58 A. 502 | N.H. | 1904
The defendants deny liability upon the policy of insurance in suit, upon the ground that the undisputed evidence discloses a breach of an express warranty in the contract necessarily fatal to its validity as matter of law. They further contend that the evidence does not disclose such insurable interest in the plaintiff as to enable him to maintain the action. The exception to the verdict ordered for the defendants cannot be sustained unless there was evidence upon both propositions which should have been submitted to the jury.
In the absence of statutory prohibition, of which no claim is made, "parties to insurance, like parties to other contracts, may . . . incorporate into their contract such conditions, whether apparently material or immaterial, as they see fit. If the assured has in express terms stipulated and warranted that a certain fact is true, that warranty makes the fact a material one and, however immaterial it may seem in any other aspect, an indispensable condition in the compact. . . . `Such express warranty is always a part of the policy, but, like any other part of the express contract, may be written in the margin, or contained in proposals or documents expressly referred to in the policy, and so made a part of it.' . . . But while this unquestionable effect is given to express warranties or conditions, when ascertained, it is a well established doctrine of the law of insurance that not every representation made by the assured, in his application or treaty for a policy, is of that nature. In order to have such an effect, the representation must be material, or . . . the fact represented must be `one upon which the parties can be presumed to have proceeded in making the contract.' . . . `A false representation cannot avoid the policy, unless it be on a point material to the risk.'" Boardman v. Insurance Co.,
The policy states that it is issued in consideration of the application which is made a part of the contract. The plaintiff having by the acceptance of the policy expressly assented that a portion of the contract was contained in the application, it is immaterial whether he acquainted himself with the contents of the application or not. He had the power to so agree and, unless he was induced to make the agreement by fraud or imposition, is bound by his agreement and by the stipulations of the application. Monitor Mutual Ins. Co. v. Buffum,
The plaintiff, however, claims that the statements were not warranties, but were representations which would not avoid the policy unless fraudulently made or material to the risk. Whether the parties have agreed that a particular statement shall be a material part of the contract, — a warranty instead of a representation, — is a question of the interpretation of the contract, and in some cases the ascertainment of their intent in this respect may be a matter of difficulty; but where, as in this case, the untrue statements are expressly described as warranties, there is little room for speculation as to what was meant. But since the question is the intent of the parties, it has been held that even where by the letter of *576
the contract the statements are made warranties, "that fact is not necessarily controlling if they are not warranties within its fair meaning and spirit. With respect to questions that relate to matters which the insurer must know are not within the personal knowledge of the applicant, and with respect to those that call, not for definite statements of fact, but for statements of belief or opinion (as, for instance, whether the applicant has ever had a certain obscure disease), the letter of the contract is to be controlled by its spirit and purposes, and the answers will be held warranties only of the bona fide belief and opinion of the applicant." Dimick v. Insurance Co. (N.J.),
Exception overruled.
BINGHAM and YOUNG, JJ., did not sit: the others concurred.