Shinrone, Inc. And Frances G. Bridge, Cross-Appellants v. Insurance Company of North America, Cross-Appellee

570 F.2d 715, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 12725
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 7, 1978
Docket77-1015, 77-1044
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 570 F.2d 715 (Shinrone, Inc. And Frances G. Bridge, Cross-Appellants v. Insurance Company of North America, Cross-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shinrone, Inc. And Frances G. Bridge, Cross-Appellants v. Insurance Company of North America, Cross-Appellee, 570 F.2d 715, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 12725 (8th Cir. 1978).

Opinion

*716 GIBSON, Chief Judge.

In this diversity case, removed from the state court, a jury verdict resulted in a judgment of $82,240 for plaintiffs Shinrone, Inc. and Frances G. Bridge (hereinafter referred to as Shinrone or plaintiffs) on an insurance policy covering livestock. Defendant, Insurance Company of North America (INA), appeals, contending that the court’s instructions were prejudicially erroneous and the plaintiffs failed to make a submissible case. Shinrone cross-appeals on the trial court’s ruling that a dismissal of a part of plaintiffs’ claim was with prejudice. 1

The policy issued to Shinrone provided in pertinent part:

3. b. This policy insures livestock against:
(1) Death or destruction, directly resulting from or made necessary by:
(b) Windstorm * * *.
4. This policy does not insure:
(b) Against loss or damage caused by * * * dampness of atmosphere or extremes of temperature.

On April 8, 1973, a severe wind and snow storm struck Iowa, during which 166 calves died on the Shinrone ranch. Previous to the storm, the weather was unseasonably warm and wet, causing extremely muddy conditions. The mud was two feet deep in the Shinrone feedlots when the windstorm commenced. The wind was accompanied with considerable snow, but most of the snow fell on the second and third days of the storm. At the time of the storm, there were 15,000 cattle on the ranch, and of these, 166 calves, approximately six months old and averaging 300 to 400 pounds in weight, died. 2

Plaintiffs’ expert, a veterinarian, testified that six factors combined to cause the calves’ death: (1) wind; (2) drop in temperature; (3) snow; (4) the size and age of the cattle; (5) the extremely muddy conditions; and (6) the lack of adequate wind protection. The veterinarian also gave as his opinion that the calves died because of the storm, pointing out that calves do not handle stress as well as older animals, and that the calves died from exposure, exhaustion and shock in trying to cope with the storm. He also testified the wind was the most significant factor but that the wind alone would not have killed the animals.

Plaintiffs’ complaint sought to recover the value of 390 head of cattle, 166 of which were the property of Frances Bridge, allegedly lost on April 9, 1973, in Iowa (Division I), and of 101 head of cattle allegedly lost in Colorado between October 31 and November 7, 1972 (Division II). No testimony was offered in support of the Division II claim for the cattle lost in Colorado, and the district judge subsequently dismissed that part of the claim with prejudice.

In connection with the Iowa cattle loss, INA contends that for plaintiffs to recover it would be necessary to establish (1) that there was a windstorm; (2) that the death of the cattle resulted directly from the windstorm; and (3) that the policy exclusions against dampness of atmosphere or extremes of temperature do not prevent recovery. Based on the above requirements, INA requested the following instruction:

You are instructed that a windstorm, in contemplation of law, is a storm characterized by high winds, with little or no precipitation, and an ordinary gust of wind, no matter how prolonged, is not a windstorm. In order to constitute a windstorm, the wind must be of such violence and velocity as to assume the aspect of a storm, that is, an outburst of tumultuous force. A windstorm means a *717 storm of wind of unusual force and violence. A windstorm must be taken to be a wind of sufficient violence to be capable of damaging the insured property by its own unaided action.

The trial court deleted the reference to “little or no precipitation” and otherwise tailored INA’s request to instruct as follows:

You are instructed that a windstorm, in contemplation of law, is a storm characterized by high winds, and an ordinary gust of wind, no matter how prolonged, is not a windstorm. In order to constitute a windstorm, the wind must be of such violence and velocity as to assume the aspect of a storm, that is, an outburst of tumultuous force.

INA’s principal attack on this instruction is the court’s deletion of the requirements that the storm be accompanied with little or no precipitation and that the windstorm must be of sufficient violence to be capable of damaging the insured property by its own unaided action. INA cites Jordan v. Iowa Mutual Tornado Insurance Co., 151 Iowa 73, 130 N.W. 177, 178 (1911), where the court, augmenting a definition from Webster, defined windstorm as:

A storm characterized by high wind with little or no precipitation. * * * more than an ordinary current of air, no matter how long continued. * * * In other words it must assume the aspect of a storm, i. e., an outburst of tumultuous force.

This definition of windstorm, was, many years later, in Crozier v. Lenox Mutual Insurance Association, 252 Iowa 1176, 110 N.W.2d 403, 408 (1961), used and amplified as an Iowa definition of windstorm. The court there commented that the additional criterion, that “a windstorm must be taken to be a wind of sufficient violence to be capable of damaging the insured property by its own unaided action”, was supported by authority, but recognized that “[t]he added sentence might not be appropriate in all cases”, although in the case then on trial this language was a proper adaptation to the issues in evidence. Crozier v. Lenox Mutual Insurance Association, supra at 409. From these decisions, INA deduces that the Iowa definition of windstorm has always meant a storm with little or no precipitation.

INA’s other requested instruction sought to incorporate the concept that even if there was a windstorm which combined with the dampness of atmosphere or the extremes of temperature and either directly or indirectly caused the death of the livestock, the verdict must be for the defendant, since an included condition had combined with an excluded condition to bring about the death of the livestock. INA argues that, in that situation, death of the livestock could not be viewed as occurring as a direct result of the wind. INA’s requested instruction read:

You are instructed that if the windstorm combined with a hazard expressly excluded from the policy coverage, that is, extremes of temperature or dampness of atmosphere, or both, to produce the death of plaintiffs’ livestock, the death of the livestock is not a direct result of windstorm and the plaintiffs may not recover.

The trial court’s instruction read:

You are instructed that the burden of proof is on the plaintiffs to prove by a preponderance of the evidence in this case that the death of their livestock, for which they seek to recover in this case, was caused directly by windstorm and not the result of some other cause.

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570 F.2d 715, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 12725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shinrone-inc-and-frances-g-bridge-cross-appellants-v-insurance-company-ca8-1978.