Watson v. Firemen's Insurance

140 A. 169, 83 N.H. 200, 1928 N.H. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJanuary 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 140 A. 169 (Watson v. Firemen's Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson v. Firemen's Insurance, 140 A. 169, 83 N.H. 200, 1928 N.H. LEXIS 2 (N.H. 1928).

Opinion

Peaslee, C. J.

In this action to recover upon policies of fire insurance the question presented by the case as transferred is whether there was any evidence from which it could be found that the origin of the fire was a risk insured against. The cause of the fire was an explosion, resultant from pouring gasoline into an automobile tank, by the light of an ordinary kerosene lantern. In the original policies all use of gasoline within the buildings was prohibited. This, under *201 our decisions, would put the risk outside the policies, whether the insured knew of the use or not. Badger v. Platts, 68 N. H. 222. The reason for this conclusion is that the risk incident to such use is one that “the defendant expressly refused to assume. ...” Wheeler v. Insurance Co., 62 N. H. 326, 329.

By a subsequent contract, attached to one of the policies, certain uses of gasoline were permitted. The right was given to keep two automobiles in the barn, and stipulations as to such use (called ■warranties) were a part of the agreement. That involved here reads: “2. That the opening, filling or emptying of any gasolene reservoir of any automobile while the same is contained in the within described building, shall be done by daylight or incandescent electric light only, and that there shall be no other artificial light and no fire or blaze in the room when such reservoir is open. ...”

Following these provisions is a statement that “This policy shall not be affected by failure of the insured to comply with any of the warranties of this permit in any portion of the premises over which the insured has no control.”

It is evident that the contract made differed vitally from those considered in the cases upon which the defendant relies. The dangers incident to certain uses of gasoline were insured against generally; and as to the excluded uses, the defendant undertook the risk if the use was in any portion of the premises over which the plaintiff had no control. The rule that there is no liability when forbidden acts are done by one “in whose possession and control” the premises “have been placed by the insured” [Liverpool and London and Globe Ins. Company v. Gunther, 116 U. S. 113) is not applicable here.

The act with which the defendant seeks to charge the plaintiff was done by the plaintiff’s son, in the plaintiff’s absence. But because the plaintiff had the right to determine what should or should not be done upon the premises, it is claimed that he had such control thereof that the act could not be found to be within the terms of the contract of indemnity.

The meaning of the word control, as here used, is a new question in this jurisdiction, and one upon which little authority is to be found elsewhere. The term was evidently chosen deliberately and with an appreciation on the part of the defendant that it has its limitations. Had right of possession or right to control been intended, it is a fair inference that it would have been so stated. Instead thereof the insurer used the term of more limited application, and its rights are to be determined accordingly.

*202 The phrase under consideration is not one having an exact and technical definition, which necessarily excludes any other interpretation; and much depends upon the point of view from which the problem is approached. Looking at the question solely from the insurer’s standpoint, and giving to each word used the significance most favorable to that party, there would be ground for the contention that the exception applied only when the insured had formally surrendered possession and authority over the premises for a definite period, that is, when they were held under a lease.

It is hardly necessary to cite authority for the refusal to adopt such a method of interpretation. This was language used by the insurer to the insured. The test is not what the insurer intended its words to mean, but what a reasonable person in the position of the insured would have understood them to mean. Fitch Company v. Insurance Co., 82 N. H. 318, and cases cited. “Men have a right to be dealt with with some regard for the state of mind and body, of knowledge and business, in which they are known actually to exist.” DeLancey v. Insurance Co., 52 N. H. 581, 590.

The evident purpose of the exception from the terms of the warranties was to reheve the insured, to some extent, from the application of the rule that his non-participation in the forbidden use was immaterial. Such being the object in view, there is fair reason to conclude that the plaintiff would understand that he was insured if the forbidden use should be made “without his fault,” as he would express it. This might well be thought to be “the meaning which they [the words] convey to the common mind.” Stone v. Insurance Co., 69 N. H. 438, 441. Upon such an interpretation of the contract, he was insured against this risk if the act was done without his authority, consent, knowledge, or culpable ignorance. Insurance Co. of North America v. McDowell, 50 Ill. 120.

If this should be thought to be too broad an application of the proviso, there is, upon the particular facts of this case, other similar ground upon which the defendant’s claim of non-liability as matter of law should have been denied. Even taking a schoolman’s view of the language, rathér than that of the farmer and portable mill operator to whom it was addressed, it does not conclusively appear that the defendant is not liable.

In its ordinary acceptance, control means regulating or directing power. In the sense that, as owner, the plaintiff could have determined in advance what uses the premises should be put to, he had control. Of course this is not what the term means here, for such a *203 construction would make the stipulation in question wholly nugatory. It plainly contemplates a situation where, for a greater or less period, the plaintiff had given over to another the power to decide what should be done. It applies to parts of the premises as well as to the place taken as a whole. The language is “any portion of the premises.” The premises concerning which this additional contract was made consisted of one barn only, and therefore the above phrase must be taken to mean any part of the barn.

There is nothing in the contract requiring the insured to retain control, or to exercise any supervision over the control of others. The plaintiff is not outside his legal rights because he did not do these things. Even if it were to be held that he was bound to take care to prevent forbidden uses which he had reason to anticipate might be made, it would not change the situation here, since there was evidence that there was nothing to lead him to think such an event might occur.

It would be entirely feasible for the plaintiff when surrendering control, as for example by a lease, to stipulate against any acts in violation of the policy and to reserve supervisory authority. But the policy contract does not require this.

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Bluebook (online)
140 A. 169, 83 N.H. 200, 1928 N.H. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-firemens-insurance-nh-1928.