20 Pa. Super. 244 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1902
Opinion by
This action of assumpsit is brought to recover the amount of loss claimed to have been sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the destruction of, or damage to, certain personal property in a building conducted as a saloon, which he occupied under a lease “ for, during and until the full end and term of two years from April 1, 1897.” The lease contained the following provision : “ It is hereby agreed that all personal property found on the premises herein described when said Simon Duda takes possession shall be left there at the expiration of the term in as good condition as when found or its value in cash.” In the policy the property is described as follows : “ Two hundred and fifty dollars on his stock of liquors, ales, wines, beers and cigars; $250 on his ice boxes, cigar cases, beer pumps, pipes and faucets, and bar and barroom fixtures and furniture of every description; $300 on household furniture of every description, useful and ornamental, family wearing apparel, and family provisions ”; and the policy also contained, the follow
. The fire occurred about one month after the policy had been issued. In construing the proviso in'the lease relating to the' personal property on the premises, the learned trial judge instructed the jury as follows: “We say to you that under that clause the possession of this personal property passed to Duda, the.tenant, and the plaintiff here, with the right to use the property during the continuance of the lease and also with the option to purchase it at its value. His interest, therefore, in this particular property was that of a lessee with an option to remove the property and pay the value of it, or with the obligation of paying the value for it unless he left it on the premises at the expiration of his term in as good condition as when found.” The defendant submitted a píúnt as follows: “ Under all the evidence in the case Simon Duda was not the unconditional and sole owner of the property described in the policy as ice boxes, cigar cases, beer pumps, pipes and faucets, and bar and barroom fixtures and furniture of every description, at the time that the policy was issued,” which was answered by the court reserving that question, and subsequently, in an opinion filed, holding that the policy sued upon was not affected by the clause relating to the unconditional ownership, and that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment on the point reserved.
. Under the clause, in the lease, above referred to, it cannot be held that the personal propert}'- therein mentioned was Du da’s in any substantial sense. He was to return it by leaving it on the premises at the expiration of the term in as good condition as when found, and the concluding words, “ or its value in cash ” did not impose any additional legal liability on him. His use of it was to be temporary, during his tenancy; and the owner, the landlord, had an admitted adverse claim to the property as such when the term mentioned in the lease, would expire. . It.
There was no written application for the policy, and no statement by the insured at the time when the policy was obtained to indicate that his title differed in any respect from that contemplated by the form of policy in use, in regard to which a a plain statement is found in 13 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d ed.), 228, viz.: “ Explicit questions are largely or wholly replaced by conditions that the interest of the insured must be truly stated, and that if the title or interest is other than the one specified, it must be specifically described, or the insurance will be avoided ; and the statements of title in the policy, where there are such conditions, are construed in the same manner as answers to express interrogatories. The conditions have the effect of questions as to the nature of title or interest, and in ease a statement thereof would be false or insufficient if made in answer to a question or if- the facts are not disclosed which would be required in such answers there is a breach of the contract. Where such conditions are contained in the policy, and there is no statement of the title or specific interest, an acceptance of the policy amounts to a representation by the insured that his title or interest is that stated in the condition, and if his title or interest is substantially different, the insurance is avoided.”
Although the goods referred to in the lease were in the pos
Nor is the case of Caldwell v. Fire Association of Philadelphia, 177 Pa. 492, an authority for the plaintiff. In tliat case the insurance company had information of “ a doubtful interest and mixed ownership,” and made inquiry of the plaintiff as to “ who the title was in,” to which the latter replied, “ The title is in me; I have the deed;” which was technically true as Caldwell had a sheriff’s deed for the premises, in which he was the grantee; and subsequent to acquiring title through the sheriff’s sale other parties, who had contributed to the purchase money of the property, agreed that the real estate should be sold or disposed of by Caldwell and that he should distribute and pay to the contributors each his pro rata share of the proceeds. He had the legal title to the property and the case so decides. “ The company, through its agent, previously knew that more than one person was interested in the property or the proceeds thereof, and nothing was ever said or done by the insured to indicate anything to the contrary.”
The question is not whether the insured had an insurable interest but whether he had the interest described in the policy: Schroedel v. Humboldt Fire Insurance Co., 158 Pa. 459; Bate-man v. Lumbermen’s Insurance Co., 189 Pa. 465; Moore v. Susquehanna Mut. Fire Insurance Co., 196 Pa. 30. The testimony clearly establishes the fact, under our decisions, that he did not have an unconditional and sole ownership in this property and that the interest of the insured in the property was not truly stated in the policy, under which facts, there was a misrepresentation or concealment in regard to a material