Schmaelzle v. London & Lancashire Fire Insurance

60 L.R.A. 536, 53 A. 863, 75 Conn. 397, 1903 Conn. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 7, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 60 L.R.A. 536 (Schmaelzle v. London & Lancashire Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmaelzle v. London & Lancashire Fire Insurance, 60 L.R.A. 536, 53 A. 863, 75 Conn. 397, 1903 Conn. LEXIS 8 (Colo. 1903).

Opinion

Prentice, J.

The plaintiff is the owner of premises upon which stood a brewery and shed. In the brewery were ma *399 chinery and stock. Upon the buildings, machinery, and stock, the plaintiff carried, in some thirty-four companies, insurance against fire aggregating $60,000 in amount. These policies were all of the standard form and contained the following provision: “ This company shall not be liable under this policy for a greater proportion of any loss on the described property . . . than the amount hereby insured shall bear to the whole insurance, whether valid or not, or by solvent or insolvent insurers, covering such property. ...” Thirty-one of the policies covering insurance for $55,000 were of the kind known as blanket or compound policies; that is, they insured said buildings, machinery and stock, as a whole and without distributing the amount of the insurance among the several items. The remaining policies, containing insurance for $5,000, were of the kind known as specific; that is, the amounts insured thereby were distributed among the several items of property, a specified amount to each item. Each of these specific policies covered, in the whole, precisely the same property as did the compound insurance, but distributively. The manner of distribution was uniform among the specific policies, and was among four separate items, to wit, the main or brewery building, stock, machinery, and shed, as follows: $1,634.88 on the brewery, $1,839.21 on the stock, $1,498.64 on the machinery, and $27.24 on the shed.

A fire damaged the brewery, stock, and machinery. The sound value of the property insured was $59,982, divided as follows: brewery, $20,586; stock, $11,085; machinery, $28,111, and shed, $200. The loss by the fire was mutually adjusted at $42,953, distributed as follows: brewery, $15,115; stock, $11,085; machinery, $16,753; and shed, nothing.

It is conceded that the assured is entitled to receive from the defendants the amount of his loss above stated. The only question in the case is one between the several defendants, as to the sums which each should pay. Between the blanket insurers there is no dispute, and between the specific there is none. The contention is between the two classes of insurers, and is as to the method to be employed in the apportionment of the loss, in view of the provision as to prorat *400 ing which appears alike in all the policies, and which has heen quoted.

It is clear that the compound and the specific insurance must be brought together in the prorating. This necessarily involves an adjustment by separate items, and the application in some way of the blanket insurance to each item covered by specific insurance. The question is as to how this shall be done.

The claim of the blanket insurers is that their policies should, for the purpose of the distribution of the loss, be converted into specific ones; specific amounts under the policies being set out to each item upon which there is specific insurance, so that, for the purpose of determining the amount that any blanket policy shall contribute towards any item of loss upon which there is specific insurance, the amount of the blanket policy’s insurance upon such item, and the total amount of insurance thereon, shall be computed upon the basis thus ascertained. The methods suggested for making this conversion from compound to specific are two, both of which are claimed as having the approval of authority and experience. One method is to distribute the amount of the blanket policy over the property insured by it, so that the items bearing specific insurance shall be credited with insurance to such a proportionate amount of the whole as the sound value of the specific item bears to the sound value of the whole. The other is to make this conversion upon the basis of the respective losses upon the property insured.

The specific insurers, upon the other hand, contend that there should be no such conversion; but that in adjusting each item of loss the total amount of insurance thereon, and the amount insured by each blanket policy, be determined by including the entire amount of the compound insurance which has not been previously exhausted in adjusting some other item. The widely differing results to which the two claims might lead are apparent.

In making these claims, and others which are incidental to them, all the parties concede that, whatever general rule of apportionment of loss may be adopted it must, in so far as *401 it is not directly prescribed by the contract, yield in case of need to the interests of the assured. The first requisite of any method of apportionment sought to be applied must be the assured’s protection to the full extent of his rights under his policies. Any method which, in a given case, fails to afford him the full measure of his just indemnity must give place to another which will.

In the present case the plaintiff has no concern as to which of the suggested modes be adopted in distributing his loss among his insurers. The interests of the latter are alone involved.

The whole question arises out of the application to the facts of the case of the provisions of the prorating clause in the policies. Each insurer has not entered into an unqualified obligation to indemnify the assured to the extent of his loss, or to the extent of his loss limited by the amount of the policy. It has made a contract which gives it, as against the assured, a benefit arising from co-insurance. It stipulates that its liability shall be limited in amount, dependent upon the existence and amount of such co-insurance. The policy expressly states how its liability shall be determined. The question, therefore, becomes one of contract construction. It is not one of equitable determination in the absence of an agreement, as was the case in certain of the adjudicated cases. We are not called upon to adjust the equities between co-insurers, one having paid more than his fair share of the loss. We are not dealing with the doctrine of subrogation. The parties have recorded their agreement, and we have only to determine its meaning and enforce it.

The policy provision, to restate its pertinent portion, is : “ This company shall not be liable under this policy for a greater proportion of any loss on the described property . . . than the amount hereby insured shall bear to the whole insurance.” It is thus provided that the mode to be employed in determining the extent of liability is purely a mathematical one, involving the stating of a problem in simple proportion. The three known terms of the proportion from which the fourth, to wit, the amount of the liability *402 under the given policy, is to be deduced, are stated to be the whole insurance, the amount insured under the policy, and the loss. The loss is in this case an ascertained sum: in any, it is a determinable one. Where the given policy is a specific one, the second term is also a definite one, and only the first remains open to question. If the given policy is a blanket one, then both the first and second terms are subject to dispute. An answer to a single question, however, resolves all. That question, which thus stands out as the controlling one in the situation, is thus seen to be this: By the terms of a blanket policy what amount of insurance attaches to each item embraced within the insurance ?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 L.R.A. 536, 53 A. 863, 75 Conn. 397, 1903 Conn. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmaelzle-v-london-lancashire-fire-insurance-conn-1903.