16 Wend. 481 | Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors | 1836
The following opinion was delivered :
The principle is well settled that every warranty on the part of the assured, whether express or implied, is in the nature of a condition precedent to the payment of the loss, and must be strictly complied with, or the policy is void. In this respect there is a material difference between a warranty and a representation ; which latter is a matter of collateral information or intelligence relative to the subject and nature of the risk to be assumed, which in itself must have been calculated to increase the responsibility of the underwriter, or to have induced him to assume the risk for a smaller premium than he would otherwise have required. In other words, it must be a misrepresentation of a matter material to the risk, either designed or otherwise. This is the legal and commercial meaning of the term misrepresentation, as used in the second condition annexed to the policy in this case; which declares that if any person insuring a building or goods in the office
Having disposed of this part of the case, it remains for me to consider the question whether the reference to the survey in the body of this policy, and which, I believe, is
On the question being put, Shall this judgment he reversed? All the members of the court present, twenty-three in number, voted in the negative.
Whereupon the judgment of the supreme court was affirmed.