The policy gave the insurance company an option to rebuild or repair the damaged property. Appellants now seek to limit plaintiff’s recovery to the estimated cost of repairs; or, if that was not allowable, then they contend that, as the machine was. sold for junk, the dis *124 erepancy between the estimated cost of repairing compared with the value given in evidence by plaintiff, cast on the paper company the burden of explaining its conduct in selling the machine for scrap; in other words, their act in selling was a breach of good faith and fair dealing. We might dispose of all the assignments relating to questions of repairs, by the observation that the affidavit did not set up any offer to repair or rebuild the machine, or any offer to place it in as good a condition as it was before the fire, both as to service and durability; the pleadings were wholly silent on the subject of repairs.

When an insurance company defends on the acceptance of the option to repair, or rebuild, or bases any defense on this repair provision as ground to reduce the policyholder’s claim, it must give specific notice of its intent so to do through averments in the affidavit of defense: Farmers’ Bank v. Manchester Assur. Co., 106 Mo. App. 114, 80 S. W. 299; Port Blakely Mill Co. v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 50 Wash. 657, 97 Pac. 781; Sutherland v. Standard Life & Acc. Ins. Co., 87 Iowa 505, 54 N. W. 453; Mechanics’ Ins. Co. of Phila. v. C. A. Hoover Distilling Co., 182 Fed. 590, 596.

The provision in a policy that liability should not exceed the cost to the insured of replacing the property and all like subordinate provisions, limiting or abating the primary liability of the insurer, constitute no part of the insured’s cause of action, if there is a breach of those stipulations. They are inserted in the policy for the benefit of the insurer and they must be pleaded by the latter if it seeks to diminish or limit the amount of its recovery by reason thereof. This is the rule deduced from the authorities: Ruth-Hastings Glass Tube Co. v. Slattery, 266 Pa. 288, 290, 291; Dietrich v. Davies, 274 Pa. 213, 215; Hoffman v. Mutual Fire Ins. Co. of Reading, 274 Pa. 292, 296; Farmers’ Bank v. Manchester Assurance Co., supra; Port Blakely Mill Co. v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., supra; Sutherland v. Standard Life *125 & Acc. Ins. Co., supra. Even as affecting the credibility of the witnesses, it is in the nature of a substantive defense of which plaintiff should be advised.

It appears that two companies made offers to repair, but neither offer was sufficient to give to the insured that which the policy contemplated, a machine as good and as serviceable as it was before the fire. The insurance company, under the option to repair or rebuild, if it elects to avail itself of the privilege, is not only bound to put the property in substantially the same state or as good as it was before the fire, but the insurer cannot avail itself of any relieving circumstances unless such repairs make the property as serviceable as it was before the loss: Joyce on Insurance, par. 3158; Hartford Fire Insurance Co. v. Peebles, 82 Fed. 546. An insurance company cannot avoid its responsibility under the policy or minimize its damage by an offer to repair property which is so far injured as to be incapable of repairs, or where it cannot be restored to the condition it was in before the fire, or to a condition as serviceable: Joyce on Insurance, supra. In all controversies as to the condition of a building or machinery after a fire, the question as to whether or not the property has been so far damaged as to be beyond repair or service is a question for the jury, whose determination, depending as it does on oral testimony, will be conclusive.

Nor will an offer to repair by a third person be considered as the exercise by the company of its option unless made with the authority and under the direction of the company, which at all times assumes the responsibility for the success of the repairs. Where the insurer elects to and does repair, that part of the contract with regard to loss ceases to control, and a different provision of the policy operates. The insurer in attempting repairs agrees to rebuild, and the rights and responsibilities are to be measured accordingly; any resulting damages are based on the contract to rebuild or repair. *126 This may be more or less than the total insurance: Fire Association v. Rosenthal, 108 Pa. 474.

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Bluebook (online)
139 A. 627, 291 Pa. 119, 1927 Pa. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keystone-paper-mills-co-v-pennsylvania-fire-ins-pa-1927.