Salmon v. Concordia Fire Ins. Co. of Milwaukee

161 So. 340, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 532
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 27, 1935
DocketNo. 16071.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 161 So. 340 (Salmon v. Concordia Fire Ins. Co. of Milwaukee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salmon v. Concordia Fire Ins. Co. of Milwaukee, 161 So. 340, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 532 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

WE STERFIELD, Judge.

The plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Clarke Salmon, brought this suit against the Concordia Fire Insurance Company of Milwaukee under two policies of fire insurance, claiming $127.70 as the proportionate loss due by the defendant company (there being other insurance) resulting from the destruction by fire of a bangle bracelet belonging .to Mrs. Salmon. The defendant resisted payment upon the ground that the loss was sustained in a manner not covered by the policy.

There was judgment below in favor of plaintiff for $121.46, with legal interest thereon from June 22, 1934, together with 12 per cent, of that amount as damages and $50 as attorney’s fees. From this judgment defendant has appealed.

It is admitted that the policies sued on were issued to the plaintiff and that, if there be any liability, the amount awarded by the judgment is correct; the sole contention being that the loss was not within the coverage of the policy. In an agreed statement of facts found in the record it is stipulated that the plaintiff’s bangle bracelet “was inadvertently thrown together with certain trash into a trash burner then located in the yard of plaintiff’s home and premises described in each of the said policies; that neither of plaintiffs knew that the said bracelet was contained in said trash burner and a fire was voluntarily set to the contents of such trash burner, and the fire so set by plaintiffs and/or their employees at all times during the said fire was contained within the confines designed and intended to contain the flames of a fire intended *341 to burn trash, debris, waste papers, etc. policies snecl on are of the standard form and; as usual, indemnify the insured “against all direct loss or damage by Are, except as hereinafter provided.” There are no exceptions mentioned in the policy which are of interest here. . It is said, however, that the fire which consumed the plaintiff’s bracelet was a “friendly fire,” ignited by the plaintiffs or by their servant intentionally and at all times confined within the limits intended by the plaintiff, and that for the effects of such “friendly fire” there can be no.recovery because not within the intendment of the parties to the insurance contract, which only contemplates indemnity for the effects of hostile fires. In support of this proposition the following is quoted from “A treatise on the Law of Fire Insurance,” by H. G. Wood (2d Ed.) published in 1886, at page 236, § 163: ” The

“Where fire is employed as an agent, either for the ordinary purposes of heating the building, for the purpose of manufacture, -or as an instrument of art, the insurer is not liable for the consequences thereof, so long as the fire itself is confined within the limit of the agencies employed, as, from the effects of smoke or heat evolved thereby, or escaping therefrom, from any cause whether intention.al or accidental. In order to bring such consequences within the risk, there must be actual ignition outside of the agencies employed, not purposely caused' by the assured, and these, as a consequence of such ignition, de-hors the agencies.”

And the following from Vance on Insurance (1904) p. 477:

“Hostile and Friendly Fires. In determining the liability of the insurer against damage by fire, it is necessary to make a rather subtle distinction between fires that are hostile and those that are friendly in their origin. So long as a fire burns in a place where it was intended to burn, and ought to be, it is to be regarded as merely an agency for the accomplishment of some purpose, and not as a hostile peril. Thus, a fire burning in a fur.nace, or a stove, or a lamp, is considered, a friendly fire; and damage that may be caused by such fire due to their negligent management, is not considered to be within the terms of the policy. * * • *
“The principle underlying these eases is simply that the policy shall not be construed to protect the insured from injury consequent upon his negligent use or management of a fire, so long as it be confined to the place where it ought .to be.”

Both counsel assert that there -are no cases in point in Louisiana and few in other jurisdictions. The industry of able counsel has revealed but three cases where the facts are similar: Weiner v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 124 Misc. 153, 207 N. Y. S. 279, 280, decided in 1924, affirmed 214 App. Div. 784, 210 N. Y. S. 935, in 1925; Reliance Insurance Co. v. Naman, 118 Tex. 21, 6 S.W.(2d) 743, 745, decided in 1928; and Harter v. Phoenix Insurance Co. of Hartford, 257 Mich. 163, 241 N. W. 196, 197, decided in 1932.

■ in the first of the cited cases, Weiner v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., the New York Supreme Court held that theré could be no recovery for the value of jewelry which the •plaintiff’s wife had placed in a velvet handbag and deposited in a stove for safe-keeping and which was destroyed when she caused a fire to be ignited in the stove. In that case it was held that: “Unless a fire policy expressly includes such a cause, the parties to the policy cannot be said to havé contemplated a loss by flame or heat wholly confined to a stove used by the assured as a stove, where, as here, the property destroyed was placed in the stove, regardless of how or why it was so placed.”

In the next cited case, Reliance Ins. Go. v. Ñaman,-the Commission of Appeals of Texas held that plaintiff’s wife could not recover the value of jewelry which she had placed in a paper hat box in a clothes closet, together with some tissue paper, and which with the box and paper was thrown into a furnace in the basement by a servant and destroyed by fire lighted by the servant. In that case the court said:

“A friendly fire is not within the undertaking of the insurance company at all. * * * In the sense in which the word ‘fire’ is used in the policy, there has been no fire so long as it is kept within the proper and accustomed place. In common -parlance one has not had ‘a fire’ so long as it'has only burned in the place where it was intended .to burn, and the sense in which that word’is used in common parlance accurately indicates • the sense in which it is employed in a fire insurance policy.”

Referring to the argument of counsel that the loss was not one which fell within the exceptions in the policy and was, therefore, within the contract, the court said:

“This by no means follows. In the very nature of an exception it is something taken out of the instrument, whether statute, grant, or contract, and is of a kind dealt with in the contract. Where the matter being considered *342 is not within the contemplation of the parties to the contract in the first place, there is no need of an exception, and, since as we think the fire in this case was without the contract of insurance, the failure to except it cannot bring it within.”

In the last of the cited cases, Harter v. Phoenix Ins. Co. of Hartford, a majority of the Supreme Court of Michigan followed very closely the holding of the Texas court in Reliance Ins. Co. v. Ñaman, quoting extensively therefrom and citing the Weiner Case. Each of the three cases which we have discussed supports the position of the defendant, and we have been referred to no other cases holding the contrary except that of Countess Fitz-James v. Union Fire Ins. Co., 23 Irish Law Times & Solicitors Jl., Yol. XXIII, p.

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161 So. 340, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salmon-v-concordia-fire-ins-co-of-milwaukee-lactapp-1935.