In a trial before the court on a written stipulation of facts, appellees, hereafter referred to as Bock, recovered judgment against appellants, hereafter called Federal, from which Federal appeals. We affirm-.
At all times concerned, Bock was actively engaged in the business of processing and cold storage of meats at the Bock Building
At the time of the loss, the meat inventory of Bock in the building was insured by Federal under policies which stated, in part, as follows:
“(Federal) does insure (Bock) against direct loss resulting from * * * windstorm, hurricane * * *
In its decree granting Bock recovery, the trial court made the following express finding:
“That the term ‘ * * * direct loss by windstorm and hurricane * * ’ as used in the insurance policies issued by the defendants in insuring the plaintiffs includes the losses suffered by the plaintiffs, same being losses occasioned by wind-caused interruption to power supply resulting in spoilage of coldstorage meats.”
The issue we are called upon to decide is whether the trial court erred in his holding that the provision in the policies “direct loss resulting from * * * windstorm, hurricane” includes the loss sustained by Bock.
Both parties agree that they have found no Texas case interpreting the meaning of “direct loss” in an insurance policy where the peril insured against (the hurricane) (1) acts upon uninsured property (the transmission lines) (2) at a significant distance from the point of ultimate loss (five miles) (3) at a time significantly in advance of the actual loss (the winds died down in a few hours, but the power remained off for three days, causing the heat to rise gradually and spoil the meat) (4) but which peril is within the chain of events leading to the loss. We feel, however, that there are a number of Texas decisions which show the Texas trend to support the ruling made by the trial court under the the fact situation presented.
In Hall v. Great National Lloyds,
“In construing the terms of the policy, we shall determine the everyday meaning of the words and in ‘common parlance’ and ‘ “the usual and popular understanding of the terms” ’ used. U. S. Ins. Co. v. Boyer, [153] Tex. [415],269 S.W.2d 340 , 341; Security Ins. Co. v. Sellers-Sammons-Signor Motor Co., 1921, Tex.Civ.App.,235 S. W. 617 , refused. If the terms of the contract are susceptible of more thanone meaning they will be construed strictly against the insurer.”
See, also, Trahan v. Southland Life Insurance Co.,
The courts recognize a distinction between the terms “loss” and “direct loss” as used in an insurance policy. Travelers Indemnity Company v. Jarrett, Tex. Civ. App.,
United States Insurance Company of Waco v. Boyer,
In the course of the opinion, the court quotes with approval from an annotation in
“The test applied under the rule of proximate cause seems to be that where, and only where, an insured peril sets other causes in motion which in unbroken sequence and connection produce the final result for which the insured seeks to recover under his policy, the peril insured against will be regarded as the direct and proximate cause of the entire loss, so as to render the insurer liable for the entire loss within the limits fixed by the policy. The rationale behind this rule is that the scope of insurance protection is defined by the application of the proximate cause standard, according to which a specified loss is compensable if and only if caused by a peril covered by the policy.”
Federal, in citing the opinion in Travelers Indemnity Company v. Jarrett, supra, in support of its contention that Carla was a remote, rather than a direct or proximate, cause of Bock’s loss, argues that “Although it does not interpret a policy covering ‘direct loss’, the case is important to this discussion since it demonstrates that the courts recognize a difference between the terms ‘direct loss’ and ‘loss’. The case infers that if only
In that case, it was held that damage to an electric refrigerator caused by spoilage of food when electric power was cut off for 12 days due to damage to a transformer caused by lightning was covered by a policy insuring ‘loss by lightning.’ Appellant insurer contended that the lightning was a remote, and not a proximate, cause, and that the spoilage of the food, which insurer contended was expressly excluded by the terms of the policy, was the proximate cause of the damage to the refrigerator. In answering this argument, the court said:
“Even if we apply insurer’s criterion, however, we determine there was evidence of probative force that lightning was the dominant, efficient moving cause which set incidental, resulting, and consequential agencies in operation (though the latter may be nearer in point of time and space to> the ultimate result) in a natural and continuous sequence. Foreseeability is not an element. Federal Life Ins. Co. v. Raley,130 Tex. 408 ,109 S.W.2d 972 , [973], 974. The resulting condition of the food is not an intervening cause; it is merely an intervening link in the chain of causation.”
Federal says that because the winds of Carla ceased to blow within a few hours after the power lines were damaged, prior to the time of the actual damage to the meat, this was not a direct loss caused by the hurricane. It is true that the spoilage of the meat was a gradual process, and was the result of the rise of temperature in the vaults over a period of three days, during which time the power was unavoidably off. It was stipulated that neither Bock, nor any other person or corporation, did any act or left undone any act to cause, aggravate, or extend the loss. Carla set off the series of events which, unbroken by any new or intervening cause, led directly to the spoilage of the meat. The sole source of electricity to the City of Galveston, and to Bock’s cold storage vaults, were the transmission lines from the mainland. These were admittedly damaged by the winds of the hurricane five •miles from Bock’s building, causing loss of power to Bock’s refrigerating vaults for over 68 hours, causing the temperature in said vaults to rise, which resulted in the spoilage of the meat. The insurance, for which Bock paid an annual premium of $492.50, expressly covered the contents of Bock’s building, specifically reciting “Occu-pancyMeat & Cold Storage.” The only way to protect the “Meats & Cold Storage” was by having a continuous flow of electrical power to the plant. The finding that the hurricane was the proximate cause of Bock’s loss and not a remote cause is amply supported by the facts. We do not see how any other conclusion could properly have been reached.
We have carefully considered the cases submitted and analyzed in Federal’s brief, such as Abady v. Hanover Fire Insurance Company, 4th Cir.1959,
Lipshultz v. General Insurance Company of America, 1959,
The well-written opinion discusses the authorities pro and con on the issue raised, including Williams v. Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Co., Mass., supra, and, we feel, arrives at the proper conclusion. We refer to the opinion for further study of other authorities on this subject.
Applying the test of proximate cause as above discussed and the rules of construction of insurance policies as laid down by our State Supreme Court in United States Insurance Company v. Boyer, supra, Hall v. Great National Lloyds, supra, and Trahan v. Southland Insurance Co., supra, to the facts as stipulated, we hold that the trial court did not commit error in concluding that the spoilage of the meat in Bock’s vaults was a direct loss by windstorm and hurricane, and was included within the terms of the policies.
Judgment affirmed.
