Pennsylvania Millers Mut. Ins. Co. v. Heule
Decision Date | 01 December 1976 |
Docket Number | No. 52815,3,2,Nos. 1,52815,s. 1 |
Citation | 140 Ga.App. 851,232 S.E.2d 267 |
Parties | PENNSYLVANIA MILLERS MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY v. H. M. HEULE |
Court | Georgia Court of Appeals |
W. Ward Newton, Lyons, for appellant.
William T. Darby, Sr., Charles H. Andrew, Jr., Vidalia, Braziel & Braziel, William F. Braziel, Sr., Savannah, for appellee.
Heule purchased from appellant a comprehensive physical damage insurance policy on a chicken house covering losses up to $35,000 sustained by fire, explosion, windstorm and hail, and supplemental coverage for other described exigencies. Coverage was afforded for 'Explosion Damage: Meaning only direct loss to the property insured hereunder from explosion caused by the rapid combustion of any volatile or combustible substance. . . .' (Emphasis supplied.)
The insured building, an 'Environmental Control Layer House,' was built in 1970 for the purpose of boarding baby chickens until they attained a certain weight. It was approximately 270 feet long and 35 feet wide, of wood frame with aluminum sheeting on the roof and side walls and insulated with fiberglass padding. The roof structure was composed of prefabricated rafter trusses with no internal support columns. Four rows of double metal cages in three-high tiers were suspended from the lower rafter trusses for the length of the building, with the exception of twenty feet at the utility room end and ten feet at the other end. There were 2,496 cages in the building. Ventilation was provided by twelve exhaust fans and the building was lighted by open wiring with 40-watt bulbs down each aisle.
On July 21, 1972, Heule had completed two 20-week feeding contracts and his chicken house contained approximately 29,000 chickens ready for delivery. When he returned home that afternoon he found that the roof had caved in where the trusses over the center aisle had opened up at the gusset plate. The end gables were not affected, the fans were still on, the aluminum sheeting on the roof and sides was not dislodged and no glass was broken. In the area where the cages were warped by the falling roof, 500 chickens had been trapped in the liquid manure beneath the cages and were dead. None were cut, mutilated or burned.
Heule's chicken house was inspected by appellant's field representative and an engineer retained by appellant, who concluded that the damages resulted from a structural collapse which was not covered by his policy. Appellant denied coverage and the loss was described on Heule's 1972 tax returns as having resulted from the collapse of the building. However, on July 2, 1973, he brought suit against appellant alleging that his loss resulted from an explosion, and the jury found in his favor in the amount of $29,300. The insurance company appeals and we reverse.
" In an action to collect on an insurance policy, the insured must show that the occurrence was within the type of risk insured against to make a prima facie case." Ga. Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co. v. Alloway, 134 Ga.App. 660, 661, 215 S.E.2d 506, 507 (1975) and citations; Showers v. Allstate Ins. Co., 136 Ga.App. 792, 793, 222 S.E.2d 198 (1975). Coverage under Heule's policy was for 'explosion caused by the rapid combustion of any violatile or combustible substance . . .,' and not for structural failures. Thus Heule was required to prove (1) that rapid combustion (2) caused an explosion. In our view he failed to do either.
Heule testified that he had no theory as to the cause of the alleged explosion but he knew there was one. His conclusion was based upon the fact that he found the chickens dead where the building was 'torn up' and he knew 'something had happened.' He could not distinguish between damage that would result to rafters that had broken from an overload, and rafters damaged by an explosion. He could not account for the fact that the thin aluminum siding was not blown off the building immediately over the ruptured timbers. He conceded that the buckling of of the building sides would result from the sinking of the crown of the roof, which would push out the walls. A neighbor testified that he 'heard a noise that sounded like an explosion.' A relative who lived 300 yards from the chicken house stated that he was standing in his front yard when he heard a loud explosion; that he turned around and saw 'a cloud of dust or smoke or something coming up from the chicken house'; and that 'then the building began to collapse.'
Heule's expert witnesses conjectured that either agricultural dust or methane gas could have served as the fueling substance for the alleged explosion and there was ample expert testimony as to how an explosion could have occurred. They also testified, however, that these substances in combustion generate heat and in rapid combustion create a flame front, but not one witness who inspected the building saw or found any evidence of charring, burning or scorching: 'Not even a chicken feather was burned.'
Layton v. Knight, 129 Ga.App. 113, 114, 198 S.E.2d 915, 916 (1973).
Combustion is 'the act or instance of burning.' Webster's New International Dictionary (2nd Ed., Unabridged). As established by appellant's experts, there are types of explosions which do not involve combustion, but in a combustion explosion material...
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