Standard Fur Cutting Co. v. Caledonian Insurance

154 A. 153, 113 Conn. 108, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 79
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 6, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 154 A. 153 (Standard Fur Cutting Co. v. Caledonian 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
Standard Fur Cutting Co. v. Caledonian Insurance, 154 A. 153, 113 Conn. 108, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 79 (Colo. 1931).

Opinion

Henman, J.

The complaint alleged and the defendant admitted that machinery, equipment, stock and other personal property contained in the plaintiff’s fur-cutting factory in Danbury, were insured under a policy issued by the defendant and that, on March 3d, 1927, practically all of the property was destroyed by fire. The defendant interposed several special defenses, one of which—the third—alleged breach of a provision in the policy requiring maintenance of watchman service in a specified manner. We confine our present attention to this defense, and recite only those of the facts found which pertain thereto.

The policy was in standard form and contained the following provisions: “In consideration of a reduced rate of premium it is hereby warranted that the insured shall maintain watchman’s service, hourly rounds being recorded nights upon approved recording stations or approved watch clock.” The plaintiff employed a watchman who. regularly commenced work at six o’clock each night and was engaged to continue until six o’clock the following morning, making hourly rounds of the factory. He had been employed by the plaintiff since 1922 and, so far as the officers of the company had .observed, had been trustworthy and reliable. He reported for duty at five-thirty o’clock p. m., on March 3d, 1927; there was no evidence as to *110 his doings thereafter. The fire occurred shortly before eleven-thirty-seven p. m.

The plaintiff, for a long time prior to the fire, had provided an approved watch clock of standard type, so constructed that when a key chained to the factory building at each of several stations or locations was inserted and turned, the number of the station and the time of the insertion would be recorded on a paper dial inside of the clock, each station having a different number and striking place on the dial. The clock was contained in a metal case consisting of two parts securely closed by a locking device operated with a key other than the keys used for recording rounds on the dial. That part of the clock used in making recordings on the dial contained inside of the case of the clock was known as the striking plate or matrix and. could only be reached by one of the station keys inserted into a slot in the case of the clock, or by opening the clock and unlocking the case. There was a key which unlocked and locked the metal case and by which the clock could be opened and paper dials on which recordings were to be made easily placed therein or removed therefrom. When the case was unlocked and open, the dials on which the recordings were made were easily manipulated by hand and moved around so that all stations could be marked on the dial in a very short period of time and made to appear as if made by hourly rounds throughout the night.

On the day of the fire, and for a long time prior thereto, the key which unlocked the case, and the blank, dials, were kept in the desk of Mr. Culhane, secretary and treasurer of the . plaintiff company, in the office .of the factory building and were accessible to the watchman at any and all times. The watchman, *111 with the knowledge and consent of the plaintiff and its officers, used this key to open the clock and change the dials therein, at all times except when absent due to temporary illness. By having access to the key he could manipulate the mechanism of the clock in the manner above stated. No precaution was ever taken by the plaintiff to have the key under the control of some other person than the watchman, and the plaintiff never provided any other person to remove or insert the dials. The watch clock was in perfect running order, mechanically and physically capable of accurately recording the time and number of any station punched thereon by the watchman. After the fire it was found in the ruins directly under the peg upon which it was customarily hung when not in use, and when broken open contained a paper dial with no stations recorded thereon.

Frequent inspections of the premises and of the fire prevention devices were made by inspectors furnished by various organizations in the interest of the insurers. No instructions were ever given the plaintiff by them as to the manner of keeping and operating the watchman’s clock and its appurtenances, except that in October, 1926, an inspector inquired of Mr. Culhane as to who had charge of the watch clock, to which inquiry Culhane replied that he had charge of it. The further finding that “in so stating, Culhane acted in good faith and upon the assumption that as the officer of the company in immediate charge of the plaintiff’s business, he was in charge of the clock within the meaning of the inspector’s question,” is attacked and we eliminate it as lacking support in evidence or fairly admissible inference, although we regard it as immaterial to the result.

As to the third defense, the trial court reached con *112 elusions that “(1) The clause relating to the watchman and the use of a watch clock is a- warranty. (2) On the night of the fire the watchman failed to perform his duty in making hourly rounds. (3) The mere fact that on the night of the fire the plaintiff’s watchman failed fully to perform his duty did not in itself constitute a violation of the policies of insurance or work a forfeiture thereof. The fact that the watchman had access to the clock key and to the dials did not constitute a violation of any provision of the policy.”

Several assignments of error pertain to different aspects of these conclusions. In considering them, we are spared the necessity of determining whether this watchman clause is a warranty, or a provision of less stringent obligation and force—a question which has proven to be of considerable difficulty in numerous cases. Here the requirement is expressly a warranty and is to be given effect as such. Our problem concerns the meaning and application of the undertaking. “The word ‘warranted’ dispels all ambiguity, and supersedes the necessity of construction” as to the nature of the provision. Wood v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co. (1840) 13 Conn. 533, 544; Glendale Woolen Co. v. Protection Ins. Co. (1851) 21 Conn. 19; Bennett v. Agricultural Ins. Co., 50 Conn. 420.

In construing a warranty the usual rules applicable to insurance contracts apply. “If the terms are plain and unambiguous, they must be accorded their natural and ordinary meaning; the court cannot indulge in forced construction, nor so distort provisions as to give them a meaning evidently not intended by the parties.” Komroff v. Maryland Casualty Co., 105 Conn. 402, 406, 135 Atl. 388. The statement is to be construed to impose such obligations only as it can *113 be reasonably presumed the parties intended. McGannon v. Miller’s National Ins. Co., 171 Mo. 143, 71 S. W. 160, 94 Am. St. Rep. 778. If there are provisions of doubtful meaning, that construction which is most favorable to the insured is to be adopted. Dresser v. Hartford Life Ins. Co., 80 Conn. 681, 70 Atl. 39. The latter rule cannot be invoked to change the nature of the contract or nullify the insured’s express and unequivocal agreement. 26 Corpus Juris, p. 198.

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Bluebook (online)
154 A. 153, 113 Conn. 108, 1931 Conn. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-fur-cutting-co-v-caledonian-insurance-conn-1931.