Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance Co. v. Wade

58 L.R.A. 714, 68 S.W. 977, 95 Tex. 598, 1902 Tex. LEXIS 205
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1902
DocketNo. 1112.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 58 L.R.A. 714 (Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance Co. v. Wade) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Springfield Fire & Marine Insurance Co. v. Wade, 58 L.R.A. 714, 68 S.W. 977, 95 Tex. 598, 1902 Tex. LEXIS 205 (Tex. 1902).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

Certified question from the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth District. The certificate is as follows:

“The appellant issued to the appellee an ordinary standard fire insurance policy covering a house and household furniture. Among other provisions, the policy contained the following: 'Permission is hereby given for the using of a gasoline stove; the reservoir to be filled by daylight only, and when the stove is not in use. Warranted by the assured that no artificial light will be permitted in the room when the reservoir' is being filled, and no gasoline, except that contained in the reservoir,, shall be kept within the building, and not more than five gallons in a tight, entirely closed, metallic can, free from leak, on the premises, adjacent thereto.
“ 'This entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement indorsed hereon and added’hereto, shall be void if (any usage or custom of trade- or manufacture to the contrary notwithstanding) there be kept, used, or allowed on the above described premises, benzine, gasoline, etc/
*600 '“The ground urged by appellant to avoid liability on the policy is the use of gasoline as shown by the testimony of appellee, which is as follows : 'About noon of the 26th day of March, 1901, as I left the house, my wife requested me to send up a gallon of gasoline for use on the premises. I declined to do so. She subsequently sent to the grocer and bought a gallon, a part of which was used by her that afternoon, so she told me that evening when I went home. I was not aware that the gasoline had been brought on the place until about 7 o’clock that night, when I was home for the night, when she told me she had gasoline on the premises, and that she had not used it all, and desired to know of me what she should do with the portion unused. I told her to throw it out. I was reading at the time and paid no further attention to it ; but I supposed she had thrown it out. About 10 o’clock at night, having occasion to go into my back yard, I passed through the house, with a view of going out the back door, through the kitchen. It being dark, I struck a match in the kitchen to see how to get out of the back door. The match burned low, and seeing what I supposed to be a little tub sitting on the floor, containing what I supposed was dirty water, I threw the .unburned portion of the match into this tub. As I did- so the flame shot up out of the tub. I. attempted to open the door and throw the tub out, holding the tub with one hand and attempting to open the door with the other. The tub had become hot and I dropped my hand hold on the tub, and in falling it tilted and the burning gasoline ran out on the floor, and as a result the property was destroyed.’ It was also shown that no gasoline stove was used on the premises.
“Questions.—1. Do the facts above stated authorize a recovery by appellee, or was the use of gasoline and the origin of the fire in the manner stated such a violation of the terms of the policy as caused a forfeiture thereof and prevented a recovery thereon?
“2. Is the temporary having of a small quantity of gasoline on insured premises, to be used for household purposes, other than for fuel, a violation of such prohibitory clause?”

The question upon which the decision of both of those put by the -court depends is: Do the facts stated show a breach of the warranty that no gasoline shall be “kept, used, or allowed” on the premises? 'The fact that the fire was caused by the gasoline, or by the negligence of the insured, if there wás such negligence, is not, by the policy as stated, made a ground for avoiding it; and it is properly conceded by appellee that the permission to use a gasoline stove does not affect the case. The (question, therefore, is, as stated, whether or not .the gasoline, in the -sense in which those words are used in the contract, was “kept, used, or allowed” on the premises. We find it unnecessary to determine the extent to which appellee is responsible for the acts of his wife to which he did not consent. For the purposes of this case, alone, it will be assumed that all that was done is properly chargeable to appellee.

That the gasoline was not “kept” on the premises is clear. “It is mot enough, according to this phraseology, that hazardous articles are *601 upon, the premises. They must be there for the purpose of being stored ■or kept.” Hynds v. Insurance Co., 11 N. Y., 554. That this is substantially true, all of the authorities agree. Mears v. Insurance Co., 92 Pa. St., 15; Insurance Co. v. Whiteford, 31 Md., 219; Insurance Co. v. Simmons, 30 Pa. St., 299; First Cong. Church v. Insurance Co., 158 Mass., 479.

As the word “kept” means that the prohibited article must not only be upon the premises, but must be there for keeping or storing, and not merely upon a temporary occasion for a different purpose, it follows that there must be some degree of permanency in its continuance there. The word implies all this. The word “used” is employed in immediate connection with the Avord “kept,” in order, we think, to extend the provision so as to exclude the idea that the article must be stored or deposited on the premises. But the purpose in the use of each word is to provide against the same danger, viz., that which Avould arise from the habitual, constant, or continued exposure of the property through the presence or use of the article.

One word forbids the permanent or habitual keeping of the dangerous thing, and the other a like use of it without the actual depositing or storing of it on the premises.

In Mears v. Insurance Co., supra, Chief Justice Paxson said: “We are not disposed to give to the word 'use’ in this policy the narrow construction claimed for it. It must have a reasonable interpretation, such as was probably contemplated by the parties at the time the contract was entered into. Nearly every policy of insurance issued at the present time contains this condition, or a similar one. What is intended to be prohibited is the habitual use of such articles, not their exceptional use upon some emergency. The strict rule claimed by the defendants would prevent the assured from painting his house or cleaning his furniture, as it would be difficult to do either without using some of the prohibited articles.”

The same interpretation of the word is approved by the same court in Insurance Co. v. Simmons, supra, in which the language of Lord Tenterton in Dobson v. Sotheby, 1 Moody & Malk, 481, is quoted as follows: “I think the condition must be understood as forbidding only the habitual use of fire or the ordinary deposit of hazardous goods, not their occasional introduction, as in this case, for a temporary purpose connected "with the occupation of the premises.”

The same principle is recognized in Insurance Company v. Fischer, 83 Federal Reporter, 807; and we find no dissent from it in any of the cases relied on by the appellant. Nearly all of those decisions are thoroughly consistent with it, the prohibited article having been habitually used or kept on the premises, and the discussions being upon other points.

The judgment in the case of Heron v. Insurance Company, 180 Pennsylvania State, 257, seems to conflict with the rule previously laid doAvn by the Supreme Court of that State.

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Bluebook (online)
58 L.R.A. 714, 68 S.W. 977, 95 Tex. 598, 1902 Tex. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springfield-fire-marine-insurance-co-v-wade-tex-1902.