45 Wash. 209 | Wash. | 1907
This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover upon a policy of insurance issued by the defendant to the plaintiff. Plaintiff recovered a judgment for $762.90. Defendant appeals.
After the issues of fact were made up by the complaint, answer, and reply, the case was tried to a jury. At the trial it was agreed that the policy was issued as alleged, and that a fire occurred while the policy was in force, and destroyed certain items of lumber; but it was claimed by the appellant that the policy of insurance covered only lumber which, was damaged or destroyed within the yards, and did not cover lumber destroyed within the sawmill buildings or buildings adjoining thereto. Respondent, on the other hand, maintained that the policy covered lumber both within and without the sawmill buildings, and particularly within the planing-mill buildings. It was stipulated at the trial that there were three parcels of lumber destroyed and in dispute,
“$ Nil — On 2 story frame shingle roof mill building and additions thereto, adjoining and communicating with 1 story frame shingle roof engine and boiler house attached, includ*212 ing foundations, capping and piling immediately thereunder, and log slides, if any, occupied as a wet log, steam power saw & planing mill,
“$ Nil — On stock (incident to the business) manufactured, unmanufactured, in process of manufacture, and materials for manufacturing same, all while contained in the above described mill building and additions thereto, or in cars on tracks within one hundred fee't of said building.
“$1,000. On lumber, laths, shingles, pickets, mouldings, posts, and all other timber products, their own or held by them in trust, or on commission, or sold but not delivered, all while contained in their yards, or in sheds in their yards, or piled on or under platforms and tramways, docks or wharves, or in cars within fifty feet thereof. All the above described property situate on block 200 of tide flat lands, Whatcom, Wash.” '
This application was signed by respondent on May 13, 1904. On the 16th day of May, 1904, the policy was issued by the defendant, containing the following clauses:
“$ Nil — On two story frame iron roof building and additions thereto, adjoining and communicating with one story frame iron roof engine and boiler house attached, including foundations, capping and piling immediately thereunder, and log slides, if any, occupied as a wet log, steam power saw mill.
“$ Nil — On stock (incident to the business) manufactured, unmanufactured, in process of manufacture, and materials for manufacturing same, all while contained in the above described mill building and additions ‘thereto, or in cars on tracks within one hundred feet of said building.
“$1,000. On lumber, laths, shingles, pickets, mouldings, posts and all other timber products, their own or held by them in trust, or on commission, or sold but not delivered, all while contained in their yards, or in sheds in their yards, or piled on or under platforms and tramways, docks or wharves, or in cars on ‘track within sixty feet thereof.”
It is plain from both the application and the policy in this case that the appellant insured only lumber while contained in the yards or in sheds in the yards of the respondent, and
It appears that the sawmill proper was a building two hundred and twenty feet long by fifty feet wide. At the side of this building and at the end next to the yards was a building sixty by forty feet, used as a planing mill. This planing-mill building was not built against the sawmill proper, but was about eighteen inches therefrom. It was a two-story structure. The machinery in the planing mill was run by a belt extending to the main shaft in the sawmill. The entrance from the sawmill to the planing mill was effected by means of a step-ladder from the sawmill to the second floor of the planing mill. There were no walls between the planing mill and the sawmill. , To the side of the planing mill, toward the yards, a shed was attached to the planing mill. This shed was a part of the planing-mill building, and was used for receiving lumber from the planers and loading the same therein on trucks to be taken to the yards. It is conceded that lumber to the value of $605 was destroyed while in the planing mill, and lumber to the value of $160
There seems to be no dispute in the evidence that the lumber which was of the agreed value of $246 was within the yards outside of the mill, and was-within fifty feet of the planer and sawmill buildings. This item was clearly covered by the policy, and was not covered by other policies of insurance. There was no disputed question of fact to be submitted to the jury. The questions involved were questions of law, depending entirely upon the proper construction of the contract of insurance, and should therefore have been determined by the court.
The judgment must therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded to the lower court with instructions to enter a
Crow, Dunbar, Root, Fullerton, and Hadley, JJ., concur.