In this non-jury case, the plaintiff sues to recover a loss in the amount of $3,-672.90 under the defendant’s insurance policy called “a mercantile open stock policy”. The coverage of the policy is stated in the first paragraph as follows:
“To indemnify the Assured for all loss by burglary, of merchandise, furniture, fixtures and equipment, from within the Assured’s premises, as hereinafter defined, occasioned by any person or persons making felonious entry into such premises by actual force and violence when such premises are not open for business, of which force and violence there shall be visible marks made upon the exterior of the premises at the place of such entry by tools, explosives, electricity or chemicals;”.
The amount of the loss, compliance with the formal requirements of the policy as to proof, and the payment of’ the premium, were all admitted by the defendant which, however, promptly denied liability for the claim because the circumstances of the loss were not within the policy coverage. The premises referred to in the coverage clause are defined in paragraph 2 of the declarations, a part of the policy, as follows:
“(a) Location of building containing the premises is 15 W. Baltimore Street, Baltimore, Maryland.
“(b) The portion of the building occupied by the Assured in conducting his business and herein called ‘the premises’ is Grade floor and most of basement and sub-basement.”
In addition to the plaintiff, Leeds, Inc., the assured as named in the policy included others “as their interest may appear”, but only the plaintiff was interested in the loss involved.
Findings of Fact.
From the testimony in the case I find the following facts.
1. The business of the assured was the sale at retail of men’s clothing. It had occupied the same premises for some years past.
2. The building, 15 W. Baltimore Street, is a five-story loft building with basement and sub-basement, situated on the south side of W. Baltimore Street, in the heart of the Baltimore business district, and immediately adjoining the premises of The Sun office newspaper building. 15 W. Baltimore Street fronts about 40 feet on Baltimore Street with a depth of even width of about 200 feet running south to the north side of W. Redwood Street which is the first parallel street to Baltimore Street. As stated in the policy, Leeds, Inc., occupied and used practically the whole of the first floor where its stock of men’s clothing was contained, and most of the basement of the building and all of the sub-basement. The first floor fronting on Baltimore Street has a common entrance at the street level for all the floors; but there is a slight down grade to Redwood Street where the basement is on a level with that street. The front of the basement on Redwood Street is occupied for a depth of about 40 feet by
3. The remainder of the whole basement is used by the plaintiff for tailoring work with fixtures and equipment, and the subbasement is used^for storage. In the basement there is a- stairway leading to the first floor occupied by the plaintiff. This stairway comes down from the first floor into an office space which has been partitioned off in the basement for the use by the plaintiff’s office force. The partition is a rather rough board structure of substantial construction running from the floor to the ceiling of the basement and completely enclosing the office and stairway. There is a door in this partition in the basement which was customarily kept locked at the close of business for the day. It was so closed and locked just prior to the loss.
4. There is a window in the basement opening on an alleyway which, in the form of an L, communicated with the north side of W. Redwood Street. This window has metal shutters on ■ the outside and a metal lattice work on the inside of the basement. The shutters were fastened from the inside and the lattice work also locked from the inside prior to the loss.
5. The loss occurred between 7 and 10 P.M., March 12, 1941. The manager of the store, after learning, as he supposed, that all persons were out of the premises, saw that the exterior doors of the premises occupied, both on Baltimore Street and Redwood Street, and the window and the partition door in the basement to the first floor, were all securely closed and locked before leaving the store about 5:30 P.M. on the night of March 12, 1941. The policeman in making his usual rounds on his beat at 7 o’clock found all the exterior doors securely closed and locked, but on his next round about 10 P.M. found the window in the basement open. The plaintiff’s manager was promptly notified, came to the premises, and on inspection found that merchandise consisting of men’s clothing of the value of over $4,000 was missing from the first floor; that the- lock had been broken on the partition door in the basement on the outside of the door, that is on the basement side and not on the office side. There were visible marks of force on the door showing where the lock had been broken or the door forced open. There were also visible signs of force which had been used to break the hasp holding the lock on the window on the inside and the shutters of the window had been opened from the inside but apparently without force.
6. A day or two later a portion of the stolen merchandise was recovered in an abandoned truck on a Philadelphia street. Police investigation reported that the truck owner asserted the truck had recently been stolen from him. A truck of this nature had been observed in the alleyway near Redwood Street on the night of the loss by some persons employed in a nearby restaurant. After crediting the recovered merchandise less expense, the net loss was $3,672.90.
7. The reasonable inference and conclusion of fact is that the theft or burglary was perpetrated by some person or persons who bad concealed themselves in the basement or sub-basement of the premises occupied by the assured before the premises were closed by the manager, and that this person or these persons broke open the partition door into the office and ascended the stairway to the first floor, removed the clothing, carried it down the stairway to the basement and then broke open the basement window from the inside, pushed the shutters outward, and passed out the stolen merchandise .to some one who placed it in the truck and drove away with it.
8. There was no evidence in the case sufficient to show that the premises occupied by the assured as defined in the policy were entered by force or violence from the outside, that is, from any exterior entrance to the building either from Baltimore or Redwood Street, or the window facing the alleyway, or from any portion of the first floor or basement or subbasement not occupied by the plaintiff. In police parlance, it appeared that the theft was an “inside job”. There were no visible marks oil the exterior of the premises of a forceful and violent entry.
Conclusion of Law.
The conclusion of law is that the plaintiff’s claim for loss is not within the coverage of the policy and that the defendant is entitled to judgment with taxable court costs.
The coverage clause in this case is expressed without ambiguity or uncertainty. Upon analysis the coverage is limited to a case where (1) the loss is by burglary from within the insured premises as defined in the policy; (2) occasioned by felonious entry into such premises (3) by actual force and violence (4) when such premises are not open for business, (5) of which force and violence there shall be visible marks made upon the exterior of the premises at the place of such entry by tools, etc. The evidence in the case establishes a loss of merchandise from within the insured’s premises, but does not show that there was an entry into such premises by actual force and violence when not open for business; and does not establish that there were visible marks upon the exterior of the premises at the place of such entry by tools, etc. Counsel for the plaintiff conceded that the force and violence, of which there was physical evidence, of the breaking and opening of the window in the basement from the inside, is not sufficient to bring the case within the coverage of the insuring clause; but contends that the visible marks of violence in the breaking of the lock on the doorway of the interior office partition in the basement, thereby giving access to the stairway and the first floor of the premises, brings the case within the coverage of the policy, even though there was no force and violence used in the original entry of the premises and no visible marks of violent entry appearing on the exterior of the whole premises. That is to say, his contention is that physical evidence of the breaking of an inner door within the premises gratifies the policy requirements. I am not able .to agree with this contention.
Looking at the policy as a whole, it seems clear enough that its essential purpose was to cover only loss by burglary involving a forcible entry from the exterior of the premises of which there should be visible evidence by marks upon the exterior. The premises are definitely defined in the policy as grade (first) floor of the building and most of the basement and sub-basement. If the premises had been defined in the policy as the first floor only, or even the first floor and the office portion of the basement, the plaintiff’s contention would
The coverage clause of the policy requires that the loss must have been by “burglary”. By the common law, in force in Maryland, burglary had relation only to the felonious entry of a dwelling in the nighttime; and the technical criminal law of burglary has not been expanded by statute. Bowser v. State,
Although there are no Maryland cases applying the terms of a burglary policy to facts analogous to those existing in this case, ■ the conclusion of non-liability here reached is quité in accord with decisions in other States and commentary by well known > text writers. Couch, Cyl. of Ins. Law, Vol. 5, ss. 1184, 1184a, 1184c; Richards on Insurance, p. 874; Joyce on Insurance, Vol. 4, s. 2821(d). See, also, cases annotated in
The plaintiff’s contention that physical evidence of the breaking of an inner door of the premises is sufficient is sought to be supported by the citation of a number of cases dealing with the forcible breaking of safes. For instance, see Vailsburg Motor Corp. v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.,
It is further argued for the plaintiff that the construction and application here given to the policy language unnecessarily restricts the coverage. The contention does not seem sound to me whether we are considering the express language of the insuring clause or when we look to the whole structure and contents of the policy. There is obviously a greater risk of loss when it is occasioned by what colloquially may be called an “inside job” than from an “outside job”. The policy itself plainly indicates this in paragraph (2) (the exclusion clause) which provides that:
“The Company shall not be liable for loss or damage:
“(1) If the Assured or any associate in interest, or servant or employe of the Assured, is either a principal or an accessory in effecting or attempting to effect the burglary;”
The reference to this clause is not made for the purpose of showing that the particular loss was excluded, but only as bearing on the nature of the risk assumed. The evidence does not establish, or even clearly indicate, that the theft of the plaintiff’s merchandise was perpetrated or connived at by a servant or employe, although it does very strongly suggest that the thief was familiar with the interior of the premises. The proof does sufficiently show that the thief concealed himself in the premises before they were closed for the day. It would seem obvious enough that the risk of loss was much greater from a theft so perpetrated than from one occasioned only by a breaking in from the exterior of the building. And the policy in itself clearly enough shows that the insurer accepted the risk of a breaking from the exterior only.
