96 Pa. Super. 521 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1929
Argued April 16, 1929. On the 21st of February, 1926, a one-story dwelling *523 house owned by the plaintiff and insured with the appellant company, was burned. The appellant company refused to pay the insurance, claiming that the fire was caused by the explosion of a still, the operation of which materially increased the fire hazard. Suit was brought and after hearing the evidence the trial judge directed a verdict for the plaintiff. The appellant contends that the court erred in (a) rejecting certain evidence; (b) directing the jury that under all the evidence their verdict should be for the plaintiff.
The appellant offered to prove by the fire chief of the Borough of Belle Vernon that he, in company with a deputy fire marshal of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, interviewed the tenant of the plaintiff who occupied the house at the time it was burned, and that he stated that the fire was due to an explosion of a still, and that Lewis Cinimo (son-in-law of Bitonti) was so badly burned that he died shortly thereafter, for the purpose of showing the cause of the fire. It was contended that this conversation was competent as a part of the res-gestae. The court excluded the testimony on the ground that it was a narration of a past occurrence and was not an utterance accompanying or immediately succeeding the fire that made it admissible as part of the res-gestae. This statement was made many hours after the fire so that the witness had plenty of opportunity for reflection and premeditation, and therefore it was not a spontaneous statement and admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule; it was properly excluded: Riley v. Carnegie Steel Co.,
The second question involves the determination of whether the unknown or unauthorized act of a third person will avoid a policy where it contains a provision as follows: "This company shall not be liable *524 for loss or damage occurring, ...... (b) while the hazard is increased by any means within the control of the insured."
The house that was burned was located about fifty yards from where the owner lived. He testified he had leased it to Rosso Zolaro, although, according to the testimony of W.R. Harvey, the fire chief, he stated to him that he leased it to his son-in-law. The plaintiff also testified that Zolaro lived in the house he rented him with his family, but the testimony offered upon the part of the defense was that Zolaro rented another house and that he lived with his family "on the other side of the hollow," and it was in the latter house that the chief, W.R. Harvey, saw him the morning after the fire with his head and hands bandaged. The fire occurred at 1:30 in the morning, and, according to the testimony of Carlyle Beatty, a member of the volunteer fire department, when the department arrived the building was burned; that he saw a still and a number of burned barrels and also a couple of metal containers with coils attached to them; that he saw "liquid fire running from the building that was on fire" and barrels containing liquid in which corn and other grain was soaking. He was corroborated in part by W.R. Harvey, the chief of the fire department, who was out of town that night, but who arrived at the scene of the fire early the next morning and described the presence of five-gallon cans containing corn, wheat and mash.
The appellee said he knew nothing about the fire as he was in bed and while he had learned that his son-in-law had died, he did not know that his death resulted from injuries received in the fire, or the cause of his death, although he was on friendly relations with his son-in-law.
The authorities in Pennsylvania hold that occupancy *525
of a house by a tenant is the occupancy by the landlord; that a violation of the terms of the policy by a tenant is a violation by the landlord; that a lessor continues to be the insured party, and that the conditions and covenants in a policy are binding whether he occupies the premises, personally, or by a tenant: Diehl v. Adams County Mutual Insurance Co.,
In Long v. Beeber,
In McCurdy v. Orient Insurance Co.,
None of the policies, however, in the cases referred to provides that the policy should be avoided if the hazard is increased by any means within the control of the insured.
In Central Abattoir Co., Inc. v. London and Scottish *526
Assurance Corporation, Ltd.,
The weight of authority is that where a policy contains the provision under consideration that unless knowledge of the insured of the hazard is shown, the policy will not be avoided: Royal Exchange Assurance of London v. Thrower, 246 Federal Reporter 768; 28 Corpus Juris 221; Waggonick v. Westchester Fire Insurance Co.,
There was no evidence offered that Bitonti had any *527 interest in or knowledge of the operation of the still, or that it was under his influence, either directly or indirectly. No one testified as to the length of time the still had been used or that it was generally known in the neighborhood that the tenant had been conducting an illegal business in the house. There were no facts adduced showing that Bitonti had either actual or constructive notice of the illegal conduct of his tenant. It could not be said, therefore, notwithstanding the suspicious circumstances disclosed after the fire, that there was an increased hazard under the control of the landlord as contemplated by the provisions of the policy.
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.