O'Neill v. Caledonian Ins. Co., of Edinburgh

135 P. 1121, 166 Cal. 310, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 322
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1913
DocketS.F. No. 6179.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 135 P. 1121 (O'Neill v. Caledonian Ins. Co., of Edinburgh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Neill v. Caledonian Ins. Co., of Edinburgh, 135 P. 1121, 166 Cal. 310, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 322 (Cal. 1913).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The above-entitled actions were brought upon policies of insurance to recover of the respective defendants the proportions due from them, respectively, of a loss to plaintiff from a fire which destroyed his property covered by the policies. By agreement the causes were tried together. A verdict was returned for the plaintiff, stating separately the amount of recovery from each defendant, and judgment was given accordingly. The defendants have each appealed from the judgment and also from an order denying a motion for a new trial.

The most important point urged in the argument is the contention that the verdict is contrary to the evidence. Some related questions will also require consideration, but we proceed first to the main question.

The policies were each in the same form. The one issued by the Caledonian Insurance Company covered the stock of goods and household furniture in the building. That issued by the American Insurance Company insured the building itself. O’Neill occupied the front part of the building, exclusively, using it as a carriage repository and for sale of carriages and agricultural implements. There was a partition across the building forty feet from the rear. In this part, one Haupt carried on a shop for the repair of automobiles, using as much space as he needed for that purpose. The remainder of the space in the rear was used by O’Neill for storage of part of his goods and for other purposes connected with his business. He kept an automobile there while it was not in use in the business.

In the body of each policy, under the head, “Matters suspending insurance,” there was printed a provision as follows: “Unless otherwise provided by agreement indorsed hereon or added hereto, this company shall not be liable for loss or damage occurring while the hazard be materially increasd by any means within the control of the assured; ... or while there be kept, used or allowed on the described premises (any usage or custom of trade or manufacture to the contrary not *313 withstanding) . . . exceeding one quart each of benzine, gasoline, naptha or ether.”

The description of the property insured was contained in a slip attached to the policy. This slip was partly in print and partly written in a blank space left for that purpose. The printed part contained the following warranty:

“In consideration of this permit it is warranted by the assured that no gasoline other than contained in the reservoirs of machines shall be admitted into the building' where the machine is permanently or temporarily stabled, if said stable is under the control of assured.”

Preceding this, in the space left for that purpose, there was written into the slip a description of the property insured, and the following statement: “All while contained in the two-story and basement brick building, and the three-story and basement brick addition thereto attached, occupied as a carriage repository and agricultural implements, dwelling-rooms and auto repair shop.” The dwelling-rooms were in the upper stories.

The policies are in the form prescribed by the state law. (Stats. 1909, p. 404.) The suspension clause is a part thereof. By its terms, the slip, or rider, as it is called, prevails over the suspension clause, so far as they are inconsistent. The riders were made upon printed forms, each of the same tenor, prepared by the respective companies. By the provisions of section 1651 of the Civil Code the written portions of the rider prevail over the printed parts thereof, and, if the two are repugnant, the written portions must control. Unquestionably, the language of the warranty printed in the rider would allow more than a quart of gasoline to be carried into and kept in the building, provided it was brought there in the reservoir of a machine and was kept in said reservoir while there. The main question, upon the evidence, is whether or not the provision written in the rider allowing the building to be used as an “auto repair shop” allows a still further latitude in the use and keeping of gasoline. If it does, it will prevail to that extent, both over the warranty in the rider and over the suspension clause in the body of the policy.

In relation to this question, evidence was given showing the manner in which the fire which caused the loss was started and the necessity for the use of gasoline in an auto repair *314 shop. An automobile with a leaking gasoline reservoir was brought into the shop by the owner, one Warlow, for the purpose of having the leak repaired. It then contained nearly twenty gallons of gasoline. Haupt emptied this into four five-gallon cans, placed on the floor of the building. He then repaired the leak and was in the act of pouring gasoline from one of the cans into the repaired reservoir to see if the leak was closed, when the gasoline ignited and started the fire that caused the loss. There was also evidence to the effect, that it was necessary and customary to keep gasoline in automobile repair shops for use in cleaning parts of the machines, that more than a gallon a day would sometimes be required for that purpose, and that it was used in pans or open cans. Haupt had in the shop a fifty-gallon tank in which he sometimes had as much' as twenty gallons of gasoline to be ready for such use when required.

Upon this proof the plaintiff contends that, as the statement in the rider attached to the policies declares that the premises were to be occupied as an “auto repair shop,” it must be presumed that the company undertook to insure against all risks incident to the conduct of that business when carried on in the usual manner. We think the contention is sound. Of the many eases cited in support of the proposition, Yoch v. Home M. Ins. Co., 111 Cal. 503, [34 L.R. A. 857, 44 Pac. 189], is typical and substantially parallel to the case at bar. The policy there involved contained a printed clause declaring that the policy should be void if gasoline was kept on the premises, “any usage or custom of trade to the contrary notwithstanding.” The property insured was a frame building and a stock of merchandise therein, which the policy described as “such as is usually kept in country stores,” the description being written in the printed form. Gasoline was kept in the building as a part of the stock in trade at the time it was burned. Proof was made that gasoline was usually kept for sale in country stores. The court held that upon this proof it must be presumed that the company intended to insure the gasoline so kept in stock and that it was not a violation of the policy to keep it in the building as an article of merchandise. In the case at bar, the rider provided that the building was to be used as an “auto repair shop.” It follows that the company must be presumed, to have intended to insure the *315 property against all ordinary risks attending an auto repair shop carried on in the customary manner. It required no proof to show that when the reservoir of a machine leaked and was brought into the shop for repair while the reservoir was full, it would be necessary first to empty it of gasoline, and that a good workman, after making the repairs, would put in some gasoline to test it. It would also be necessary, in the usual course of business, to replace the gasoline in the reservoir after the leak was repaired.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 P. 1121, 166 Cal. 310, 1913 Cal. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneill-v-caledonian-ins-co-of-edinburgh-cal-1913.