Home Insurance Co. of New York v. Peoria & Pekin Union Railway Co.

178 Ill. 64 | Ill. | 1899

Mr. Justice Boggs

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellee company brought assumpsit on an insurance policy made and delivered by the appellant company, insuring certain cars and other property against loss or damage by fire, and recovered a judgment in the circuit court in the sum of §6502.90. The judgment was affirmed by the Appellate Court for the Second District on appeal. This is an appeal to bring the judgment of affirmance into review in this court. In the trial court the cause was submitted to the court without a jury. The judgment was for the value of thirty-eight freight cars which were destroyed by fire while on the tracks of the appellee company during the period covered by the policjr.

Appellee, a railway corporation, was the owner of certain railroad yards in and near the city of Peoria, with tracks leading to certain breweries, elevators, etc., and was engaged at the time of the delivery of the policy, and at the time of the destruction of the property by fire, in doing a switching and terminal business in the city of Peoria, receiving the cars of other companies consigned to and from industries and elevators on its tracks, and carrying and storing such cars for charges to it paid, as well as doing a general railroad business. All of the railroad companies hereinafter mentioned in a quotation from the policy, except the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company, ran their trains into the city of Peoria on the tracks of appellee, and their cars and contents were delivered to appellee on the arrival of such trains, to be by it transferred or stored as directed, for certain charges to it paid. The railroad of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy company connects with that of appellee, and the latter received and carried the former’s cars consigned to it, from or to any industry or elevator on appellee’s tracks, making a charge therefor. What was known as the “Iowa elevator” was on the tracks of appellee, and was one of the elevators to and from which it carried cars for other companies. The cars destroyed by fire were brought into the city of Peoria and delivered to appellee by the companies mentioned in the stipulation, to be transferred or stored as directed, in the customary and usual manner.

The particular provisions of the policy relied upon by the appellee are as follows:

“44. $50,000—On freight cars of every description, the property of other roads, firms, individuals or corporations, for which the assured are or may be liable, while on the line of their road, the limit of loss, if any, on any one freight car not to exceed $500.
“45. $20,000—On passeng'er cars, the property of other roads, firms, individuals or corporations, for which the assured are or may be liable while on the line of their road, the limit of loss, if any, on any one passenger car not to exceed $2500.
“Names of roads owned or operated by the assured on the lines of which the above described rolling stock is to be covered, viz.: Peoria and Pekin Union railway and upon the tracks of the Iowa Elevator Company at Peoria, Ill., and also on tracks known as No. 5 and 6 on property of the Iowa Elevator Company, said tracks owned by the Iowa Central Railway Company and operated under lease by the Peoria and Pekin Union Railway Company, and also on tracks of Toledo, Peoria and Western Railway Company in Peoria.”

The contention is as to the true interpretation of these items, particularly item No. 44, as the cars which were burned were freight cars.

The position of the appellant company is, its undertaking, according to the true interpretation of the policy, is not to insure the appellee company ag'ainst loss or damage to the cars, but only against loss by reason of a liability legally accruing against the appellee company, if any, to account to the owners of the cars for the loss of or damage to the cars by fire, and that in order to entitle the appellee company to recover, it was essential the liability of the company to account and pay to the owners of the cars should be made to appear by the proof in the same manner as would be necessary in an action by the owners of the cars against it to recover upon such liability. We do not so construe the policy. The words and phrases employed in insurance policies are chosen by the insurance company. For this reason, and perhaps also for other reasons, it has become the settled rule of construction the language of a policy shall be interpreted most strongly against the author of the instrument. The words in item 44, “for which assured are or may be liable,” which we have caused to be italicized, were not, according to our interpretation, incorporated into the item for the purpose of indicating that it was the liability of the assured to account to the owners for the cars that was the subject of the indemnity, but for the purpose of restricting the obligation of the insurer with regard to the class of cars to be covered and protected by the policy. It was not the intention of the insurer to insure any and every freight car belonging to “other roads, firms, individuals or corporations’’ which might be on the line of appellee’s road, but only such cars belonging to such “other roads, firms, individuals or corporations” on appellee’s line of road as assured had such control of or such connection with as that a liability might accrue against such appellee company to account for such cars to the owners thereof. The phrase is properly construed to be descriptive of the cars to be insured. Had it been the intention of the insurer to insure the liability, only, of the assured to respond to the demands of the owners of the cars, this intention could have been readily and unmistakably manifested by the use of apt words and phrases. It was a part of the same contract of insurance to insure the liability of the assured to respond to the claims of owners of freight, merchandise, baggage, etc., in transit in and on cars on its line of road against loss by fire, and the insurer found no difficulty in clearly expressing the obligation so assumed. Item No. 46 in the same policy is as follows:

“46. $20,000—On the liability of the assured as common carriers and warehousemen, including their interest as owners for freight, merchandise, baggage, and all other property (excluding cotton on open flat cars or petroleum in tank cars) while in transit in or on cars on the line of the road hereby insured, and its branches, spurs, side-tracks and yards owned or operated by the assured at the date of this policy,” etc.

So, if the undertaking sought to be expressed in item 44 under consideration had been to insure the liability of the assured to account to the owners of cars for any loss or damage which mig'ht come to such cars while on the line of appellee’s road, it is clear the author of the policy-had the requisite command of language to enable him to set forth such undertaking in clear- and unambiguous terms.

Nor is the right of recovery limited to such cars as it should be made to appear by evidence the appellee company was absolutely legally liable to account and pay for to the owners thereof. The proper construction of the policy in this respect is, that all freight cars consumed by the fire while on»the line of the appellee’s road and in its care and custody, with respect to which it had some duty to perform of such nature it might be charged with leg'al liability to account to the owners therefor or to be subjected to claims and demands to so account, and to possible litigation growing out of such claims and demands, were protected by the policy.

The contention the word “liable,” incorporated in item 44, means an absolute legal and fixed liability, is not tenable. In Webster’s Dictionary the word “liable” is said to refer to a future possible or probable happening which may not actually occur. And the same lexicographer further defines the word as follows: “exposed to a certain contingency or casualty more or less probable.” The word as used in the policy does not signify a perfected or fixed legal liability, but rather a condition out of which a legal liability may arise. The word, as most frequently used, does not necessarily exclude the idea of a contingency. An assignor of a negotiable note may, with no incorrectness of speech, be said to be liable upon his assignment; but his obligationis not an absolute fixed legal liability, but is contingent upon the financial condition of the maker and the exercise of diligence on the part of the assignee, if diligence could avail to secure payment of the note from the maker thereof. Law writers and courts, without improper use of language, may and do declare the liability of a warehouseman begins when the goods are delivered, etc., and such liability ends on the delivery of the property to the person rightfully entitled to it, without being understood to assert that an obligation on the part of the warehouseman to answer in any manner has become fixed and absolute. The correct meaning of such expressions is that the warehouseman has such connection with the property as that a fixed liability may arise. The italicized phrase in said item 44 was intended to indicate the policy was to protect cars to which the appellee should bear such relation as to become charged with the performance of duties which might involve a fixed legal liability. All cars as to which appellee owed such duty were covered, and no more was required than that the evidence should establish the existence of such relation of the appellee company to the cars. That relation established, it is well settled an insurable interest rested in the appellee company, that it might lawfully insure the cars in its own name and sue for and recover the value thereof if destroyed by fire, holding the excess over its own interest in the property for the benefit of those who had entrusted the cars to it. Fire Insurance Ass. v. Merchants and Miners’ Transp. Co. 66 Md. 347; California Ins. Co. v. Union Compress Co. 133 U. S. 387; Home Ins. Co. v. Baltimore Warehouse Co. 93 id. 527; Siter v. Morris, 13 Pa. St. 218; Hope Oil Mill Compress Co. v. Phenix Assurance Co. 74 Miss. 320; Snow v. Carr, 61 Ala. 363; Hough, Clendenning & Co. v. People’s Fire Ins. Co. 36 Md. 432; Baxter v. Hartford Ins. Co. 11 Biss. 306.

The trial court ruled correctly in passing upon the propositions of law applicable to the case.

The judgment of the Appellate Court is conclusive on all questions of fact, and that judgment is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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