70 Mo. 610 | Mo. | 1879
This is an action on a policy of insurance issued to plaintiff by defendant on the 14th day of February, 1873, on plaintiff’s’ dwelling house in the city of Sedalia, by which defendant, in consideration of $45 paid by plaintiff', agreed to make good to her all such immediate loss or damage not exceeding $2,000, as should happen by fire to said house from the 14th day of February, 1873, at 12 o’clock noon to the 14th day of February, 1874, at 12 o’clock noon. On the 26th day of October, 1873, said property was totally destroyed by fire, an 1 this action was to recover of defendant the amount for which the property was insured. A motion to set aside non-suit taken with leave was overruled, and plaintiff appealed. It was stipulated in the policy that: “ If the premises become unoccupied without the assent of the company indorsed hereon, then, and in every such case, the policy shall be void.” What is the meaning of the term “ unoccupied ” as employed in that clause of the policy ? This is the principal question for determination. About two weeks before the fire the plaintiff went to Kansas City, Msssouri, to reside, and lived there until after the fire, She shipped a car load of her furniture to the latter place, and left about $800 worth in the house, and instructed one Barnard to sell it, except a bedroom set, and also to rent the house. Joseph Southwick was left in possession, with instructions to remain in possession and sleep in the house until he could rent it. DeLaney was to rent the house. Southwick went to Kansas City three or four days before, and was there when the fire occurred. He left ho one in the house, but told DeLaney, with whom he left the keys, .except the key of the room he had slept in, to take charge o.f the house and rent it if he could before he returned. The above is the testimony of plaintiff and Southwick. Her evidence is somewhat contradictory as to whom she gave authority to let the house. .
On these facts the question arises, was the house unocc
Applying the doctrines of the above cited cases to this, it is clear that, within the meaning of .the clause under considerations, the premises insured were unoccupied from the time plaintiff went to Kansas City until the fire occurred. In the trip-hammer case the tools and machinery were left in the shop, and plaintiff’s son went through the building nearly every day to see that all was right. In Paine v. Ag. Ins. Co., 5 T. & C. 5 N. Y , the party who resided in the house left all his furniture there, and, although absent five or six weeks, frequently returned and looked after the house, and a person living near by visited the house frequently, and maintained a general supervision over it, yet it was held that the assured could not recover. When this policy was issued, the plaintiff kept what witnesses called a “ Ladies’ Boarding House,” and had eight girls with her. After she left the premises, there was no one living in it. She lived in Kansas City, and Southwick was, by her, instructed to sleep in the house, but he did not sleep in it after Wednesday night next preceding the Saturday night of the fire. His sleeping there at night was not an occupation of the house within the meaning of the policy. He did not occupy the house during the day. It is true that there is more danger from incendiaries at night than in the day time, but dwelling houses unoccupied during the day are in more danger from that class than when occupied, and the abandonment of the premises by plaintiff' dimin
It will be observed that the condition avoids the policy if the premises become unoccupied, without regard to the period of time that they remain unoccupied, therein differing from the cases cited; and giving it a liberal construction, while the temporary absence of the entire family for a day, or a few days, might not avoid the policy, yet if the family occupying the house abandon it, as in this case, for another residence, requesting a person to sleep there until it should be rented, and such person leaves the place several days before the fire occurs and remains away until it is consumed by fire, with what propriety can it be said that it was “ occupied ” when burned ? If the absence of plaintiff had been for a visit, and not to change her residence, the case might (we do not say would) be different. “ Occupation of a dwelling house is living in it.” “A mere supervision over it is not sufficient.” It was plaintiff’s business, under the policy, to see that the house was occupied. If she had put a tenant in possession under a lease for a month, or a year, and four days previous to the fire the tenant had vacated the premises and taken another house, her agreement with that tenant would not have availed her in a suit with the insurance company. So her instructions to Southwick, admitting that the observance of them by him would have saved the policy, cannot avail her, if with or without her consent, he did vacate the premises several days before they were burned. He slept there at night when in Sedalia, but did not take his meals there; was not there during the day. He was not living in the house, and this is not the case of an occupant of the house who was but temporarily absent when the fire occurred ; and the circuit court did not err in holding that the house was unoccupied when burned.
The fourth instruction asked by plaintiff, which, it is alleged, was refused by the court, is on the margin so marked, but in the body of the bill of exceptions it is
The fifth asked by the plaintiff was erroneous, and the court did not err in refusing it. An offer to compromise never estops the party making it from setting up any legal defense or asserting any right to which the offer of compromise relates. For the same reason the fifth instruction for defendant was properly given, nor was any error committed on the trial which would warrant a reversal of the judgment. It is, therefore, affirmed.