Suit wаs brought for loss on a fire insurance policy which covered the contents of a dance pavilion. This policy was written June 4, 1934, and the premium was $35 for one year from that date. The amount of the policy was $2,000. A jury was waived, and the court found the value of the property destroyed was $2,684.05, and entered a judgment for the full amount of the policy, $2,000, from which the insurаnce company appeals, and for reversal claims the judgment is contrary to law and is not sustained by the evidence.
The property destroyed was in an outdoor refrеshment stand, located some 42 feet from the main dance pavilion, and connected therewith by a concrete sidewalk and small conduit. The amusement park, of which this was a part, was called the Royal Grove, erected at a cost of $28,000. The main dance pavilion was 168 feet by 124 feet, a story and a half high, with basement, and was surrounded by a hedge. This рarticular insurance policy covered the “contents” of the dance pavilion in a very broad form, the portions of the paragraph relating thereto involved in this case reading as follows:
“Contents form
“Peony Park, Incorporated
“$2000.00 On the ‘Contents’ of the premises occupied by the assured in the one story, composition roofed, brick, frame and steel building and basement and additions and known as Nos. 7718y% Dodge Street, * * * Omaha, Nebraska.
“The word ‘Contents’ used in this contract is hereby declared to include all property fixed оr movable belonging to said Assured, * * * liability being hereby specifically assumed on tools, implements, awnings, signs, * * * all of said property being covered while contained in, on or attached to the building above described and on and under sidewalks, platforms, alleys, streets, yards, areaways and*506 in and on conveyances and railway cars on tracks and on premises while within 100 feet of said building.”
Adolph Musil, a real estate and insurance agent, was the broker who placed all of the insurance for Peony Park, Inc., and was a stockholder therein. He tеstified that he was at this place at least twice every week; that he was there a couple of days before the fire; that a policy in the “National Liberty” for $2,000 expirеd June 4, and as Fell & Pinkerton discontinued representing that company they rewrote it in the defendant Security Insurance Company. Mr. Musil told them they wanted the “Contents Form,” with •the broad covеrage. He said he received a commission from the company on this policy. Mr. Baldwin, through whom Mr. Musil placed the insurance in suit, knew about the refreshment stand being erected, for оn May 25 he wrote a $500 policy on the building known as the refreshment stand. The fact that the owners took out a distinct and separate policy on the refreshment stand just as soon as it was completed indicates clearly that there was no thought on the part of the owners that this new building, separated from the main dance pavilion by a distance of 42 feet, wаs to be considered, or was covered, as an “addition” to the main dance pavilion.
An examination of exhibit No. 2, being the statement of the fire loss, made out- June 8, shows cleаrly that there were no chairs nor tables which had been transferred from the main dance pavilion temporarily, and which would doubtless be insured, under the terms of the policy, while out in the. premises, under trees, within 100 feet of the main pavilion, but the personal property listed in exhibit No. 2 consisted for the most part of an electric refrig-erator, cooling tanks, beer dispensing equipment, soda fountain, and other apparatus for dispensing beer, and soda fountain equipment, the plumbing bill for installing the same amounting to $195, and that the beer-cooling boxes, dispensing cabinets, fountain cabinets, insulation, and installation, including cabinet work, cost $500. These items for labor and material indicate definitely that this personal
The defendant insurance company insists that, if there is no uncertainty as to the meaning of an insurance contract, and the same is legal and not against public policy, it will be enforced. It further argues that the contents of the large dancе pavilion were covered while on sidewalks, in or on conveyances, and on the premises while within 100 feet of the building, but that this does not cover such personal property whеn it has become the contents of a separate frame refreshment stand, and cites in support thereof the case of Franklin Fire Ins. Co. v. Hellerick & Son,
The defendant insurance company has also cited the case of Leavitt v. National Fire Ins. Co.,
An insurance policy is simply a contraсt between the parties, and the usual rules of construction of contracts apply to policies. If the provisions of the policy are clear and unambiguous, the rule of strict construction against the company does not apply. On the other hand, for many years it has been held that insurance policies should be very liberally construed to effеct the intention of the parties. It has been held that, where there are conflicting clauses, the one which affords the most protection to the insured will control.
Insurance рolicies are prepared by experts, who anticipate all possible complications arising in every contingency,
There is another established rule which applies to the case at bar, for while it is ordinarily held that insurance contracts are construed against insurance companies touching those provisions that are ambiguous, it has been held that this is not true as concerns the location of the property which is destroyed, and it is the general rule that “the policy will not be extended to property not in the terms of the desсription in this respect.” See 26 C. J. 93; 6 Cooley, Insurance (2d ed.) 4921; 4 Couch, Cyclopedia of Insurance Law, sec. 963; Jefferson Coimty Bank v. Insurance Co.,
In the case of Meriwether v. Phenix Ins. Co.,
“A policy of fire insurance which is expressly limited to loss .occasioned while the insured property is located in a definite * * * place does not impose liability such as will follow the property upon its being removed to and destroyed at another and different place.” Liverpool & London & Globe Ins. Co. v. Georgia Auto & Supply Co.,
The supreme court of Michigan held in the case of Gersten v. Western Assurance Co.,
In like manner, in the case at bar the installation of the beer and soft drinks dispensing equipment in the refreshment booth was an entirely independent construction. Some of the equipmеnt may have been taken out of the main dance pavilion, but when it was installed permanently in the newly-constructed refreshment booth it would in our opinion lose its connection with the main dance pavilion, and would no longer be covered as part of the “contents” of such pavilion. This is true because the word “contents” is a term which should have some dеfinite, fixed relationship to the building in which it is to be used. When it is covered as being a part of that building, it must be fairly for use within it.
Reversed and dismissed.
