51 A. 898 | N.H. | 1902
"In construing insurance policies courts are governed by the same general rules which are applicable to other written contracts. That is to say, it is the duty of the court to adopt that construction of the policy which, in its judgment, shall best correspond with the intention of the parties, which is to be ascertained from the whole instrument, the nature of the property to which the language of the policy is to be applied, the purposes for which property is ordinarily to be used, its situation, and the manner in which it is usually kept." Stone v. Insurance Co.,
The policy purports to insure the plaintiff against loss by fire "on frame mill building and all additions thereto adjoining and communicating, including steam-pipes, if any, . . . and occupied by the assured as a pail shop." Whether in the strictest sense of *255
the terms the dry-house and the boiler-house could be said to be "additions" to the principal building, and if so, whether they were "adjoining and communicating" additions to that building, may suggest discussions of the technically correct use of language, in which it is not often useful for the court to indulge. The question of the grammatical propriety of the language is not before the court. The question for decision is: What is the meaning of the language employed in view of the apparent purposes of the parties, the situation and uses of the property, and the nature of the contract evidenced by the policy? The plaintiff was a pail manufacturer. He owned one large building and two smaller ones located a few feet away. All the buildings were used by him in the prosecution of his manufacturing business, and constituted his manufacturing plant. Each was a necessary part of the whole, which was "occupied by the assured as a pail shop" or manufactory. The frame mill building was not used independently of the smaller buildings, and without the additional buildings it did not constitute the pail shop. In view of the dependent uses of all the buildings in the manufacture of pails, the word "additions" was not an inappropriate designation of the two smaller ones; and for the same reason the qualifying words "adjoining and communicating," though perhaps unnecessary, were evidently intended to designate such additional buildings as were necessary appurtenances to the main building in the manufacture of pails. They were "adjoining and communicating" buildings, because they were within a few feet of, and next to, the mill building, and because their common use in the business made it necessary that some communication or connection should exist between them and the mill building. If they had not been in common use with the mill building, — if, for instance, they had been used for stores or dwelling-houses, — the evidence of the meaning of these terms in the policy would be less convincing. The parties, knowing the relative location of the buildings and their interdependent uses, were guilty of no great perversion of language in designating the smaller buildings as "adjoining and communicating" with the larger building. The word "communicating" alone does not convey a definite meaning. There are many senses in which communication may be said to exist, as by telegraph, telephone, or conversation, between individuals, or by physical contact, or apparent uses, between inanimate objects. The context, purposes, and circumstances in view of which it is used must be resorted to to determine its significance in a particular case. Kendall v. Green,
The fact that there was a movable bridge between the mill building and the dry-house, as well as the fact that steam-pipes made a physical connection between the buildings, is evidence of some weight, though perhaps not alone sufficient, that the parties' intention when the contract was made was as above indicated. Marsh v. Insurance Co.,
If the testimony of the defendant's witness on cross-examination — that the dry-house was an addition to the mill building — was incompetent, it was harmless, The trial justice having ruled adversely to the defendant upon the construction of the contract, its rights were fully protected by the exception, and the admission of the testimony upon any ground presents no reversible error. Wait v. Association,
Exceptions overruled.
CHASE, J., did not sit: the others concurred. *257