118 Minn. 422 | Minn. | 1912
This is an appeal from an order denying the defendant’s alternative motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial.
The action is based upon a policy of accident insurance covering the life of Anna Maria Kleis, whom we will hereafter call Mrs. Kleis, she being a married woman, and the only question involved is
Such being the case, we are not called upon to choose between the rule declared in Houlihan v. Preferred A. Ins. Co. 196 N. Y. 337, 89 N. E. 927, 25 L.R.A.(N.S.) 1261, where it was held that a policy insuring against'injury “caused by the burning of a building-while the said person is therein” did not cover a case where no portion of the building itself was burned, but only a jiortion of its contents, and the substantially contrary rule laid down in Wilkinson v. Ætna, 240 Ill. 205, 88 N. E. 550, 25 L.R.A(N.S.) 1256, 130 Am. St. 269. All we are required to do in the instant case is to determine whether the evidence was sufficient to warrant the submission of the question as to whether Mrs. Kleis’ injuries, which caused her death, were literally “caused by the burning of a building” while she was therein, within the strict rule oropounded by the New York case.
John Ilia, called by the .plaintiff, was employed at the hotel at
John Downs, called by the plaintiff, owned a blacksmith shop about, two hundred feet to the rear of the hotel. He was in front of his-shop, talking to a Mr. Mahoney, when he saw a young lady jump out. of the hotel laundry. She “hollered,” and witness looked and saw that the room was all in a flame inside. Mr. Mahoney pulled off his overcoat and started to fight the fire. Just then Mrs. Kleis jumped out of the room, “just a living torch.” Witness grabbed the coat which Mahoney had dropped, ran, and threw it around Mrs. Kleis,
Sarah Kleis, daughter of the deceased, called for the plaintiff, heard the cry of fire, and went back to the kitchen, but could not get through the house that way, on account of the fire. She returned to the main hall, and there met her' mother, Mrs. Kleis, who had been brought into the house. Mrs. Kleis was burned all over, except her face. Her clothing, excepting underclothes, was all burned off, and her shoes were burned to her feet. It was only a few minutes, according to the witness, between the time when she ran out to the kitchen, and the time when she returned to the hall and there met her mother.
Dr. Peck, a physician, called for the plaintiff, testified that Mrs. Kleis was burned all over, except her face, from her feet to her shoulders, and back of her neck. The upper parts of her feet were burned, and also her toes. Most of the burns were of the third degree; that is, clear through the skin. When the witness-first saw Mrs. Kleis after the fire, which was about five minutes after she was burned, she said that the building was all on fire. She died in about fifty hours thereafter.
The above is, in substance, all the evidence in the record pertinent to the issue involved, and, while it is somewhat vague and uncertain as to just what portion of the building was burned, and the extent of the burning, it is nevertheless apparent that there was a general conflagration of considerable dimensions, and we cannot say that there was no evidence of the burning of the building. Hnder the instruction given, the verdict implies a finding that Mrs. Kleis’ death was caused by the burning of the building while she was therein, and we cannot say that there was no evidence to sustain this finding.
Order affirmed.