after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
In McGowan v. Insurance Co., 54 Vt. 211 (41 Am. Rep. 843), the court, speaking through Taet, J., announced the following doctrine: “The general rule, ‘Void in part, void in toto,’ should apply to all cases where the contract is affected by some all-pervading vice, such as fraud, or some unlawful act condemned by public policy or the common law; cases where the contract is entire, and not divisible ; and all those cases where the matter that renders the policy void in part, and the result of its being so rendered void affects the risk of the insurer upon the other items in the contract.” To the same effect, see 1 May, Ins. § 277, note 5. We-are impressed that this rule is especially applicable in arriving at the rightful construction of the policy under consideration. It was"thought by the learned judge that it was sufficient to reconcile the apparently conflicting decisions touching the question of the divisibility of the contract of insurance. In Moore v. Virginia Fire Ins. Co., 28 Gratt. 508 (26 Am. Rep. 373), it was held, upon the construction of a policy similarly worded to the one at bar, that false swearing as to one of the items covered would render the policy void, and that recovery could not be had for any other item therein, although not involved in the false proof. A similar construction has been given to policies of insurance where fraud was not involved. In Smith v. Insurance Co., 118 N. Y. 518 (23 N. E. 883), the wording of the policy was : “If the property, either real or personal, or any part thereof, shall be incum
There are many cases holding that the contract is several, but its severability depends upon the intention of the parties, as gathered from all its terms, stipulations, and conditions. We may instance a case in which the policy declares that it shall be void for any subsequent alienation by the insured. If only a part of the entire subject of insurance be alienated, and this without increasing the risk to the rest, the policy would not be thereby wholly avoided : Trabue v. Dwelling House Ins. Co., 121 Mo. 75 (42 Am. St. Rep. 523, 23 L. R. A. 719, 25 S. W. 848). And where an insurance is effected upon several houses in a gross sum, and the policy thereafter designated a definite sum upon each, if a part of the houses only are permitted to become vacant, contrary to the stipulations, it will not avoid the policy upon those that remain occupied : Connecticut Fire Ins. Co. v. Tilley, 88 Va. 1024 (29 Am. St. Rep. 770, 14 S. E. 851). These and other cases of similar import well illustrate the principle we desire to announce. We have found no case where fraud or false swearing is introduced as an element in the consideration wherein the contract is construed to