Miller v. London & Lancashire Fire Insurance

41 Ill. App. 395, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 148
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 2, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 41 Ill. App. 395 (Miller v. London & Lancashire Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. London & Lancashire Fire Insurance, 41 Ill. App. 395, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 148 (Ill. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Waterman, P. J.

It is quite manifest that there was no insurance against loss caused directly or indirectly by explosion. What is insisted, is that the explosion having been caused by fire, the destruction of the house by the explosion was a damage by fire; in other words, that .we are to attribute the injury not to the immediate cause, but to the cause of that cause.

While it is true that where no conditions to the contrary are imposed, the insurer is liable for goods stolen during reasonable attempt to remove them from a burning building, or damage by water in a reasonable attempt to extinguish the fire, the rule that to hold the insurer the fire must be the proximate cause of the loss, remains. As was said by Byles, Jr., in Everett v. The London Assurance Co., 19 C. B. & N. S. 126, “If that was not so, and a ship was in the neighborhood of Vesuvius and was shaken by an explosion, that would be damage by fire; or if a gun was fired off loaded with small shot, among crockery, that would be damage by fire.” Somewhere we must cease in this class of cases to look for the cause of causes, else we may run back

“To that primeval fire Which wrapt the earth ere life began.”'

In the present case the policy, although against loss by fire, contains a stipulation to the effect that the company will not be liable for loss caused directly or indirectly by explosion. In the face of such condition what difference does it make whether the explosion was caused by fire, steam, gas or concussion ?

In Wood on Fire Insurance, Sec. 104, it is declared to be the rule, that “If the injury is entirely due to concussion, the fact that the concussion was caused by fire does not pjake the fire the proximate cause of the loss; it is but the cause of the cause, the causa remota and not the cause próxima.”

With the loss by fire-which occurred after the explosion, we are not concerned; appellee makes no contention as to such loss; for that directly caused by the explosion before there was any fire in the insured premises the insurer, under the conditions of this policy, is not liable. Caballero v. Home Ins. Co., 15 La An. 217; Briggs v. North American Ins. Co., 53 N. Y. 446; U. S. Ins. Co. v. Foot, 22 Ohio St. 340; Insurance Co. v. Tweed, 7 Will. (U. S.) 44; Roe et al. v. Columbus Ins. Co., 17 Mo. 301; Montgomore v. Fireman’s Ins. Co., 16 B. Monroe, 427; Stanley v. Western Ins. Co., L. R. 34, 71; St. John v. American Ins. Co., 11 N. Y. 516.

The judgment of the court below is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
41 Ill. App. 395, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-london-lancashire-fire-insurance-illappct-1891.