The appellee insurance company strongly relies upon Giles v. Citizens Ins. Co. of Missouri,
Testimony that the vehicle was the one stolen from Wall was not only uncontradicted, but supported by the testimony of all who testified. Captain Wall was in no way impeached. “The law presumes that witnesses who testify are credible and worthy оf belief, unless impeached or otherwise discredited.” Coates v. State,
Appellants urge that Giles requires a reversal here under its further holding: “In the instant case it indisputably appears that the plaintiff was in bona fide possession of property previously stolen from the original owner by parties unknown, about two years previously, and that the original owner had transferred all his title and interest in the car to the other insurance company, which had indemnified him against his loss by the original theft; but the record discloses that the defendant, upon whom the burden rests of disproving the title of the plaintiff in possession at the time of the secоnd theft, has failed to show that the other insurance company had not conveyed its title and' interest to a pаrty through whom the plaintiff claimed.”
The rule of Giles as to insurable interest is not changed by Code Ann. § 56-2405 in which it is defined, as to property, to mean “any actual, lawful, and substantial economic interest in the safety or preservation of the subject of the insurance free from loss, destruction, or pecuniary damage or impairment.” (Emphasis supplied.) It was held in Giles that one who purchases stolen property, though in good faith, can acquire no title—hence no lawful interest. Cf. Sappington v. Rimes,
Does the provision of the policy providing coverage to a “non-оwned” vehicle alter this situation? We think not. The provision simply can not and does not extend coverage to vehicles in which the insured has no insurable interest. If it did, it would convert the insurance contract into a gaming arrangement and render it void as a matter of public policy. “The rule
It is true that title is not the sole test for determining an insurable interest. It may be a special or limited interest, disconnected from any title, lien or pоssession, whereby the holder of the interest will suffer loss by its destruction, etc., and that will entitle him to protect the interest by insurаnce. Pike v. American Alliance Ins. Co.,
The insured, under this non-owned provision, might well have an insurable interest in a vehicle which he has leased, or whiсh has been supplied to him by another as a temporary substitute for his own. He would be held accountable to thе owner if the loss should occur, as is recognized in Code Ann. § 56-2405(1). Whether owned or non-owned, the insured must have an insurable interest in thе subject matter of the contract, and under the ruling in Giles, Gordon had none in this vehicle.
Another reason why the “non-owned” provision afforded no coverage and is not applicable in this instance is that Gordon obtained insurance on it as an owned vehicle; it was so listed in the policy and he paid a specific premium charge for the cov
Judgment affirmed.
