Senn Products Corp. v. Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection & Insurance

180 Misc. 675, 41 N.Y.S.2d 133, 1943 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1805
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 180 Misc. 675 (Senn Products Corp. v. Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection & Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Senn Products Corp. v. Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection & Insurance, 180 Misc. 675, 41 N.Y.S.2d 133, 1943 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1805 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1943).

Opinion

Towers, J.

This action was tried before the court, without a jury, and is to recover damages alleged to have been sustained as the result of an accident.

The defendant issued to plaintiff a policy of insurance, by the terms of which defendant agreed to indemnify plaintiff against loss “ from an accident as herein defined to an object described herein. ” The term “ accident ” is defined in the policy as “ a sudden and accidental tearing asunder of the object or any part thereof caused by the pressure of steam or water therein, or the sudden and accidental crushing inward of a cylindrical furnace or flue of the objects so caused.” The “ objects ” insured are described in schedules attached to the [676]*676policy and, so far as material, consist of a fire-tube Economic boiler. It was in this fire-tube Economic boiler that the alleged accident is claimed to have occurred.

The boiler in question was a return tubular-steel boiler of riveted-seam construction. It consisted of a horizontal shell sixty inches in diameter projecting beyond the front riveted seam to form a smokebox. The rear part of the shell was joined by a riveted seam to a larger oval shell. The upper portion of the boiler contained a number of long rolled-steel tubes, running from the circular head in front to the rear oval head, and the lower portion of the boiler contained a number of short tubes running from the fire tube-sheet to the rear oval tube-sheet. When the boiler was in operation the tubes were surrounded by the water within the boiler, while the hot gases from the furnace passed through the tubes to heat the water, thereby generating steam. The upper part of the boiler, above the long tubes, formed a steam space, with a waterline an appropriate distance from the top of the boiler. The bottom and sides of the round portion of the boiler were exposed to the direct action of the fire, as was the fire tube-sheet. It was externally fired, through a brick furnace situated under the front portion of the round part of the boiler. The fuel used was oil, which was injected into the rear part of the .brick furnace by an oil burner. In operation, the fire and hot gases would strike the bottom of the round shell and then pass through the rows of short tubes to a chamber attached to the rear end of the boiler. Here the hot gases would travel upward and thence back through the rows of long tubes in the upper part of the boiler to the smoke-box in the front of the boiler, from where they were discharged into the smokestack. The boiler was equipped with a steam gage, two safety valves, a water column with gage glass and try-cocks, a blow-off pipe with a blow-off valve, a feed-inlet pipe with a valve, and a main steam pipe with a valve.

The boiler was manufactured in 1924 and was in use for the following four years. It was then out of use until 1934, at which time it was purchased by plaintiff, and thereafter was in continuous use with a normal steam pressure of about one hundred pounds per square inch until January 4, 1942. It was operated sometimes eight hours a day and in peak seasons as much as sixteen hours a day. It was designed for the production of steam for power and processing purposes. It was used by plaintiff primarily to supply steam to cooking kettles used by plaintiff in the manufacture of certain products.

[677]*677At the end of the day, January 4, 1942, which was also the end of the week, the fire in the boiler was allowed to die down and go out. Nothing had happened up to this time with respect to the boiler that had attracted the attention of anyone. It had not been examined internally for at least a month and probably longer, although it was casually inspected externally several times each day. The main purpose of allowing the fire in the boiler to die down and go out was so that the boiler would cool off and permit the installation of a new oil burner which plaintiff intended to install the following Monday morning. Accordingly, arrangements were made to commence the installation of the new oil burner and at the same time, because the boiler would be cooled off and accessible, arrangements were made to have a boiler-repair mechanic make such repairs inside the boiler itself as might be needed, including the rolling of the tubes and including also the caulking of the seams if they needed it.

When the mechanics commenced their work on Monday morning, January 7, 1942, a bricklayer mechanic working in connection with installing the new oil burner called the attention of the boiler-repair mechanic to a sag in the sheet on the upper part of the interior of the boiler. The boiler-repair mechanic thereupon called the attention of plaintiff’s engineer to this sag, and this was the first time plaintiff knew of the existence of the condition in the boiler which is the basis of plaintiff’s contention that an accident occurred.

On inspection, the sag was found to be a bulge or distortion downward in the shell plate over the fire box, to a depth of approximately three inches, for a distance of approximately four feet in length, starting about six or eight inches from the front head-seam and for about the same distance from the firebox tube-sheet seam. The bulge or distortion extended girth-wise for a distance of approximately six and one-half feet. In other words, the bulge or distortion did not extend to any of the seams. There was no hole, break, crack, tear or other opening in the bulge or distortion itself. There was some slight leakage or evidence of leakage at the seam itself. The extent of this leakage can probably best be visualized from the testimony of the witness Boland K. Borchers, called by plaintiff, who testified that there was a separation at the seam, and was asked: “ Q. How big a separation did you see? A. Minute. Very minute. Q. How minute? A. A fraction of an inch; small fraction of an inch. Hardly perceptible. Q. Beg pardon? A. Hardly per[678]*678ceptible. Q. Hardly perceptible to the human eye? A. That’s right. Q. As a matter of fact, you would have to have a magnifying glass to see it? A. That’s right.”

On the inspection it was also found that there was soot over the surface of the bulge or distortion, indicating the bulge or distortion had existed for some time prior to the shutting down of the boiler.

After the inspection plaintiff was advised by defendant that it would not be safe to operate the boiler with a steam pressure of more than fifteen pounds per square inch. It was not operated again. It is quite probable that if it had been operated again there might have been an accident, but that is not decisive of the issues.

Counsel for both sides in this case have advised that there is no reported case in this State directly in point, and none has been found by the court. However, the factual situation presented in Cleveland Drop Forge Co. v. Travelers’ Indemnity Co. (114 Ohio St. 549) is almost identical with the factual situation presented in the instant case. The reasoning of the court in that case is persuasive.

If the plaintiff is to recover, it must be because the proofs affirmatively establish (1) that there was an accident, and (2) that such accident was the particular type or character of occur- . rence the parties agreed by the terms of the policy of insurance must occur before liability would arise. It is well settled that in this type of case the burden is upon the plaintiff to establish affirmatively that the occurrence complained of was one of the risks assumed. (Cary v. Home Ins. Co., 235 N. Y. 296; Borgemeister v. Union Ins. Soc., 127 Misc. 9;

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180 Misc. 675, 41 N.Y.S.2d 133, 1943 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/senn-products-corp-v-hartford-steam-boiler-inspection-insurance-nynyccityct-1943.