Redfearn v. American Central Ins. Co.

1926 OK 22, 243 P. 929, 116 Okla. 137, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 651
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 12, 1926
Docket15851
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1926 OK 22 (Redfearn v. American Central Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redfearn v. American Central Ins. Co., 1926 OK 22, 243 P. 929, 116 Okla. 137, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 651 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

RAX, C.

This sui-t is to recover on fire insurance policies on a theater building and a hotel building1 located in the negro section of the city of Tulsa, conceded to have been in force at the time the buildings were totally destroyed by fire. The defense was that -the loss was caused direcly or indirectly by a riot. Each of the policies contained this clause:

“This company shall- not be liable for loss caused directly or indirectly by invasion, insurrection, riot, civil war or commotion, or military or usurped power, or by order of any civil authority. * * *”

The court directed a verdict for the defendant and entered judgment on the verdict, from which plaintiff appeals. The only assignments of error argued by plaintiff are that .the court erred in directing the verdict fo,r the defendant and in overruling plaintiff’s motion for a new trial. The only question to be decided is whether there was sufficient evidence tending to sup *138 port the plaintiff’s theory of the ease to go to the jury.

The undisputed evidence shows that on the 31st day of May, 1921, it was rumored in and around the city of Tulsa that a üegro then confined in jail would be lynched that night. The negroes residing in the northeast part of the city of Tulsa, known as the negro section, became excited over the rumored lynching, and a great many of them armed themselves for the declared purpose of preventing the lynching. By nine or ten o’clock in the evening, the streets about the courthouse in Tulsa were congested with white people, men, women, and children. A number of armed negroes in automobiles drove around the courthouse two or three times and drove away. They returned, parked their cars, and marched single file down west of the courthouse. As they neared the courthouse a shot was fired, following which there were a great many shots fired and one white man was killed. Following the shooting the negroes left the vicinity of the courthouse and apparently went back to the negro section of the city. A large number of white men then broke into a hardware store, a pawnshop, and ahother place, where arms were kept, and armed themselves with guns, revolvers, and ammunition, and in a short while after the firing occurred at the courthouse the streets were full of armed white people. Two or three hundred armed men assembled around the police station and were sent out to different parts of the town .ostensibly to guard the town. Prom that time until about 9 or 10 o’clock the following day there was a great deal of shooting, especially in the negro section of the city, and a number of men were killed. Beginning about 2 o’clock in the morning of June 1st, fires began to break out in the negro section of the city. The fire department, in attempting to respond to calls coming in from the negro section, found the streets full of armed white men, who, with pointed guns, refused to permit the firemen to connect the hose, and forced them, to return to the fire stations without rendering any service in extinguishing the fires. After a few attempts to reach the fire the chief of the fire department directed the men to respond to no more calls until morning. About daylight on the morning of June 1st, at the sound of a whistle, shooting became rather general and continued for some time. Armed white men, described as traveling in groups of frcm a dozen to 20, rounded up the negroes found in the section where the fires were burning, and took or sent them to the convention hall where they appear to have been detained. A number of witnesses testified that these groups of white men, many of them wearing police badges and badges indicating that they were deputy sheriffs, after removing the negroes from buildings, ^went inside the buildings and, after they left, fires broke out inside the buildings. By nine o’clock buildings were burning in every part of the negro section of the city. One witness, whose testimony is not questioned, testified that about 9 o’clock he viewed the scene from the top of the Tulsa hotel. He testified that it looked like the whole section of the negro district was on fire. His estimate was that he saw 30 or 40 different fires in different places in the negro section. He testified that he knew the section well and definitely located the fires; that what part of it was not burning at the timel had been burned and the houses had been consumed. By twelve o’clock, noon,- all the ¡buildings in the negro section had been burned. About 7:30 in the morning one of the fire -wagons responded to a call to protect a wholesale house and lumber yard. One of the firemen testified that the fires appeared to him to be all over the negro section; that they were not molested that time in their attempt to put out the fire; that there was a great deal of shooting going on and that “there was an awful bunch of men going along there all morning”; that there was a great deal of shooting going on; that he saw white men shooting and there was shooting from the north; that the fires appeared to be starting irom the inside of the buildings, except the lumber yard appeared to start from the outside. It caught from the adjoining building just across the fence; that while protecting the lumber yard fire broke out in a negro hospital near the lumber yard; that after the fire was extinguished in the hospital it broke out again, was extinguished and broke out the third time. He was unable to say how the fire was started.

The evidence shows conclusively that there was rioting in the city of Tulsa from about 10 o”cloek p. m., May 31, 1921, until about noon of the following day; and during that time all the buildings in the negro section of the city of Tulsa, where the buildings involved in this suit were located, were entirely destroyed by fire.

There was evidence to show that the plaintiff’s hotel and theater buildings were burned between 9:30 or 10 o’clock and noon of the morning of June 1st;' that before these buildings were burned a' train of cars *139 south and west of the hotel was burning and at that time there were other buildings standing between the hotel and the burning cars and the wind was blowing in an easterly direction toward the plaintiff’s building. Plaintiff, in his brief, says:

“The plaintiff in rebuttal established that the property of the plaintiff took fire anywhere from 10:30 to about 12 o’clock. That there was some buildings between the Red Wing Hotel and the railroad track; that tte railroad track was south and west of the Red Wing Hotel, and that there was a train of cars on fire at that place,, and that the wind was in an easterly direction. No witness in the entire case testified that .they know how the plaintiff’s buildings caught fire; the inference that they caught fire by reason of the .disturbance being purely of a circumstantial character, and under these facts it is contended by the plaintiff that the court erred in directing a verdict and taking upon himself the authority of deciding the case for three reasons:
. “First, we contend it was purely a question of fact for the jury to determine under proper instructions from the court whether the property of the plaintiff was destroyed directly or indirectly from, a cause excepted in the policy, such as riot, invasion, etc.

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382 F.3d 1206 (Tenth Circuit, 2004)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 22, 243 P. 929, 116 Okla. 137, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redfearn-v-american-central-ins-co-okla-1926.