In this аction of contract the plaintiff seeks to recover on an insurance policy covering damage to personal property. The case comes to us on an appeal by the plaintiff from an order on a statement of agreed facts allowing the motion of the defendant insurer for summary judgment and denying the plaintiffs motion for summary
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judgment.
See New Amsterdam Cas. Co.
v.
Goldstein,
As set out in the agreed facts, the damage to the plaintiffs property occurred “sometime over the Labor Day weekend of 1967, [when] a 1 *l 23A inch water pipe in the basement of the... premises [adjacent to those of thе plaintiff] burst. Some of the water which collected in the cellar of the next door premises escaped through its foundation walls and foundation floor, and through the ground, and then into the basemеnt of the insured’s premises thru its foundation walls and/or foundation floor causing water damages to the insured’s contents within in the amount of $6,760.00.” “These next door premises contain a building which is approximately 8 feet from the building of the insured’s premises and the cellar depth of the insured’s premises is 3 to 3 lA feet deeper than that of the next door premises. ’ ’
The insurance policy then in effect “insure[d] against all risks of physical loss” and contained various exсlusions. 1 The defendant interprets paragraph B3 to exclude damage from water which has come through the ground, regardless of the source of the water. The plaintiff argues that the exclusiоn does not refer to water damage caused by a broken pipe. We agree with the plaintiff.
Loss from the bursting of a pipe on the premises of another would seem to be the kind of “fortuitous loss” which is “not usually covered under other insurance” and against which an “all risk” policy is designed to extend protection. Couch, Insurance (2d ed.) § 48.138, p. 596.
C.
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H. Leavell & Co.
v.
Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co.
Accordingly, such a policy presents “very serious and extremely difficult questions relating to whether an occurrence is fortuitous or natural, what is inherent or extraneous, what is wilful or accidental, and perhaps even what
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is lawful and unlawful. . ..” Gorman, p. 356. An examination of the policy in this case demonstrates that it was generally these questions that the list of exclusions was intended to answer. Besides the exclusions listed in paragraph B (seе n. 1), section vm a provides that the policy “does not insure ... against loss caused by: [e.g.] Earthquake ... shortage'of property disclosed on taking inventory ... latent defect... [ijnherent vice, wear and tear ... [a]ny fraudulent, dishonest or criminal act”, etc.
3
These are not ordinarily thought to arise out of an accident. In context, therefore, it does not seem to us that (or it is at least doubtful whether) the exclusion in paragraph B3, on which the defendant relies, refers to water damage caused by an accident.
4
The interpretation of the defendant insurer which isolates the exclusiоn and looks only at its text — even though we were to consider it a “warranted interpretation” — cannot be said “best [to] effectuate the main manifested design of the parties....”
Joseph E. Bennett Co. Inc.
v.
Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co.
The contention of the defendant is inconsistent with the well established principle that recovery on an insurаnce policy is allowed “where the insured risk itself set into operation a chain of causation in which the last step may
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have been an excepted risk.” Appleman, Insurance Law аnd Practice, § 3083, p. 311. See Couch, Insurance (2d ed.) § 74:706, p. 614 (“Train of events test”). In
Wyatt
v.
Northwestern Mut. Ins. Co.
The Supreme Judicial Court has followed the same rule in applying insurance policies covering injuries solely caused by accident and with еxclusions for disease, etc.
Barnett v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co.
In
McDonough
v.
Hardware Dealers Mut. Fire Ins. Co.
The insurer concedes that the McDonough case was properly decided because a fire insurance policy was involved and the loss was “proximately connected” with the fire. The insurer suggests that an “all risk” policy stands on a different footing, and greater emphasis must be given to the exclusions. We reject this distinction. To accept it would create the anomaly that, if the plaintiff in thе McDonough case had been insured only under this “all risk” policy rather than a fire insurance policy the insurer would not have been liable, though this policy covers fire and water damages generally.
As long ago as
Parkhurst
v.
Gloucester Mut. Fishing Ins. Co.
So ordered.
Notes
The policy states under sеction “viii. exclusions”: “A. This policy does not insure under this form against loss caused by:... [1-12 inclusive] “B. This policy does not insure against loss caused by, resulting from, contributed to or aggravated by any of the following:
1. flood, surface water, waves, tidal water or tidal wave, overflow of streams or other bodies of water, or spray from any of the foregoing, all whether driven by wind or not;
2. water which backs up through sewers or drains;
3. water below the surface of the ground including that which exerts pressure on or flows, seeps or leaks through sidewalks, driveways, foundations, walls, basement or other floors, or through doors, windows or any other openings in such sidewalks, drivewаys, foundations, walls or floors ....”
This is quoted in the
Mellon
case and by Gorman. We need not decide whether under some circumstances an “all risk” policy may go beyond the scope of the above charaсterizations. See
Republic Ins. Co.
v.
French,
We are, of course, not passing on the exact scope of each exclusion which may depend on the factual situation and thе extent to which an ambiguity may be created.
It should be noted that the policy does not exclude all water damage. For example, it includes among “specified perils” “leakage оr accidental discharge from automatic sprinkler systems.”
The defendent cites a number of cases from other jurisdictions (and see also
Krug
v.
Millers’ Mut. Ins. Assn.
