38 Mo. App. 582 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
This action is on a policy of fire insurance.
On the trial the plaintiff introduced in evidence the policy of insurance sued on, by which the defendant, in consideration of a gross premium, undertook to insure the plaintiff against loss or damage by fire or lightning in the gross sum of fifteen hundred and seventy-five dollars, as follows: Three hundred dollars on frame building occupied by assured as dwelling; three hundred and seventy-five dollars on his household furniture; two hundred and fifty dollars on his barn ; twenty-five dollars on hay in said barn ; one hundred and fifty dollars on farming utensils; one hundred dollars on grain;
The policy contained the following stipulations, among others: “This insurance is based upon the representations contained in the assured’s application of even number herewith on file in the company’s office in Chicago, Illinois, each and every statement of which is hereby specifically made a warranty and part hereof, and it is agreed that, if any false statements are made in said application, this policy shall be void; or if the assured shall have or hereafter accept any other insurance upon the above-mentioned property, whether valid or not; * * * or if the property shall hereafter become mortgaged or encumbered * * * then in each and every one of the above cases this policy shall be null and void.” The policy was also endorsed, “mortgage of five hundred and fifty dollars permitted.”
The defendant introduced the application made by the plaintiff to it for insurance upon which the policy sued on was issued, in which the property was described and classified as set out in the policy. The application asked “for insurance against loss or damage by fire or lightning in the sum of fifteen hundred and seventy-five dollars.” The portions qf said application relevant are as follows:
'•'■Interrogatory 29. Is this property encumbered in any way ? If so, how much, and when is the mortgage due % Answer: Five hundred afid fifty dollars, due March 12, 1891. * ■* * I warrant the foregoing application, whether written by me in person or not, to contain a full and true description and statement of the circumstances, conditions, situation, value, .encumbrances, occupation or title to property hereby proposed to be insured in the Phoenix Insurance Company, and I warrant the answers to each of the foregoing questions to be true.” This application was signed by the plaintiff.
It appeared from the testimony that there was a deed of trust on the real property upon which the dwelling was situated for six hundred and sixty dollars, dated March 12, 1883, before the policy was issued, and satisfied January 28, 1888, after the loss, but before the institution of this suit. The application for insurance which, as has been seen, was made a warranty, and so referred to in the policy, stated that there was an encumbrance of five hundred and fifty dollars on the real estate, whereas, in fact, there was a deed of trust for a greater sum, viz., six hundred and sixty dollars. Was the policy on the dwelling alone, this would be held to avoid it. For, although the encumbrance is mentioned in the application and permitted in the ■policy, there is a substantial misrepresentation as to the amount. When such is the fact it will defeat the policy. Wood, Fire Ins., sec. 155.
But since the policy covers several separate articles or species of property separately insured at the different amounts stated in the policy, our opinion is, the policy should only be held void as to the property, the title to which, or the encumbrance upon which, has been misrepresented. Loehner v. Home Ins. Co., 17 Mo. 247; Koontz v. Ins. Co., 42 Mo. 126. And this notwithstand-. ing the insurance is for a gross sum in the aggregate and for a gross premium. It is true that in some states such .contract is considered an entirety and not divisible, but it has not been so» ruled with us.
We are referred to the case of American Ins. Co. v. Barnett, 73 Mo. 367, as having practically overruled the two cases cited. It does not dó so in express terms. On the contrary those cases are cited with approval.
Plaintiff contends that as he stated in his application that there was an encumbrance of five hundred and fifty dollars on the dwelling and that as there was but one encumbrance shown, though for a larger amount, the statement must have referred to the. one shown in the evidence. This however would not relieve him from the misrepresentation which he warranted to be a true representation.
Nor do we see how the fact that this encumbrance was entered satisfied about two months after the loss can aid plaintiff’s case. Evidence of a deed of trust subsisting unsatisfied at the trial, and dated prior to the application and policy, was prima facie proof that such encumbrance existed against the property for the amount stated, at the date of the policy.
Prom the foregoing views it results that the trial court erred in permitting plaintiff to recover three hundred dollars for the loss of his dwelling, but that a