120 Ky. 752 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1905
Opinion by
The Peaslee-Ganlhert Company and Louisville Lead & Color Company are distinct corporations, "but operating together a plant for the manufacture and sale of paints, oils and so forth. The plant consisted of three buildings, located at Fifteenth street and Portland avenue, in Louisville. The buildings were separated by alleys, occupied by railroad tracks, but were connected by overhead bridges with doors at their ends.. Two of the buildings, one owned by the Peaslee-Gaulbert Company, known as the “Fifteenth Street "Warehouse,” and another owned by the Louisville Lead & Color Company, known as the “factory” building, were also physically connected, in addition to the bridges mentioned by a belt canopy extending
The question for decision that is common to all the cases is the construction' of the term “noon” contained in the clause of the policies which reads, “does .insure (the insured) from the first day of April, 1901, at noon, to the first day of April, 1902, at noon.” A fire occurred in the insured premises on April 1,1902, by which all the insured property was totally lost. Whether the loss occurred before “noon” of that day is the question. The fire originated in the “factory” building at about 11:45" a. m., standard time. The alarm was turned in at the fire' department of the city at 11:59 a. m., standard time, according to the records of that department. The difference between central standard time, based upon the mean time of the ninetieth meridian west of Greenwich, and mean solar time at Louisville, is 17% minutes, So that at 11:45
Authorities are abundant to the effect that words of well-understood meaning in their ordinary sense may, by the custom of 'a class, trade or profession, have a peculiar and different meaning when used with reference, to the custom or general dealing of such trade or profession, and evidence may be received to show such exceptional use and meaning. Tradesmen, artisans and professienals of various
In the early case of Finnie v. Clay, 2 Bibb, 351, the parties had agreed that certain lands might be surveyed in “squares to the cardinal points.” The survey was made according to the magnetic needle, and not to the cardinal points; that is, the true meridian. The court decided that, as the parties had not declared whether the courses should be run according to the true meridian or magnetic needle-(the former being strictly and technically the meaning of the term used), the popular rather than the technical meaning should be adopted, and proof was admitted showing that at that time the usual and almost universal mode of making surveys was according to the magnetic courses. Said the court: “Where a usage has prevailed so long and so generally, it is much more reasonable to suppose the parties had reference to it than to the mode of surveying according to the true meridian, so little known and seldom used in practice. That an agreement ought to be interpreted with reference to the usage of the country, although such an interpretation is contrary to the technical meaning of the language used by the parties, is fully warranted by the English authorities.”
The question we are now considering came before the Supreme Court of Iowa in Jones v. German Ins. Co., 110 Iowa, 75, 81 N. W., 188, 46 L. R. A., 860. The fire occured after 12 o’clock by sun, time, but
Appellants would distinguish the Iowa case from these, because the words “at 12 o’clock at noon,” it is claimed, have a different meaning from the word “noon.” We think the expressions amount to the same thing. Both refer to midday. Noon is midday; so is 12 o’clock in the daytime. “Noon” is merely a shorter expression than “12 o’clock in the daytime.” Originally it represented the ninth hour of the day after sunrise, or about 3 o’clock p. m., and was the canonical hour of nones, at which was celebrated a religious rite. (Webster’s Dictionary, “Nones.”) It has ceased to denote the ninth hour of the day so long ago that it can scarcely be traced.
In the Rochester German Ins., Company case the further question arises, when must the loss occur? This question is presented by the following instruction: “The court instructs the jury that the policy of insurance sued on herein insured certain goods for plaintiffs in their warehouse at the northwest corner of Fifteenth and Portland«avenue against fire from April 1, 1901, at noon, to April 1, 1902, noon. Now, if the jury believe from the evidence that the fire which destroyed said goods started in said warehouse before noon on April 1, 1902, or if they believe from the evidence that said fire did not reach said warehouse before noon, but at noon the destruction of said warehouse from such fire was inevitable, they should find for the plaintiffs; but if they believe from the evidence that the fire which destroyed said goods did hot start in said war.ehou.se before noon on April 1, 1902, and that at noon, April 1, 1902, the destruction of said warehouse, as the result of said fire, was not inevitable, they shall find for the defendant. ” The evidence was conflicting whether the fire caught in this building before 12 o’clock noon, standard time. But under,the instruction quoted, the jury were not required to find that it did in order to make a verdict for the plaintiff. It was held to be enough if the destruction of the warehouse from the adjacent fire was inevitable at noon. We are of opinion that thi§ view of the case was error. The risk assumed by the insurer was that of loss or damage by fire pending the term written in the contract. It did not insure against peril to the property without loss during the policy term. If the fire broke out in the insured building before the policy expired, and continued to burn thereafter till it was totally destroyed, the loss is one occurring within the insured period. It
The judgments in the case of National Fire Ins. Co. v. Peaslee-Gaulbert Co. and Pacific Fire Ins. Co. v. Louisville Lead & Color Co. are affirmed. The judgment in the case of Bochester German Ins. Co. v. Peaslee-Gaulbert Co. is reversed, and that cause is remanded for a new trial under proceedings consistent herewith.
October 6, 1905:
Some of the policies were npon merchandise contained in the buildings that were discussed in the opinion, and not upon the buildings. The same principles announced in the original opinion will apply to the insured merchandise also. Where the fire had begun in the building containing the merchandise before the expiration of the policy term, and by reason of that fire it was impossible to remove or save the merchandise from loss or damage, it is to be deemed a loss occurring in the life of the policy, whether the fire was actually communicated to the specific articles of merchandise within such time or not.