46 Mass. 439 | Mass. | 1843
Upon the facts agreed, the question is, whethei the property lost was covered by the policy declared on.
The cases cited as to the computation of time have but little bearing on the present question. Those are cases where a contract was to be performed, or an act to be done, within a limited time after a day certain. In such cases, the general rule is, that the day from which the computation is to be made is to be excluded in the computation, unless it appears that a different computation was intended ; and this rule applies to cases where the computation is to be made from and after an act done on a particular day ; for a day, as was said in Pugh v. Duke of Leeds, Cowp. 720, is to be considered in law as an ■indivisible point of time, and there can be no distinction between a computation from an act done, and a computation from the day in which the act was done. If by this policy, therefore, the plaintiff’s goods had been insured for five months from the first day of February, that day would have been excluded and the first day of July would be included. But the language of the present policy is different and is peculiar ; it being usual, in policies on time, not only to specify the day, but also the hour, when the risk is to commence. It was not so done in the present case, and the construction of the first policy, if no regard is to be had to the second policy, as explanatory of the intention of the parties as to the first, seems to depend wholly on the true meaning of the word “between.” This preposition, like many other words, has various meanings ; and the question is, in what sense was it used in the present policy ? The most common use of the word is to denote an intermediate space of time or place, and the defendants’ counsel contends that it was so used in the present policy, and that the first day of February and the first day of July are to be both excluded. On the other hand, the plaintiff’s counsel insists that both days are to be included; at least I so understood the argument. And we
It is undoubtedly true that the word “between” is not always used to denote an intermediate space of time or place — as the plaintiff’s counsel remarked. We speak of a battle between two armies, a combat, a controversy, or a suit at law between two or more parties ; but the word thus used refers to the actions of the parties, and does not denote locality or time. But if it should be said that there was a combat between two persons between two buildings, the latter word would undoubtedly refer to the intermediate space between the buildings, while the former word would denote the action of the parties. But it was argued, that the word “ between’J is not always used as exclusive of the termini, when it refers to locality. Thus we speak of a road between one town and another, although the road extends from the centre of one town to the other ; and this, in common parlance, is a description sufficiently intelligible, although the road in fact penetrates each town. But if all the land between two buildings or between two other lots of land be granted, then certainly only the intermediate land between the two lots of land, or the two buildings, would pass by the grant. And we think the word “ between” has the same meaning when it refers to a period of time from one day, month or year, to another. If this policy had insured the plaintiff’s property to be shipped between February and the next July, it would clearly not cover any property shipped in either of those months. So we think the days mentioned in the policy are excluded. We think the word “ between” has the same meaning in this respect, as the words used in the second policy. In that policy, the goods insured are to be shipped subsequently to the 14th of July, and prior to the 15th of October next following. This would be construing the contract according to the most common meaning of the word “between.” And there is nothing in the contract to intimate that the word was used in any other sense
But if the language of the first policy were doubtful, the doubt, we think, would be removed by the terms of the second,
Plaintiff nonsuit.
The chief justice did not sit in this case.