27 Mo. App. 446 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1887
This action is to recover on a policy of insurance. That portion of the policy under which the insurance is claimed, reads: “Four hundred dollars on their one-story frame building to be occupied by furnaces for smelting zinc.” The building was not yet completed, but permission was given that it might be finished. The policy was admitted, and the only evi
The defendant’s claim here is, that there were two buildings, calling the one that was burned the gas producer, and, therefore, not covered by the policy, and the one not burned, the furnace for smelting zinc, as described in the policy. But the evidence of the president of the plaintiff company, on this point, was as follows:
“About forty feet distant from the structure for the holding of the retorts, as already described, eight furnaces were built, variously called ‘gas-furnaces,’ ‘gas-ovens,’ and ‘gas-producers,’ made of fire-proof material, firebrick, common brick and iron. Into these eight furnaces the coal is charged, which is the only fuel used. Flues lead from them to two stacks; these stacks are capped or hooded with large iron boxes ; with these boxes are connected two large iron tubes; these tubes discharge into one tube, about five feet in diameter; this tube leads to, and discharges into, chambers of fire-brick checker-work, under-the structure already described, containing the retorts, from whence passages lead to, and are discharged into, the space in which the retorts are placed, by openings under the retorts, called port-holes. * * * The building enclosing the structures that I have described, that is, the structure carrying the retorts, and the eight furnaces, was in two parts, one of them being about fifty by ninety feet in dimensions, and the other about fifty by sixty feet, with separate roofs and separate foundations, but connected by the iron tubes which I have described, and by a wooden platform, which was used by the men, in passing from one part of the building to the other, and upon which, also, was a tramway for the carrying of coal. Both' these parts were built of wood, were one story high, were shingle-roofed, and had basements or cellars under them. That part of the building enclosing the eight furnaces was destroyed by
We are satisfied the trial court erred in sustaining a demurrer to the testimony. The only contest between the parties was, whether the building burned was covered by the policy. The court in effect, declared that the structure burned was not only not the building mentioned in the policy, but no part of it. We do not believe such declaration is justified by the testimony. The question whether the property burned was, in whole or in part, the property described in the policy, was, under the evidence contained in the record, a question for the jury. The case of Tesson v. Ins. Co. (40 Mo. 33; s. c., 50 Mo. 112), is, in some respects, analogous to the question presented here. That portion of the case which can be fairly said to apply to this, is expressed in the syllabus as follows : “Whether the description in the policy covers, or fairly describes, the property intended to be insured, is a matter of fact for a jury to determine, and the terms of the policy are to be reasonably construed with reference to the whole subject-matter.”
I am of the opinion that the jury should pass upon the facts, as developed; that .they should find whether what has been called here the furnace-building, and the retort-building, are to be considered as one structure ; whether, together they comprise the “ one-story frame
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.