Widness v. Central States Fire Insurance

47 N.W.2d 879, 259 Wis. 159, 1951 Wisc. LEXIS 329
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 47 N.W.2d 879 (Widness v. Central States Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Widness v. Central States Fire Insurance, 47 N.W.2d 879, 259 Wis. 159, 1951 Wisc. LEXIS 329 (Wis. 1951).

Opinion

Martin, J.

The verdict herein was approved by the trial court and must be sustained if there is credible evidence to support'it. Wallin v. Sutherland (1948), 252 Wis. 149, 152, 31 N. W. (2d) 178; Sonnenberg v. Hardware Mut. Casualty Co. (1949), 255 Wis. 261, 264, 38 N. W. (2d) 491.

The question of the value of the hay is not contested by the defendant on appeal. It is their contention that the barn would not hold the quantity of hay plaintiff claims was there. They rely principally on three exhibits, photographs showing the Jones barn and silo in question before the fire. It is agreed that the barn loft was 50 feet wide and 100 feet long, but there is considerable testimony regarding the height of the barn and all of the witnesses did not agree upon the height.

Plaintiff testified that: It was 30 feet from the floor to the crossbeams; the peak of the barn was 10 to 15 feet above the beams; the distance from the floor to the peak was 45 feet; the hay was piled 26 bales high; a truck loaded 13 feet 5 inches wbuld go in the hay-barn door with sufficient clearance; the crossbeams were 12 to 14 feet above the door; the height of the stock barn was 6¿4 feet; posts in the barn were 12 by 12 inches; extra timbers had been provided by the owner for strengthening the floor of the hay barn and were put in place; the average standard bale is 14 by 16 by 40 inches; and the minimum weight is 80 pounds per bale.

William Kimmes, present owner of the farm and a highway contractor, who did not live on the premises, testified that there were extra timbers as supports, size 12 by 12 inches; that when some men put a new roof on the silo *163 they said they were 50 feet up in the air; and that the peak of the barn would not be as much as five feet below.

Merle-Saylor, who lived on the farm from 1913 to 1936, testified on behalf of defendants that: The height of the stock barn was 7 feet; it was 20 feet from the concrete floor in the stock barn to the plate of the roof; the over-all height of the barn from the floor of the stock barn to the peak was 40 to 42 or 43 feet; and that the tile part of the silo was supposed to be 40 feet but 2 feet was gained by the mortar between the tile.

Klaus Helske, a draftsman in an architect’s office, testified he measured the tile silo and found it to be about 43 feet and that the height of the barn was about 42 feet.

Leo McGauley, a licensed engineer, testified that he inspected the remains of the barn and talked with various people concerning its size and that in making his computation he assumed the barn to be approximately 42 feet in height, and from the floor to the plate 20 feet, and the wall studding was 20 feet.

Assuming those figures, McGauley testified the cubic content of the barn would allow 762 tons of hay with a bale size 14 by 18 by 3 feet 7j4 inches and weighing 80 pounds. As computed, from the floor to the top of the plate, the cubic content would be 100,000 cubic feet, and the portion above within which hay could be stored would be 37,000 cubic feet. He allowed 6,000 cubic feet for clearance of the bales, leaving a total of 131,000.

Klaus Helske, the draftsman, testified that in a bale of hay 14 by 16 by 38 (size of bale as testified to by a farmer who buys and sells hay), there are 4.875 cubic feet and assuming the dimensions of the barn to be 50 by 100 by 45 feet and—

14 feet from the loft to the plate, 137,000 cubic feet;
16 feet from the loft to the plate, 147,500 cubic feet;
18 feet from the loft to the plate, 157,500 cubic feet;
20 feet from the loft to the plate, 167,500 cubic feet.

*164 Several witnesses testified that there were 25 bales in a ton of hay. Using the figure of 4.875 cubic feet in a bale of hay produces a result of 121.875 cubic feet in a ton. The jury found that there were 728 tons of hay on hand, and using these figures, would amount to 88,725 cubic feet.

Plaintiff testified the average size of a bale would be 14 by 16 by 40 which would be 5.185 cubic feet. 25 x 5.185=; 129.625 cubic feet per ton. 728 x 129.625=94,367 cubic feet.

The trial court stated:

“From some of the testimony of Mr. Helske, if the jury saw fit to believe it, they could have found that there was less than 100 tons of hay in the barn. [Referring to his testimony that the loft would not hold more than 94.8 tons without falling.] On the other hand from a portion of his testimony if the jury believed that testimony as to the cubical content, the jury could find that it held 732 tons of hay.”

Appellants also assert that the wires found in the debris accounted for only 88 tons of wire-bound hay. The jury could believe that many of the wires were not found and then, too, there is evidence that much of the hay was twine-bound.

There is evidence that the 728 tons of hay would go into the barn with ample clearance.

Defendants claim that it is necessary to assume that there are 270 to 275 cubic feet in a ton of hay. This is based on the testimony of the insurance adjuster that he always used 270 feet in settling fire losses, and on the testimony of a farmer that 275 cubic feet of baled hay per ton is used in the hay business. Using 270 cubic feet per ton, 196,560 cubic feet would be required to store 728 tons of hay or, in other words, 2.215 times more space than the computation using the 121.875 figure.

The weight discrepancies in the statement of witnesses as to the number of tons of hay that a barn of a given size *165 would hold was due to the method which they used. The jury had a right to use whichever method they desired in making their calculation.

The photographs show that the height of the barn is below the tile silo, but the exact distance cannot be determined because there is a difference in perspective of view. On behalf of the defendants, Witness Helske testified that the silo was 43 feet and the barn 42 feet; Witness William Kimmes testified that the silo was 50 feet and the barn would not be 5 feet below the height of the silo.

The figures used in the computations are supported by evidence.

The plaintiff made a record of the baling as it was' done in the field and this record, together with other records, was destroyed in a truck accident on November 6, 1949. The operator of the baler furnished him with a record of the tally of the bales which had gone through the hay baler. The total number of bales which went through the hay baler was 11,530. The bales averaged 80 pounds to a bale or 25 bales to a ton, or the amount of 461 tons of hay produced from the four farms where plaintiff purchased hay stumpage, known as Douglas county or mixed hay. He sold 292.25 tons, leaving on hand at the time of the fire 168.75 tons.

Plaintiff kept a record of the western alfalfa hay which he purchased from two truckers and this totaled 560 tons, the amount purchased and on hand at the time of the fire. He testified from an original record made by him at the time the loads were delivered in the barn.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.W.2d 879, 259 Wis. 159, 1951 Wisc. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/widness-v-central-states-fire-insurance-wis-1951.