94 Mo. 182 | Mo. | 1887
The policy of insurance upon which this action was based covered certain personal property and machinery located in the state penitentiary at Jefferson City. The property was destroyed by fire on the twenty-third of February, 1883. The plaintiffs, Straus & Company, recovered a judgment in the circuit court, which was reversed by the court of appeals, and they appealed to this court.
The defences to the action are based upon the following stipulations in the policy: “Provided, always, and it is hereby declared and agreed, that these respective companies shall not be liable to make good any loss or damage by fire, which shall happen or arise * * * by any person or persons engaged or concerned in any riot, or in notorious resistance to the authority of magistrates, or to any other lawful authority.”
While the evidence is voluminous, there is little or no conflict in it, and the facts are these : The penitentiary buildings, of which there are a number, are surrounded by a high stone wall. The penitentiary was operated on the contract system, and the plaintiffs used one of the buildings for manufacturing purposes by the employment of hired prison labor. About ninety-five men were employed in the second story in manufacturing harness. The first story was used as a collar factory, and was divided into two rooms, some sixty-five men were employed in the front room, and twenty-six in the rear one, which was called the' “ stuffing-room.”
Between twelve and one o’ clock, on the twenty-third of February, 1888, the convicts returned from the dining-hall to the shops under the' direction of their guards. It was the duty of the convicts to take their respective places at the work-benches, but they could work or not as they preferred until one o’clock. Mr. .Tarlton, the guard for the second floor of the building used by the plaintiffs, remained on the upper floor .platform of the outside stairway while the men in his charge passed into the room. Three or four convicts, under the leadership of Johnson, a convict, unobserved by Tarlton, with knives used at the benches in their hands, went down the inside stairway to the first floor. Johnson stepped up to Yan Horn, guard in the front lower room, and Snyder, foreman in the same room, who were then talking together, and commanded them to keep quiet, saying to Snyder that he would kill him if he moved, and to both of them that if they kept quiet they would not be hurt. Johnson left the guard and foreman in charge of his associates, and went to the other room, apparently for the purpose of getting assistant foreman Schinberg, who escaped crying .“murder.” Johnson then came back and demanded of Snyder his clothes, threatening to kill him if he did not give them up, and at the same time cut his apron string. Snyder yielded up his pants, vest, and hat, and Johnson put them on over his prison garb, took a coat from another guard by the name of •Platt, and went into the yard. There he procured a ladder and went to the enclosure wall, and was- attempting to place the ladder against the wall, when the guard on
Baffled in this effort by the threat of the guard to shoot him, Johnson went back to the collar-room, cursing and calling upon the convicts to follow him. He then passed into the “stuffing-room” and in the presence of the guard, foreman, and convicts, struck a match and set fire to a quantity of straw. At the alarm of fire, the engineer attached two lines of hose to the fire plug and was proceeding with one line of hose when Johnson struck him, and at the same time Johnson and his three or four associates, with their knives, cut the hose so as to render them useless. Johnson then gave up to Snyder the latter’s clothes, and with knife and club in hand went to Sullivan’s factory and endeavored to raise a mutiny, but failed in his efforts. Deputy Warden Bradbury, at this time, with his pistol in hand, arrested Johnson, and put him and his three or four associates in confinement. The disturbance, up to the time of the fire, lasted not more than fifteen or twenty minutes, and during that time the convicts, save Johnson and his three or four associates, were under the control of, and obeyed every order of, their unarmed guards. While the fire was in progress many of the convicts, detailed by the deputy warden, took an energetic and faithful’part in saving property.
Outside of the prison walls, exaggerated reports were circulated, and the Adjutant General caused a company, composed of citizens and legislators, to be armed. But Deputy Warden Bradbury, who was within the prison walls, during the entire time, says he had no notice of this outside organization, did not request or need it, and at no time did a convict refuse to obey his orders.
No complaint is made of the rulings of the court in respect of the riot clause ; but defendant complains of
“The court further instructs you, that the phrase, ‘notorious resistance to lawful authority,5 as used in this instruction and in the policy of insurance, means (as applied to the circumstances of the present case) a resistance of such magnitude and accompanied with such show of force as operated for the time being to disrupt prison discipline and free the inmates of said penitentiary, or large numbers of them, from the restraints of law and from the restraints of prison regulations. It does not mean a resistance to authority, on the part of one person or a few persons, that was readily and speedily overcome by the prison officials, without losing their control over the great majority of the inmates of said prison.55
It must be conceded that this instruction, in the light of the evidence, amounted, practically, to a direction to the jury to find for the plaintiffs on the clause of the policy therein defined. The real question in the case is, whether the evidence tends to establish a defence based on that clause. We are not aware of, and counsel, with their uniform diligence, have been unable to discover, any case in which a clause has been construed and applied which exempts the insurers from loss “ by fire, which shall happen or arise by any person or persons in notorious resistance to the authority of magistrates or to any other lawful authority.5 5 This clause is a part of the printed portion of the policy, and it is clear it was not specially designed for this particular policy, but for general use, and it is in this light we must understand and treat it.
The term, “magistrates,55 is evidently used in the general sense of a public civil officer. When these four or five convicts went to the lower room, and there, by their actions and threats, put the guard or time-keeper
But it is urged that the instruction is faulty in this, that it requires the resistance to be of too great a magnitude in point of seriousness and the number of persons engaged in it. Webster defines notorious as, “generally known and talked of by the public ; universally believed to be true; manifest to the world,” etc. Thus we speak of one as a notorious thief. The word has a defined signification in describing that adverse possession upon which one may found a claim to land. The possession must be open, or visible, and notorious. As said in Armstrong v. Morrill, 14 Wall. 145, “secret possession will not do, as publicity and notoriety are necessary as evidence of notice and to put those claiming an adverse interest upon inquiry.” In these and like cases the idea of a number of persons engaged in the act is wanting, it is true. But
The clause here in question is preceded by others which relieve the company from payment of the loss when the fire shall happen by any invasion, foreign enemy, insurrection, or civil commotion, lawful military power, usurped power,, or by any person or persons engaged in a riot. The class notion prevailing in these cases is, that there is an unusual and extraordinary state of affairs, a state of affairs in which and for the time being the usually constituted civil authorities are overpowered and inadequate to successfully contend with the existing emergency. All this is true in respect of the clause, “notorious resistance to lawful authority.” It was never in the mind or contemplation of the insured or insurers, that the company should be relieved from payment of the loss, when the fire should happen during those occasions of resistance to the authorities which usually well-regulated governments are at all times prepared to overcome, even though well or publicly known; Had such been intended, different language would have been used. Such a construction would make the most trivial disobedience to the commands of an officer, if seen or heard by a multitude of people, a case of notorious resistance. The expression must be understood in a more general sense — the sense before stated.
Now, in this case, the sum and substance of the evidence is, that these three, four, or five convicts secretly combined, it would seem, to free themselves from prison restraint. They put two unarmed guards and as many
The judgment of the court of appeals is, therefore, reversed and the cause remanded to that court, with •directions to it to affirm the judgment of the circuit court.