Thеse are actions upon seven policies of insurance. In six of the policies the descriptive clause of the property insured was as follows: “ On tobacco and cigars, manufacturеd and in process, and boxes, labels, and supplies, contained in brick block situated Nos. 82-90, Worthington St., Springfield, Mass.” In the other policy the descriptive clause was : “ On tobacco and cigars manufactured, unmanufactured, and in process, and on boxes, labels, and supplies, contained in brick block situate Nos. 82 to 90 Worthington St.; Springfield, Mass. On furniture, fixtures, machines, tools, implements, and apparatus, benches, and improvements therein.”
The question in controversy at the trial was whether these descriptive clauses covered the tobacco and cigars contained in the warehouse of the plaintiff. At the trial in the Superior Court, the judge excluded the greater part of the evidence offered by the plaintiff, and ordered verdicts for the defendants ; and the cases are reported for our dеtermination. By the terms of the report, if there was any evidence upon which the jury might have found for the plaintiff, or if any evidence was excluded which should have been admitted, the cases were to stand for trial; otherwise, the verdicts were to stand.
It appeared in evidence, that the plaintiff occupied the fifth story over stores numbered 84 to 90 on Worthington Street, and also the fifth story over a storе numbered 80 on the same street, the latter being used as its warehouse. The only entrance to these premises from the street was by a doorway numbered 82 on the same street.
If the evidence offered had been admitted, it would have warranted the jury in finding that the numbers mentioned in the policies designated only some of the entrances to a large build
It appears, therefore, that the entire premises occupied by the plaintiff were constructed at the same time, by the same person. The only way of reaching these premises, еxcept by a freight elevator in the rear of No. 80, was by the stairs, to which entrance was had by the doorway numbered 82. At the top of the stairs were a hallway, and a door on the east side leading into thе factory, and one on the west side leading into the warehouse.
The defendants have made a tender of the amount due for the loss occurring in that portion of the premises over numbers 84 to 90, but contest their liability for loss in the warehouse over number 80.
We have no doubt that, if the description in this case had contained no reference to a brick block, it would be plain that the warehouse in question would be properly described as No. 82. It could not be contended that, if a building had two entrances from the street, one to a store on the first floor with one number, and the other with another number to the flоors above, an insurance of the contents of the floors above would not properly
The’ leading case on this point is Sampson v. Security Ins. Co.
We know of no reason why the evidence offered should have been excluded. There is nothing in the word “ block ” which requires us to say, as matter of law, that that part of the building running frоm the west side of the doorway numbered 80 to the east end of the building was a separate and distinct block by itself. This is a question of fact to be determined by the evidence. The jury would be warranted in finding that it was merеly a part of a large block extending to Main Street. To give it the construction contended for by the defendant, and apparently adopted by the court below, that only the premises occupied by the plaintiff over the numbers mentioned were covered by the insurances, would give no effect to the number 82 over the entrance. We do not understand from the exceptions that the upper story over this number was used by the plaintiff except as a hallway, from which access could be had to the factory on the one hand, and to the warehouse on the other. But even if it were otherwisе used, it seems to us that the facts show a
There is also another ground on which we are of opinion that the plaintiff is entitled to go to the jury. There was evidence from which the jury might have found that the entrance way now numbered 82 was not its proper number, but that this was the official number of an entrance to the westward of it, the entrance to the plaintiff’s premises being officially numbered 84; and that these numbers werе changed in 1890 by the owner of the land, without any authority ; and that the store to the westward, and the entrance way beyond that, over both of which, in the fifth story, was the warehouse of the plaintiff, were known to insurers, аnd were so put down in their rate-book, as numbers 82 and 84, and that the agents of the insurers, when they insured the plaintiff, went by these numbers. We see no reason why the evidence offered was not competent, or why thе plaintiff should be bound by a number improperly painted over a door; if it was not its official number. If a house should be described in a policy as on a certain street in a city, would it be any defence tо an action for a loss that the owner of the fee in the street had, shortly before the policy was issued, and without authority, assumed to change the name of the street, and had taken down the old signs and рut up new ones, so that in fact there was no street of the name mentioned in the policy in the city ? Would it not be competent to show by official records that such a street did exist? Yet this differs only in degree from the case before us.
In either view of the case, we are of opinion that the order in each case must be,
Verdict set aside ; case to stand for trial.
