81 Wis. 583 | Wis. | 1892
The liability of the defendant depends upon the proper construction of the condition contained in the policy issued by it, that it should be void if the barn described in it, “whether intended for occupancy by owner
The clause, “ whether intended for occupancy by owner or tenant,” was plainly intended to give the same effect to non-occupancy or failure to use the building arising from the act or omission of a tenant, upon a policy issued to the owner, as if it occurred by reason of the act or omission of the owner himself. The substance of the warranty contained in the policy, which was continuing in its nature, was aimed not against mere vacancy or non-occupancy existing at any particular period,- — - whether at the date of the policy or at any subsequent time,— as affecting the risk, but against the existence of such a condition of the building, continuing for ten days at any time after the policy was issued. If the building was vacant and unoccupied at the date of the policy, the insured, within ten days, might use and occupy it so as to save the policy. No good reason can be suggested why vacancy or non-occupancy should be attended with any greater effect if it existed at the date of the policy than if occurring at any subsequent period, when, to be effective as a breach of warranty and consequent forfeiture, it was necessary it should continue for ten days. We think that by a fair grammatical construction of the language the clause “ and so remain for ten days ” applies as well to the present as to the future condition of the property. Any other construction seems foreign to the intention of the parties, as manifested by the language used, and would result in making the policy void db initio,— a construction to be avoided if the language is reasonably susceptible of any other meaning. The language of the policy should not only be construed most strictly
On behalf of the respondents it is claimed that, as the premises were vacant and unoccupied at the date of the policy, it is to be presumed that the insurer knew of the fact, or is chargeable with knowledge of it, and is deemed to have waived the requirement in question. Neither the argument nor the cases cited meet the necessity of the case, for it may well be said that actual knowledge at the time of issuing the policy of existing facts that by the terms of the policy would prevent it from attaching and render it void from its inception, will amount to a waiver of stipulations in the policy in relation thereto; but it cannot, we think, be successfully maintained that, conceding that knowledge of vacancy or non-occupancy is to be imputed as a matter of law to the insurer, there is any implied consent to the continuance of such condition of.the premises, or that the insurer is thereby affected with notice that they so continued and remained thereafter vacant and unoccupied, contrary to the express continuing warranty or condition on that subject contained in the policy. Under the policy in question it was clearly the duty of the insured to make good their warranty in this respect, and they knew perfectly well that they had failed to do so. Nothing took place between the parties on the subject. There is no reason for imputing to the insurer, as a matter of law, knowledge of the breach of the stipulation in regard to the
The respondents’ counsel place reliance-upon the case of Short v. Home Ins. Co. 90 N. Y. 16, upon which mainly it is understood the case was decided in the circuit court. In this case the provision was that, in case the premises “become vacant and unoccupied, and so remain, with knowledge of the assured, without notice to and consent of the company in writing,” the policy should be void. The premises were vacant and unoccupied at the time of the insurance, and so continued until the building was destroyed by fire, and it was held that there was a breach of the condition; and that when the insurer fails to inquire as to occupation, unless there is proof of concealment, it is not evidence of bad faith which will vitiate the policy; and that, where no statement is made in the policy as to the occupation, it must be - assumed that the insurance was made without regard to occupation; and the court held that it was a question of fact for the jury to determine whether the agent of the insurer Tcnew the condition of the premises;
The cases of Comm. v. Hide & Leather Ins. Co. 112 Mass. 136, and Washington Mills E. M. Co. v. Weymouth & B. M. F. Ins. Co. 135 Mass. 505, do not go beyond holding that, where no inquiry is made as to title and the like, and no representation is made in that regard by the insured, the policy will not be avoided without showing misrepresentation or concealment ; that an innocent failure to communicate material facts will not avoid it, although the policy contains the provision that “ the assured covenants that the representation given in the application for this insurance contains a just, full, and true exposition of all the facts and circumstances in regard to the condition, situation, value, and risk of the property insured, so far as the same are known to them; and that, if any material fact or-circumstance shall not have been fairly represented,” the policy shall be void. In the case first named (112 Mass. 136) the insurers chose to issue the policy on their own examination, without the application contemplated by the provision quoted. In the case of Philadelphia Tool Co. v. British Am. Ass. Co. 132 Pa. St. 241, much relied on by respondents, the policy, in like manner, was issued without written request describing the interest of the insured in the building, and no actual representation was made by him on that subject; and it was held that, as the policy could be avoided only on the ground of fraud, and as fraud could not be presumed, the court ought to assume for the purposes of that issue that
These cases fall far short of showing that there was or could be an implied waiver of the continuing condition or warranty as to future use or occupation in this case, founded upon a mere presumption that the insurer knew that the premises were vacant and unoccupied at the date of the policy, when nothing whatever occurred or took place between the parties on this subject at the time or thereafter before the loss. The insurer took a stipulation, as to the future merely, against vacancy or non-occupancy, as affecting the risk, continuing for more than ten days. There is no pretense that until after the loss occurred the defendant had any notice whatever that the condition in question had not been kept, or that it had in any way or manner waived such breach. Waiver implies actual knowledge of some essential objection or condition going to the liability of the insurer. McFarland v. St. Paul F. & M. Ins. Co. 46 Minn. 519; Boyd v. Vanderbilt Ins. Co. 16 S. W. Rep. (Tenn.), 470; Bonneville v. Western Ass. Co. 68 Wis. 298; Hotchkiss v. Home Ins. Co. 58 Wis. 297. The proof of waiver of a material provision of the policy ought to be reasonably clear and certain. Bosworth v. Merchants' F. Ins. Co. 80 Wis. 393, and cases cited; Stevens v. Queen Ins. Co., ante, p. 335.
It is not material that a former policy, issued by the defendant company to the plaintiff on the same property, did not contain the same provision in regard to the use or occupancy of the premises as the one in suit. There is no pretense of fraud or mistake, and, the plaintiffs having had ample opportunity to examine the policy in suit and learn its terms, it must be presumed that they assented to the policy as written. Indeed, by bringing their action on the policy, the plaintiffs confirmed it and are bound by all its provisions. Bonneville v. Western Ass. Co. 68 Wis. 298; Swan v. Watertown F. Ins. Co. 96 Pa. St. 43.
By the Gourt.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.