Queen Insurance v. Sinclair

1 Ohio C.C. 496
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio C.C. 496 (Queen Insurance v. Sinclair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Queen Insurance v. Sinclair, 1 Ohio C.C. 496 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1886).

Opinion

Swing, J.

Sinclair brought his action against the insurance company in the common pleas court, on a policy of insurance issued by the company, on his mill, situated at Salem, in the state of Indiana. The case was tried before a jury, and a verdict was given for the plaintiff, on which a judgment was rendered. To reverse this judgment this action is prosecuted here.

The case was stubbornly fought, and quite a number of exceptions taken to the rulings of the court, to which error is assigned, here, but in the argument counsel for plaintiff in error stated that he would claim error as to three assignments only, which errors were:

1. That the court erred in not permitting the jury to pass on. the question raised in the third defense of defendant’s answer, .which was as to whether plaintiff had used gasoline or a product of petroleum in lighting said mill, or kept the same in store on said premises; but passed on the question itself.

[497]*4972. That said policy of insurance was avoided by the defendants ceasing to operate the mill.

3. That by the terms of said policy the same was to become void when in the buildings insured nitro-glycerine, gun-powder, phosphorous, fire-works, naptha, benzole, benzine, gasoline, or any of the products of petroleum or coal-oil are deposited, stored or kept, or used for light on the premises, or if refined coal or earth oils or kerosene in quantities exceeding five gallons are deposited, stored or kept on the premises.

The contract sued on was a contract of insurance in the ordinary form, and with the ordinary conditions.

As to the first ground of error relied on, to-wit, that the court erred in refusing to submit to the jury the question whether the .substance used in lighting the building came within the terms of the policy, we think that we are not called upon to decide it, for the reason that we are not able to find in the bill of exceptions any exception taken at the trial to the ruling of the court on this point. We could, therefore, only consider it, if upon a consideration of the whole case we came to the conclusion that the court was wrong, not only in refusing to refer the matter to the jury, but in its conclusions upon the facts and law, and this wé are not prepared to do.

Next as to the second error relied on, that the mill ceased to be operated. The evidence shows that the mills were shut down entirely about the 1st of September, 1883, and were not operated from that time on until December 4th, 1883, at which time the mill was destroyed by fire.

It was claimed by plaintiff and conceded by defendant that the plaintiff had the right, at any time whenever it became necessary, to shut down for repairs, and this is what the plaintiff claimed he did. There was no controversy as to the law, but it was purely one of fact for the jury. The plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that repairs were necessary and that he proceeded to make the same in a judicious manner, as rapidly as it could properly be done. This was contradicted by the defendant and was the' issue of fact between the parties. Without taking up the evidence and commenting on it in detail, we may say, that we have considered it, and the result of our conclusion is, that at least we can not say that the finding [498]*498of the j ury on this issue is not so manifestly against the weight of the evidence as to authorize us in reversing the judgment.

The third and last ground of error relied on is as to the manner in which the building was lighted. There is no difference between the parties as to the facts about the way the building was lighted, the only question being whether it was lighted by gasoline or a product of petroleum, as claimed by defendant, or whether by gas or gasoline vapor, as claimed by plaintiff.

The building was lighted by what was known as a Coleman gas machine. Gasoline was placed in a tank under ground, thirty-five feet distant from the outside of the nearest wall of the insured building. In connection with the tank are flannel cloths and adjusted weights, and other appliances, by means of which the gasoline is easily and rapidly vaporized, and in this form forced through iron pipes, which connect with said tank, and which pipes run through all portions of the building which are to be lighted. The pipe used is the ordinary gas-pipe, and the manner of lighting and burning is similar to ordinary gas. In this way the mill was lighted.

It is claimed by defendants that the vapor produced by means of this machine was still gasoline and a product of petroleum, and that it was stored and kept in the building and used for lighting the same, and the conditions of the policy violated. To support this view, defendant called Prof. Frayne and Mr. Going, expert chemists, the substance of whose testimony is to the effect that while in common parlance it is called a gas, yet strictly and scientifically speaking it is not a gas, but gasoline. They say that a gas does not condense, whereas under proper circumstances and conditions this gasoline vapor can be condensed so as to become gasoline again, just as steam will become water. They call it atmospheric air charged with gasoline, a vapor of gasoline carried along in a current of atmospheric air, and an atmospheric air saturated with gasoline, but Prof. Frayne says that common people out of the labratory speak of it as gas. Gasoline is defined by •Webster as “a highly volatile mixture of fluid hydrocarbon, obtained from petroleum.” Worchester, as “a volatile fluid distilled from naptha.”

[499]*499The Encyc. Brittanica says, “ gasoline is the lightest fluid, obtained in considerable quantities, and is used in automatic gas machines for the carburation of gas or air.”

There is no question that by the word gasoline, as ordinarily understood, a fluid is meant. As an article of commerce no other idea is conveyed, it is sold in barrels and measured by the gallon.

Taking these three facts to be established, viz., that ordinarily gasoline is understood to be a fluid, that the vapor produced by this machine is {commonly called a gas, but that chemically speaking it is still gasoline held in the air in a vaporized condition, what meaning shall we give to the word gasoline as used in this contract? It is a fixed rule of construction that the words of a contract are to be understood in their general, ordinary and popular sense, unless from the circumstances and surroundings of the parties and the context of the instrument they were clearly intended to be used in a different sense. Applying this principle of law to the admitted facts, it seems clear that the thing usód in this mill for lighting was not the thing called gasoline within the meaning of the contract.

It would seem very unjust and unreasonable indeed, that a contract of insurance, which usually, I might say always (as this one was), is prepared with great care and at great length by the insurer, not as the result of any agreement between the parties, about which they had consulted, but rather in the nature of a statement of terms and conditions upon which insurance would be taken, should be governed by any other rule of interpretation.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio C.C. 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/queen-insurance-v-sinclair-ohiocirct-1886.