Marsh Oil Co. v. Aetna Insurance
This text of 79 Mo. App. 21 (Marsh Oil Co. v. Aetna Insurance) 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.
Opinion
The plaintiff was the owner of twenty-eight thousand bushels of flax seed located in a certain building in Kansas City, which the defendant insured under the description of “their stock of grain and seed.” Some months after this the seed was removed to ' a mill where it was ground into meal and the oil extracted therefrom. The residuum was then pressed into what is commercially known as “oil cake.” Fr.om there it was removed to another building where it was stored. After this, on the application of the plaintiff, the policy was amended so as to read in this way: “This policy is hereby amended to cover same property now contained in a certain building (being the building in which the oil cake was stored). Insurance in former location ceasing from date.” There is therefore no difference between the original policy and that amended except the recital as to the situs of the risk.
Shortly after this amendment was made the oil cake so stored was consumed by fire. The defendant declined to pay the loss on the ground that the plaintiff’s oil cake was not covered by the terms of the policy. It is contended with [24]*24much force and plausibility, on the part of the defendant that oil cake does not fall within the definition" of grain or seed.
As an abstract question, without reference to the intent of the parties, it is difficult to say, in all cases, that oil cake is not grain Or seed, or may not be included in such terms. But however this may be, we think the intent of the plaintiff undoubtedly was to insure the oil calce which it had stored in the building described in the policy and the defendant must, we think, have so understood and executed the policy with the intent of insuring the same. We conclude that the terms employed in the descriptive clause of the policy are sufficient to cover the property destroyed and that therefore the defendant should be held liable.
We think the judgment for the right party and should be affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
79 Mo. App. 21, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsh-oil-co-v-aetna-insurance-moctapp-1899.