Union Indemnity Co. v. Leidesdorf

37 F.2d 26, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2488
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 1930
DocketNo. 110
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 37 F.2d 26 (Union Indemnity Co. v. Leidesdorf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Indemnity Co. v. Leidesdorf, 37 F.2d 26, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2488 (2d Cir. 1930).

Opinion

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

The Universal Pile Fabric Coat House, Inc., sued on a policy of insurance issued against burglary. A receiver in bankruptcy was later appointed and substituted as plaintiff. A recovery was bad below. The insurance was effective November 6, 1924, and the burglary is alleged to have been committed on December 5, 1924, at the insured’s place of business in. New York City. It claimed the theft of $29,688.19 worth of beaver sets — fur collars and cuffs cut in shape to be sewed on ladies’ coats — and some crepe de chine silk. This merchandise is said to have been delivered November 29, 1924, December 2, 1924, and December 5, 1924, by Brody & Funt, Inc., whose shareholders organized the bankrupt. The policy of insurance was for $30,000. It contained the following clause:

“A. For all loss by burglary of merchandise, usual to the Assured’s business as described in the schedule hereof, and furniture, fixtures and equipment, from within the Assured’s premises as hereinafter defined, occasioned by any person or persons who shall have made felonious entry into the premises by actual force and violence, when the premises are -not open for business, of which force and violence there shall be visible marks made upon the premises at the time of such entry by tools, explosives, electricity or chemicals.”

The insured was wired by a protective company’s burglary alarm system. At 6:29 p. m. on December 5,1924, the burglar alarm signal was closed for the night. At 6:43-the electric signal, showing the door of the premises bad been opened, appeared. At 6:52 the protective company’s representatives arrived at the premises and signaled1 back their presence there. They bad been there four minutes. Thus this record disclosed that the door was locked at 6:29 p. m., the signal apparatus was in place, and the night signal sent to the home office of the protective company at 6:43, a lapse of 14 minutes; the trouble signal appeared, and within five minutes the protective company’s men were on the premises. This record of time and the occurrences are not in dispute. The breaking and entry must therefore have occurred within fourteen minutes, between 6:29 and 6:43; about five minutes,. 6:43 to 6:48, was the time when it was possible for the burglars to have carried away eight bags of fur and three bundles of silk. An officer of the bankrupt testified that this merchandise was ten feet away from the door which was broken open. One of the officers of the insured left the premises between 6:20 and 6:30. -The damage to the door by the breaking and entry must have occurred between 6:29 p. m. and 6':43 p. m.

The door which was broken open was in the rear on tbe sixth floor of the building opening to a stairway having a small platform and turn at each floor, but extending from tbe roof to tbe sidewalk. The de[27]*27fense interposed denied the burglary; at least that there was no “force and violence,” and no “visible marks” upon the premises, at the time of entry, by tools, were shown to have been made as a result of the burglary. In short, the appellant claims that the burglary was a sham; that it was physically and mechanically impossible to have entered from the outside and damaged the lock and door as their physical appearance exhibited injury. On the other hand, the theory of the appellee is that the burglars ascended the rear stairway from the street to the rear door on the sixth floor and broke ■it open quickly and carried out the merchandise and disappeared during this short interval of time.

Prom the photographs in evidence, an examination of the physical exhibits, door and door frame, lock and its parts, and the demonstrations made at the oral argument, we are convinced the evidence did not warrant the trial judge sending as a question •of fact to the jury whether or not a burglary was committed. It was established that it was physically impossible for burglars working from the outside to have inflicted the •wounds that the lock, the door, and the adjacent parts showed. The injury to the lock and door conclusively shows that some of them were inflicted from the inside. Two burglar jimmies were found on the premises, and it is claimed that these were used in the burglary. The use of these, with the marks shown, makes it impossible of belief that the entry was made from the outside. It wás mechanically impossible to have used them on the outside and made entry, doing the injury to the lock, and still find it hanging as it was. Appellant’s Exhibit A and Appellee’s Exhibit 5 show the damage to the outside of the door. The metal covering was around the nose of the batten of the door and was forced back over itself. White scratches appeared which were made on the vertical angle iron constituting the stop. •One picture (page 6) shows this stop and the scratches in gray lines. The heads of the ■machine screws which held the strike and slim in place are shown in the picture. The stop was undamaged except for these scratches. The stop was a strong vertical solid piece of steel which could not have been pushed by the jimmies. In one of the pictures (page 7), the slim and projecting screws are plainly seen, and show no damage to the stop. On the inside of the batten was the ease of the lock in close proximity with the edge thereof and with the edge of the ■stop. No new opening was made by the use of tools from the outside which admitted passage of the tip or end of any tool from the outside to contact with the lock case or its housings or the strike of the slim. Therefore, the only use that could be made of the jimmy was from the outside around the nose of the batten through to the inside and in contact with the housings of the lock so as to cause the breaks shown in the pictures. But it is evident that no such point of entrance was made. The gray lines at the end of the housing show that the metal which covered the batten was forced back in a little roll which prevented an instrument from reaching the housings and thus twisting them into the form they appeared. The metal rolled back and lifted up (page 10) would have blocked the jimmy directed toward the housings, and the sears on the nose of the wing corroborates this conclusion. The deep sears (page 8) on the outside edge of the batten could not have helped a jimmy to get in; the effects produced on the inside edge were a lifting and pushing baek of the metal cover so as to prevent touching the housings. And, since no hole was bored or cut to admit the point of the jimmy to the lock, the door would have had to be opened so as to break the lock and give the trouble signal to make an entrance large enough to admit the point of a jimmy.

It is mechanically clear that the lock could only have been broken, as it appeared, from the inside. The injuries to the lock confirm this. The bottom housing was forced downward, and so far that it was broken almost off the ease (pages 9, 10). The top housing was forced upward. The two moved in different directions,* one vertically upward and one vertically downward when bent or broken, and necessarily required separate applications of the instruments used, one prying upward and the other prying downward. This could not have been done from the outside. In order to introduce a jimmy from the outside far enough to come in contact with either of these housings, the door would have had to be so far open that the lock would have been broken and entrance effected. The conclusion is irresistible that the lower housing was broken by a sharp blow downward by something from the inside, for a sear is left from that blow.

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Related

Fitzgerald v. Pennsylvania R.
164 F.2d 323 (Second Circuit, 1947)
Redman v. Baltimore & Carolina Line, Inc.
70 F.2d 635 (Second Circuit, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 F.2d 26, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 2488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-indemnity-co-v-leidesdorf-ca2-1930.