Maryland Casualty Co. v. Finch

147 F. 388, 8 L.R.A.N.S. 308, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4248
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 9, 1906
DocketNo. 2,375
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 147 F. 388 (Maryland Casualty Co. v. Finch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Finch, 147 F. 388, 8 L.R.A.N.S. 308, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4248 (8th Cir. 1906).

Opinion

PHILIPS, District Judge.

The Maryland Casualty Company, plaintiff in error (hereinafter for convenience designated the defendant), issued its policy of insurance to the defendants in error (hereinafter for convenience designated the plaintiffs), for a term of one year beginning the 7th day of June, 190-1, and ending June 7, 1905, whereby the defendant insured the plaintiffs—

••Against direct loss or damage to property owned by the assured and described in the said schedule and also tor loss from liability of the assured for damage to merchandise held in trust or on commission or sold but not delivered by being removed, situate on that part of the premises occupied by Hie assured as (Inscribed in said schedule, and caused, during the term of this insurance, by the accidental discharge or leakage oi' water from the automatic sprinkler system now erected in or upon the building occupied wholly or partly by Hie assured; * * * but the total aggregate liability of this company hereunder shall in no event exceed $25,000.”

The policy, however, was made subject to certain specified conditions. The ninth condition, which is the subject-matter of this controversy-, is as follows:

‘‘This policy does not cover loss or damage resulting from any leakage occurring at any point outside of 1lie inner surface of the collar floor or walls; nor resulting from the explosion, rupture, collapse or leakage of steam boilers or steam pipes; nor -resulting from any interruption of business or stoppage of any work or plant; nor resulting from freezing; nor resulting from lire or violation of law; nor resulting from or caused by the willful act of the assured, nor by the neglect of the assured to use all reasonable means to save and preserve the property insured hereunder; nor resulting from or caused by invasion, insurrection, riot, civil war. or commotion or military or usurped power, or by order of any civil authority; nor resulting from or caused by earthquakes or cyclones or by blasting or explosions of any kind,, or by the fall or collapse of any building or buildings, or pari, thereof.”

On the 80th day of August, 1901, between 8 and 9 o’clock p. m. the city of St. Paul was visited by a windstorm which (lid injury to the plaintiffs’ building, breaking the pipes of the automatic sprinkler, whereby the goods in the store were flooded by the freed water, doing damage to an extent of over $35,000. E'or the recovery of this alleged loss suit on the policy against the defendant was brought. To this action the defendant interposed the principal defense that said injury resulted from a cyclone, and was therefore excepted from the operation of the contract of insurance. On trial to a jury the plaintiffs obtained a verdict in the sum of $36,285, for which judgment was rendered, to reverse which the defendant prosecutes this writ of error.

The controlling question presented for determination is whether or not the wind storm occasioning said loss was a cyclone within the [390]*390meaning of the policy. A brief summary of the work of that storm will disclose its character. The cloud which contained its fury was first observed by Professor Weitbrecht, the head of the. Mechanics Arts Pligh School of the city of St. Paul, who was at his cottage at Lake Minnetonka about 35 miles from St. Paul. He testified that between 8 and 9 o’clock p. m. of August 20, 1904, his attention was directed to the threatening- clouds, which he described as a “great large cloudy mass, balloon in shape, and coming down to a decided point at the bottom, as observed from the lake, to the southeast of the portion we were occupying.” It moved down the lake towards St. Paul, and was apparently moving with the wind, and without evidence of revolution; “it was an oblong balloon, decidedly oblong, with a pendant.” Pie testified that it struck his house, broke a large pane of glass 36 to 40 inches square, removed the frame work of the screens, driving- one with such force against a table as to punch a hole in it. It blew down the chimney of his house, and a maple tree 18 .inches in diameter, taking off the whole top and carrying- it 60 feet diagonally across the cottage without striking the roof. It blew in the windows and took off the roof of an adjoining cottage; turned a large barn around at an angle of 45 degrees, taking off the roof and scattering- the contents. When it reached the vicinity of the city of St. Paul it carried out spans of the steel and iron bridge spanning-the Mississippi river, precipitating them to a considerable distance; and did great damage to trees and houses on an island in the river. It struck the city at the north bank of the river; and its general course, with some' eccentric divergencies, was from southwest to -northeast, covering a pathway of 300 feet or more in its sweep. Near the river the destructive force of the storm made its first impression upon the city. It blew from a railroad track and overturned box-cars. It wrecked the Empire Theater and demolished the Tivoli Concert Hall, killing some people therein. In its pathway through the city it smashed windows of various sizes and strength; blew down sighs, and took off cornices from buildings, scattering- their fragments in.large quantities over the streets. At Third street it raised and dropped a skylight 50 feet square which covered the open court of the Pioneer Press Building; blew in its windows on the Fourth street side, creating some consternation among the inmates of the building. It unroofed the Davidson Block at the corner of Fourth and Jackson streets. It leveled to the ground the freight depot of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway. At Smith Park it broke, blew down, and uprooted a large number of trees. It carried off the top of the brick building occupied by a wagon company; the roof of which, after being blown off, dropped back on the remaining building. At another place in the vortex of its pathway it took out a section of the wall of a brick building. On the next street it wrecked into fragments a frame church building. In Lafayette Park locality chimneys were toppled over, some buildings were demolished, and trees in and about the park were broken and uprooted-■ It is true that the evidence tended to show that most of the trees about the park were comparatively [391]*391young, and those blown down were easily restored in place by the park commissioner. On the hill further on the destruction to houses and property was marked, in places, sidewalks were lifted up on either side of the street and tumbled in mass in the center of the street, showing the eccentric motion of the wind. One sidewalk was lifted, into the air, carried over a stone-wall fence, and deposited a hundred feet or so in a yard. Telephone and telegraph poles of great size and strength were blown down, broken off, and twisted in different directions. One house, as shown by a photograph in evidence, was blown diagonally around, entirely off of one corner-. Some of the trees, broken or twisted off and uprooted, were of large size and apparent great strength. While it is to be conceded that the direction in which the trees fell was generally in that of the storm, yet as evidence .of its concentric motion, trees standing in opposite positions fell with their tops together. The limbs of trees had the appearance of being twisted off.

As indisputable proof of the effect wrought by this narrowly confined windstorm, the street, park, telegraph and telephone inspectors, and repairers were all out as early as the light of the next morning would admit to look after the injury done on their respective lines and beats.

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Bluebook (online)
147 F. 388, 8 L.R.A.N.S. 308, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-co-v-finch-ca8-1906.