Montgomery v. Southern Mutual Insurance

88 A. 924, 242 Pa. 86, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 842
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 27, 1913
DocketAppeal, No. 22
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 88 A. 924 (Montgomery v. Southern Mutual Insurance) 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
Montgomery v. Southern Mutual Insurance, 88 A. 924, 242 Pa. 86, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 842 (Pa. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Brown,

Isaac Montgomery was the owner of a farm in Eden Township, Lancaster County. He died February 27, 1904. On July 1,1903, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, under its right of eminent domain, appropriated for a roadbed for its low-grade road a strip of land extending through the said farm for a distance of about 1,500 feet and of a width of about 180 feet. The south line of the right of way passed through a tobacco shed, leaving a portion of it on the company’s right of way and the balance on Montgomery’s land. In 1905 the railroad company was engaged in constructing its new roadbed, the contractor doing the work being the John Shields Construction Company. Dinky engines were operated on temporary tracks which ran past the tobacco shed. On August 1, 1905, a fire broke out on the north [89]*89peak of this building, on the right of way of the railroad company, caused by a spark from one of the dinky engines. Sparks from the shed set fire to a frame barn and wagon shed located on the land of the plaintiffs, and they were entirely destroyed. In 1865 the Southern Mutual Insurance Company of Lancaster County issued a policy of insurance to Isaac Montgomery, insuring the said buildings. The plaintiffs brought suit against the John Shields Construction Company, alleging that its negligence had caused the fire, and instituted this action against the appellee upon the policy of insurance. The case against the construction company was tried first and a verdict rendered in favor of the plaintiffs. That company was insolvent and a dividend of only $168 was received on the judgment recovered against it, which sum has been credited on the present claim of the appellants. The defense set up in this action was the following section of the by-laws attached to the policy of insurance: “This policy shall cover any direct loss or damage caused by lightning,......but will not cover loss or damage by fire happening by means of insurrection of any military or usurped power, or fire from, or occasioned by locomotive engine or engines.’.’ A verdict was returned for the plaintiffs under undisputed facts, but the court subsequently entered judgment for the defendant non obstante veredicto, on the ground that the fire was within the exempting clause.

In the opinion of the court below, directing judgment to be entered for the defendant, the learned president judge said that the question of the plaintiffs’ right to judgment on the verdict was not “without difficulty.” We were at first of the same impression, but, after due consideration, have concluded that the policy covers the loss sustained, and that judgment should, therefore, be entered on the verdict.

The exemption of the appellee from liability is not, in express words, for loss by fire directly or indirectly from or occasioned by a locomotive engine or engines, and in [90]*90determining whether the appellants are entitled to recover it is first important to ascertain what was the intention of the parties to the contract of insurance as gathered from a reasonable construction of the words used in the exempting clause in the by-laws. These words are to be construed most strongly against the insurer and in favor of the insured, and, in so construing them, reasonable effect is to be given .to them so as not to defeat — unless there be an imperative necessity to do so — the indemnity which the insured sought and thought he had secured through the policy of insurance: Franklin Fire Insurance Company v. Updegraff, 43 Pa. 350; Mears v. Humboldt Fire Insurance Company, 92 Pa. 15; Lancaster Silver Plate Company v. Fire Insurance Company, 170 Pa. 151; McClure v. Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Chester County, 242 Pa. 59. In so construing the words of the exempting clause the conclusion to be reached from them is that the fire contemplated by them was one directly from or directly occasioned or caused by a locomotive engine or engines.

Instead of a fire caused directly by a locomotive engine, the fire in the present case was caused directly by sparks from a burning building one hundred feet distant and entirely disconnected from those that were burned. The proximate and direct cause of the burning of the first building was a spark from an engine, and, if that building had been insured by the appellee under a policy of insurance similar in terms to the one in suit, the owner of the building could of course, have recovered nothing in an action against the insurance company ; but if buildings hundreds of yards away, located on another farm, had been burned by a spark carried by the winds from the burning building, the owner of such burned buildings could not be denied a recovery in an action against an insurance company, if it had insured the buildings under a policy similar in terms to the one issued by the appellee to Montgomery, for the clause exempting the insurer from liability could not be reason[91]*91ably so read or understood by any one as being expressive of any such intention by either party to the contract of insurance. Under the view entertained by the learned court below, the owner of the burned buildings could not recover; nor could there be a recovery by an owner of a house in a town entirely wiped out by fire caused by sparks from a building outside the municipal limits, if such building was set on fire by a spark from a locomotive. If the principle announced by the learned court below — not, however, without some misgiving — be correct, there can be no distinction made between the supposed cases and the one at bar. That the exempting clause in the Montgomery policy should have such an effect as has been given to it by the judgment in the court below could never have been contemplated by insurer or insured, and there is nothing in the clause that requires it to be so construed. On the contrary, as just stated, it contemplates a fire directly from or occasioned directly by an engine.

The case upon which the learned court below seems to have mainly relied in directing judgment for the defendant is Insurance Company v. Tweed, 74 U. S. 44. It must be admitted that what was there held sustained the learned president judge in his view as to what ought to be regarded as the proximate cause of the fire. Tweed brought suit against the insurance company on a policy of insurance against fire which covered certain bales of cotton in a building in Mobile known as the Alabama warehouse. The policy contained a proviso that the insurer should not be liable to make good any loss or damage by fire which might happen or take place “by means of any invasion, insurrection, riot, or civil commotion, or any military or usurped power, explosion, earthquake, or hurricane.” During the period covered by the policy an explosion took place in a building known as the Marshall warehouse, situated directly across the street. This explosion threw down the walls of the Alabama warehouse, scattered combustible mate[92]*92rials in the street, resulting in an extensive conflagration, embracing several squares of buildings, among which the Alabama warehouse and the cotton stored in it were wholly destroyed. The fire was not communicated directly to the Alabama warehouse from the Marshall warehouse, in which the explosion occurred, but came more immediately from a third building — the Eagle mill — which was itself fired by the explosion. The wind was blowing in a direction from the Eagle mill to the Alabama warehouse and the whole fire was a continuous one from the explosion.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Keystone Lumber Co. v. Security Mutual Casualty Co.
158 A. 314 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1931)
Oakdale Baking Co. v. Philadelphia & Reading Railway Co.
91 A. 358 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 A. 924, 242 Pa. 86, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-southern-mutual-insurance-pa-1913.