The H. Schumacher Oil Works, Inc. v. Hartford Fire Insurance Company

239 F.2d 836
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 8, 1957
Docket16049_1
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 239 F.2d 836 (The H. Schumacher Oil Works, Inc. v. Hartford Fire Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The H. Schumacher Oil Works, Inc. v. Hartford Fire Insurance Company, 239 F.2d 836 (5th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment n. o. v. entered by the trial court in a suit on several fire insurance policies in which the jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff. The judgment was based on the ground that there was no “substantial evidence to support the verdict,” the court stating: “The evidence is insufficient to support a verdict of ‘fire’ within the meaning of the policies.”

There is no dispute between the parties as to the legal definition of the term “fire.” The trial court charged the jury, without objection: “ ‘Fire’ is used in its ordinary and practical sense, ladies and gentlemen, and as generally understood and as used in these policies of insurance, it means combustion accompanied by visible light or heat. Combustion without visible light or heat is not fire.”

The damage occurred from the loss to the plaintiff of a substantial part of the value of a pile of approximately 1000 tons of cottonseed stored in its warehouse. It was plaintiff’s theory that a spark or other source of fire became imbedded in the seed while it was being piled up in August, and this fire continued to smolder and glow until uncovered in November, thereby accomplishing the destruction of the seeds. Defendant’s theory is that spontaneous combustion caused the heating of the pile to a point at which all the value of the seed was destroyed, i. e., the seeds were charred over a period of months without any glow or visible light ever existing until the hot part of the mass was exposed to air by means of a hole dug on November 10th, when the cottonseed, which was already at or about its kindling point, started to glow and then burst into flame.

The matter was submitted to the jury on testimony as to facts, expert opinions, and these theories, with strict and repeated instructions! to award recovery only for fire-caused loss and none for damage due to heat only, and a verdict was returned finding defendants liable on the policies to the extent of $52,800; in response to special interrogatories the jury stated that (1) an actual fire had occurred in the seedhouse and (2) the fire existed from September 1 to November 11, 1953.

The evidence tendered on behalf of the parties was of two kinds — (a) Factual and (b) Expert.

(a) Factual Evidence

The damage occurred in a pile of seed piled in the north half of plaintiff’s seed-house. The bulk of the seed in that part of the building had been acquired from local sources and had been brought into the building throughout the month of August 1953; the seed was carried into the seedhouse by an overhead metal conveyor approximately forty feet above the ground and was dropped to form conical piles whose tops were as high as thirty-five feet. Though apparently an effort was made to store in that part of the seed-house only such seeds as had a low enough moisture and fatty acid content to permit safe storage, several lots were mixed in whose condition was not entirely satisfactory. During all this and the subsequent period seed with higher moisture content was moved into the south end of the building as it was purchased, but since its storage qualities were considered poor it was removed for milling as fast as the capacity of the mill would permit.

During the first week of September 1953 the manager of the mill was told, and ho observed, that the seed piled in the north end of the building was extremely hot. Even through shoes it burned the feet of those who walked on *838 it and when metal rods were pulled out of the seed piles, water placed on the end that had been over 10 feet deep in the seed would sizzle. The manager thereupon called the local fire department who inspected the premises and placed a dry hose on the seed for some weeks in early September; at that time two insurance agents were also called to inspect the seed. The manager stated that in view of the danger of fanning a possible fire he did not turn on the fans that normally would be used to cool overheated seeds; for similar reasons it was decided not to remove the hot seeds by dropping them into an automatic conveyor running underneath the seed but to remove them by laboriously shoveling them from the pile through the window.

This procedure was continued throughout the months of September, October, and early November, More and more steam, vapor, and smoke kept rising from the pile as the upper portion of the seeds was removed. On November 10th a portion of the pile collapsed inward forming a crater from which heavy smoke issued. The fire department was again called and firemen started digging in the pile throughout the night of November 10-11. At first blackened, charred lumps of seed were uncovered and later masses that were actually glowing; when these were thrown out of the window they burst into flame. Thereupon water was pumped both on the seed flaming outside the building and into the hole dug in the cottonseed pile. It is agreed that until that time no flame or glow had been observed in the seed pile.

(b) Expert Evidence

Several witnesses testified as experts or as having special technical qualifications. For the plaintiff appeared Mr. H. Cecil Wamble, a research engineer for the Texas State Engineering Experiment station, manager of the Cottonseed Products Research Laboratory, with a degree in chemical engineering and over twenty years of practical and theoretical experience in cottonseed oil mills, and Mr. Charles D. Jacoby, manager of the plaintiff’s mill, whose experience in the field goes back to 1946. Defendants introduced several mill operators, principal among whom was Mr. W. L. Goble who had been in the cottonseed milling business for over thirty years and was the manager of a mill considerably larger than that of plaintiff, but who had apparently little theoretical knowledge of the pertinent chemical and physical processes involved. These experts testified as follows:

It was agreed that it was possible for seeds like those stored by plaintiff to become subject to spontaneous combustion which would damage them and ultimately make them worthless by oxidizing the oils in the seed. This process consists of the evolution of heat due to internal transformations which results in a rise in temperature due to the poor heat conducting qualities of the cottonseed and thereby further speeds up the enzyme processes to which the heating is due. Wamble testified that regardless of how favorable conditions were for selfheating, spontaneous combustion would not of itself set the seed on fire since experience and experiment showed that high enough temperatures could not be reached through this process. On the other hand Goble, who had first testified that he had never known seed spontaneously to achieve a temperature in excess of 168° F, later stated that he had uncovered seed glowing from spontaneous combustion and therefore he believed that a high enough temperature to reach the kindling point of the material must have been achieved, whether that be 200, 250, or even 450 or 500 degrees Fahrenheit.

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Bluebook (online)
239 F.2d 836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-h-schumacher-oil-works-inc-v-hartford-fire-insurance-company-ca5-1957.