66 Mo. App. 153 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1896
This suit was brought on a fire insurance policy in which plaintiff had judgment and defendant appealed.
I. The defendant objects that the trial court erred in its action refusing to strike out paragraph 2 of the plaintiff’s replication, in which it was alleged that plaintiff “did not know whether the fire by which said building and contents were destroyed caught therein, or was communicated thereto from a stove, as alleged in said answer, or from a discharge of lightning or electricity from and in the course of said electric storm, but he believes that the fire originated from one or the other of said causes,” etc.
The petition alleged that the plaintiff’s dwelling house and contents, covered by the policy sued on, were totally destroyed by fire. The answer of the
II. The plaintiff testified that he gave the notice of the fire to defendant’s secretary within the five days thereafter required by the terms of the policy. The defendant’s secretary in his testimony flatly contradicted the plaintiff in respect to that. The plaintiff was permitted, over the objections of defendant; to introduce in evidence the record of the proceedings of the board of directors of the latter, which tended to show that within five days after the happening of the plaintiff’s loss there was a meeting of said board and the subject-matter of plaintiff’s loss was taken up and considered by it and an offer of $175 was authorized to be made to plaintiff in settlement of his loss, which
III. The defendant further objects that the court erred in its action permitting plaintiff, while testifying, to aid his memory by the use of a list of the personal property lost, which had been made several months after the fire occurred. It appears from an examination of the plaintiff’s testimony that, in stating the various articles of such personal property, he relied on his independent recollection, except in two or' three instances, where he resorted to the list to refresh his memory. Perhaps it was not proper for the plaintiff to have used the list in giving his testimony, but since his wife testified to the loss of the same articles withbut the aid of any memorandum, it is not perceived that the use of such list was harmful. Plaintiff’s testimony was, at most, but corroborative.
IY. The defendant further objects that the court erred in permitting the witness Wheat to testify what it would have cost to replace the plaintiff’s house on the foundation from which it had been removed by the storm. He testified that it could have been put back all right for $20. The effect of this testimony was to diminish the quantum of the plaintiff’s damages, if he was entitled to recover.. If irrelevant, it was not harmful to the defendant.
Y. The defendant further objects that the court erred in permitting the plaintiff to read in- evidence the
VI. The defendant offered to prove by one Gribson that the plaintiff had applied to him to prepare proofs of loss on his building under another policy covering the same. This offer was rejected by the court for the reason that it appeared that Gribson was an attorney and that the communication to which defendant’s offer related took place while the relation of client and attorney existed between plaintiff and said Gribson, and was therefore privileged. And this offer, we think, was properly rejected for the reasons just stated. And besides this, there is no force in the defendant’s suggestion that the claim of the plaintiff for damages to his building, under a cyclone policy, is inconsistent with the claim that his building was destroyed by the agency claimed in his petition.
The plaintiff, as we have seen from the beginning, entertained the notion that the defendant was not liable for the loss to his building occasioned by the action •of the storm m removing it from its foundation. It is shown in the present case that he made no claim against defendant for that item of his damage. His claim under his cyclone policy was therefore not inconsistent with that made against defendant. And hence it follows that in no view of.the action of the court, which we are able to take, do we perceive any just ground for complaint by defendant on that account.
The defendant further contends'that the-said instruction is erroneous in that it told the jury that even though plaintiff’s building was removed from its foundation and damaged thereby, yet if they further believed that it remained near the foundation and thereafter took fire from a stove in the building, or from a stroke of lightning, etc., their verdict should be for the plaintiff, for such sum as it was worth after being removed from its foundation. This is not a case like that of Nave v. Ins. Co., 37 Mo. 430, where the plaintiff’s building had ceased to be such and had become a mere congeries of materials before the fire - occurred and by reason of a cause not insured against in the policy. Nor is it a case where the cause of the loss of the building was not the fire but a fall. Nor ‘ is it one where the fire sprang up afterward in the rubbish and destroyed the fallen materials. Here the building, subject to some slight injuries, though removed from the foundation, could still be indentified as the subject of the insurance. Its structure and location were such that it could still be identified
In Ins. Co. v. Transp. Co., 12 Wall. 194, it was. said: “It is true, as argued, that as the insurance in this ease was only against fire, the assured must be regarded as having taken the risk of collision, and it is also true that the collision occasioned the fire; but it is well settled that when the efficient cause nearest-the loss is a peril expressly insured against, the insurer is not to be relieved from responsibility by his showing that the property was brought within the peril by a cause not mentioned in the contract. St. John v. Ins.
In the policy in the case before us, there is no exception of fires by storm, cyclones, or lightning, and, therefore, according to the principle enunciated in the quotation just made, the defendant took the risk of the fire which caused the plaintiff’s loss, even though it was caused by one or more of the three above named agencies. The present policy, we think, insured the plaintiff’s property against loss by fire, however caused, since it contains not a single exception. Renshaw v. Ins. Co., 103 Mo. 601. It follows that the direction of the plaintiff’s second instruction, heretofore referred to, was a correct expression of the law applicable to the facts it hypothetically states.
The plaintiff’s first and second instructions told the jury that if they found for plaintiff, they should allow interest on the damages from the date of the commencement of the suit. Since the petition does not directly or indirectly demand judgment for interest, the instructions, so far as they authorized the allowance of interest, must according to previous rulings of this court, be deemed error. Shockley v. Fischer, 21 Mo. App. 551; Van Riper v. Morton, 61 Mo. App. 444.
VIII. No serious objection is perceived to plaintiff’s third instruction, in relation to the measure of diligence enjoined upon him to save the property from destruction by the fire.
Instruction number 17, given by the court of its own motion, told the jury that before they could find for plaintiff they must find the fire was the original cause of the loss,- and if they found that while a fire
IX. The court did not err, as defendant contends it did, in refusing its instructions numbers 2, 3, 4, and 5. These instructions, as already remarked in the preceding paragraph, embody the same rule as that declared in instruction number 17, given by'the court on its own motion. The defendant had the full benefit of
It results that the judgment will be affirmed, if the plaintiff, within ten days hence, will file with the clerk of this court a remittitur of $78.93, the amount of the interest allowed by the jury under the erroneous directions contained in' plaintiff’s instructions. Otherwise the judgment will be reversed and cause remanded.