Michigan Sugar Co. v. EMPLOYERS MUTUAL LIABILITY INS. CO. OF WI.

308 N.W.2d 684, 107 Mich. App. 9
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 1981
DocketDocket 50640
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 308 N.W.2d 684 (Michigan Sugar Co. v. EMPLOYERS MUTUAL LIABILITY INS. CO. OF WI.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michigan Sugar Co. v. EMPLOYERS MUTUAL LIABILITY INS. CO. OF WI., 308 N.W.2d 684, 107 Mich. App. 9 (Mich. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

M. J. Kelly, J.

Plaintiff-appellant, Michigan Sugar Company, appeals as of right from an opinion and order of the lower court finding no cause of action in the plaintiff’s suit to recover insurance benefits from defendant-appellee, Employers Mutual, and defendant, Commercial Union. In its claim, plaintiff alleged that the destruction of specified amounts of sugar in its storage silo was covered by policies of insurance with each defendant. The lower court, following a bench trial, held *11 the claim against defendant Employers Mutual to be barred by the "Perils Excluded” provision of its policy. As to Commercial Union, the trial court found the evidence could not support a finding that the objects insured in its policy caused the damage to the plaintiff’s sugar. Plaintiff does not appeal that aspect of the judgment finding no cause of action against defendant Commercial Union.

The facts pertinent to this appeal are as follows. Plaintiff maintains a large horizontal storage silo that is "approximately the size of a football field” at its plant in Caro, Michigan. The silo is approximately 220 feet long and 60 feet wide; the side walls are 21 feet high and are gabled 46 feet above ground level. The silo has a total capacity of approximately 200,000 hundredweight of sugar. A hundredweight is equivalent to 100 pounds of sugar.

When the silo was constructed in 1966, heating elements were imbedded in the concrete floor so that moisture could be eliminated. The heating elements were controlled by thermostats. During the first two years of the silo’s operation, the thermostats were set at approximately 70 degrees Fahrenheit and remained at that setting year round. When plaintiff discovered that some of the sugar was caking on the silo floor due to the heat, the procedure was varied so that the heating elements were used only during the one-week period immediately before the sugar was stored. The new procedure was preceded by a yearly cleaning of the silo floor, after which the heating elements would be set at 90 degrees Fahrenheit for the one-week period to dry out the floor.

On or about November 1, 1974, plaintiff entered into the disputed contract of insurance with Em *12 ployers Mutual. The pertinent provisions of the contract stated that, in return for annual premiums of $240,000, Employers Mutual would insure certain property located at plaintiffs Caro plant "against all risks of direct physical loss” in the total amount of $25,000,000. The policy provided in part:

"3. Perils Insured Against:
"This policy insures against all risks of direct physical loss to the property covered from any external cause * * * except as hereinafter excluded.
"4. Perils Excluded: This policy does not insure against loss:
"(k) By shrinkage, evaporation, loss of weight, contamination, change in flavor, color, texture, or finish, change in temperature (whether or not atmospheric) or humidity (but excepting loss by or resulting from freezing of automatic sprinkler, fire hydrant, standpipe, plumbing or heating systems) rust or corrosion; unless loss by fire or explosion not otherwise excluded ensues, and then the Company shall be liable only for such ensuing loss * *

On February 11, 1975, at a time when the silo was almost full of sugar, a worker discovered that a large amount of sugar in the silo "was bubbling through the top of the pile of sugar and running down the side in a black lava-like substance”. According to the plaintiff, the sugar had become heated to a level where it changed from sucrose to levulose and dextrose, which could not be sold or used by plaintiff. The plaintiff claimed a loss of $1,597,464.14, plus interest.

After the silo was cleaned out, Employers Mutual hired Ellis/Naeyaert Associates, Inc., to investigate the loss and determine its cause. Avery Burdick, an electrical staff consultant, conducted *13 the investigation. On September 22, 1975, Ellis/ Naeyaert issued its final report on the loss. The report states in pertinent part:

"In this second report our opinion as to the cause of the loss remains as thermostat C-4 being incapable of controlling the temperature due to a number of factors:
"2. Improper location of the thermistor sensing probe for thermostat C-4.
"3. Inadequate length of heating cables which resulted in an uneven installation and therefore uneven heating of the floor slab.
"5. Uneven lie of heating cables.
"* * * Therefore, improper installation of the heating cables and the thermostat sensing probe are the primary causes of this loss.
"In conclusion it is our opinion the improper installation of the heating cables and the thermostat sensing probe are the primary causes of this loss.”

On October 17, 1975, Employers Mutual advised plaintiff that its claim for the loss was denied and that no payment would be made under the policy. In the trial court’s opinion denying the plaintiffs claims, it was specifically found that: (1) a mechanical breakdown exclusion found in paragraph 4(g) of plaintiffs policy with Employers Mutual was not applicable, (2) the change of temperature exclusion found in paragraph 4(k) of the policy precluded recovery by the plaintiff, and (3) the change of temperature exclusion was not ambiguous, therefore not to be interpreted against Employers Mutual.

We first deal with a question of causation. At *14 trial, Employers Mutual argued that the condition of the plaintiffs stored sugar was caused entirely by a change in the substance’s temperature, a cause of damage precluded under subsection 4(k) of the parties’ insurance agreement. The plaintiff admits that the injury to its sugar was the result of a change in temperature, but argues that the temperature change was itself caused by improper placement of the thermistor sensing probe and heating cables, which would not be excluded from the "all risks” coverage in the contract.

As in negligence cases, the question of proximate cause in insurance cases is generally held to be one for the trier of fact. Kangas v New York Life Ins Co, 223 Mich 238, 244-245; 193 NW 867 (1923), 18 Couch on Insurance (2d ed), § 74:697, p 607. The Rangas majority, per Justice McDonald, also noted the intent of qualifying language in a disputed insurance contract:

"I am of the opinion that the qualifying language of the contract may properly be interpreted to mean that the parties intended efficient, proximate cause to be the ultimate test of liability. This interpretation renders the contract of some substantial value to the man who pays the premium as well as to the party who carries the risk.” Kangas, supra, 244.

In Weissert v City of Escanaba,

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308 N.W.2d 684, 107 Mich. App. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michigan-sugar-co-v-employers-mutual-liability-ins-co-of-wi-michctapp-1981.