82 Md. 88 | Md. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the eleventh of June, 1889, the appellant, a fire insurance company, wrote a policy of insurance upon the dwelling house, barn and personal property of the appellee, insuring the same against loss by fire for the term of three years. Upon the expiration of this policy in Í892, a second one for the same amount, for another term of three years and covering the same property was issued by the same company. At the time the first policy bears date and continuously on from then until the month of December, 1892, the dwelling house covered by the policy was actually occupied by the appellee and his family as a place of abode ; but in December, 1892, he and his family moved out of the house and went into and occupied another dwelling some few hundred yards away and located on the opposite side of a public highway. He took with him nearly all his furniture, though he left in the house from which he moved a few beds and some trifling household articles, a trunk containing clothing and some provisions stored in a pantry. He and his family ceased to live in the house mentioned in the policy. On the twenty-seventh of December, 1893, the house from which he moved and which was insured under the policy issued by the appellant was totally destroyed by fire. Due proof of loss was filed, but the company refused to pay the loss, and based its refusal upon a ground which
The distinct inquiry is thus presented for the first time in this Court, as to what is the meaning of the terms “ vacant or unoccupied,” as applied to dwelling houses under fire insurance policies embodying a forfeiture clause of the kind we have said the policy sued on contains.
In Kelly's case, 32 Md. 421, and in Weaver's case, 70 Md. 539, this Court repudiated the principle of interpretation adopted in some cases, that insurance contracts are to be construed most strongly against the underwriter; and adopted the sounder view that the intention of the parties, as gathered from the whole instrument, must prevail.
This view is fully supported by numerous well considered adjudications, to some of which we will now refer. Thus in Herman v. The Adriatic F. Ins. Co., 85 N. Y. 162, the plaintiff was living in the dwelling house at the time th'e policy was issued; he left the place in November, leaving the dwelling furnished and in charge of his farmer, who occupied the farm house — a different structure — and members of whose family visited and aired the dwelling once a week. The plaintiff and his wife also visited it once a fortnight. Besides the furniture, all the summer clothing of the plaintiff and his family was left in the dwelling. In the following April the dwelling with its contents was destroyed by fire. In an action upon- the policy it was held that the dwelling house was not occupied within the meaning of the policy, which provided that if the house should “become vacant or unoccupied, and so remain for more than thirty days, without notice,” &c., the policy would be void, and a
These adjudged cases and many more that might be referred to, announce, we think, conclusions, entirely in accord with the natural and obvious meaning of the words contained in the restrictive condition to which we have alluded. That the dwelling house described in the policy sued on was vacant or unoccupied in the sense in which those terms are employed in the policy, at the time the fire occurred, seems to us to admit of no serious controversy notwithstanding the fact that some of the employees of the plaintiff occasionally slept there, and notwithstanding the further fact that some of the provisions of the plaintiff were kept in the house and his wife daily visited the house for the purpose of getting provisions therefrom.
But it was insisted that the fourth prayer should not have been granted because at least some of the personal property contained in the house was covered by the policy, and that the forfeiture of the policy as to the risk upon the house, did not involve or carry with it a forfeiture as to the personal property. This position is wholly untenable. When the policy became void because of the non-occupancy of the house, it became void as an entirety. It was an indivisible and entire contract, and when by its express terms it became invalid, -it became invalid for all purposes and to all intents. The stipulation in regard to the forfeiture is applicable to the policy as an entirety. This is settled in Maryland beyond contention or controversy. Bowman v. Franklin Fire Ins. Co., 40 Md. 632.
Nor can the fact that the loss was, by endorsement, made payable to the mortgagees as their interest might appear, at all affect the question before us. When a loss has happened that is covered by a valid policy, it is possible that a controversy may arise as to whether a payment has been rightly made to the insured when the policy has prescribed
As we think the Circuit Court erred in refusing to grant the appellant’s fourth prayer, the judgment in favor of the appellee must be reversed; and as this view of the case is decisive against the right of the appellee to recover at all, a new trial will not be awarded.
Judgment reversed with costs above and below.