36 Wis. 159 | Wis. | 1874
In the contract under consideration, as in all, or nearly all, modern contracts of insurance, there are two classes of stipulations: first, those relating to matters and things prior to the loss, and which define and determine the limits of the risk; and second, those which relate to matters and things occurring after the loss, and haying for their object to determine the mode in which the loss is to be established, adjusted and recovered. The former pertain to the circumstances which affect the risk itself, the latter to those acts required of the assured after a loss in order to fix the liability .of the insurer. “ As to the former ” (says Mr. May in his excellent work on the Law of Insurance, § 217), “ relatively speaking there is more strictness in holding parties to the terms of the contract, and less readiness to find in the circumstances a waiver of their re.-spective rights. In other words, the courts will proceed with caution in determining the question of the liability of the insurer ; but when this liability is fixed by the capital fact of a loss within the range of their responsibility, they will be very reluctant to deprive the insured of the benefit of that liability, by any failure or neglect to comply with the mere formal requisitions of the contract, by which his right is to be made available for his indemnification.” p. 231. The stipulations in this contract of insurance upon which the action must be determined, relate to matters and conditions not only prior to the loss, but prior also to the making of the contract, and hence belong to the first class before mentioned. In this case, therefore, the parties must be held to the terms of the contract which they have entered into, and the most that either of them can justly claim, is, that their contract shall be governed by the general rules of law applicable to the interpretation and enforcement of all written agreements.
In many of these cases (and so far as we have discovered, in all of them in which the subject is mentioned), and in numerous other cases, the principle is asserted, that if the assured is interrogated for the character and particulars of his title, or if he be required by the provisions of the policy to disclose the same, he must disclose his title fully and correctly, or the insurer will be relieved from liability on the policy.
The character and extent of the interest of the assured in the insured property is an important element in the risk. In Columbian Ins. Co. v. Lawrence, 2 Peters, 25, Chief Justice Marshall says: “ Generally speaking, insurances against fire are made in the confidence that the assured will use all the precautions to guard against the calamity insured against, which
If the contract requires the assured fully to disclose his-title, and he fails in any material particular to do so correctly, it is highly probable, in view of the importance of such information to the insurer, that the policy would thereby be invalidated and the insurer relieved from liability, although it contains no express provision to that effect. But this question is not in the present case. In the contract before us there are express conditions and stipulations, valid in the law, and amply sufficient to charge the plaintiff with the obligation fully to disclose to the insurer his title to the insured building and the ground on which it stood, at the peril of losing the benefit of the contract should he fail to do so.
As before observed, the cases which assert and apply the foregoing principles are very numerous. For the convenience of the profession, a few of them, taken almost at random, will be here cited. Franklin Fire Ins. Co. v. Coates, 14 Md., 285; Sussex County Mut. Ins. Co. v. Woodruff, 2 Dutcher (N. J.), (541), 553; Ætna Ins. Co. v. Tyler, 12 Wend., 507; Same case in court of errors, 16 id., 385; Strong v. Manufacturers' Ins. Co., 10 Pick., 40; Curry v. Commonwealth Ins. Co., id., 535 ; Smith v. Bowditch Ins. Co., 6 Cush., 448; Hayward v. N. E. Mut. Ins. Co., 10 id., 444; Brown v. Williams, 28 Me., 252; Birmingham v. Empire Ins. Co., 42 Barb., 457; Marshall v. Columbian Ins. Co., 7 Foster (N. H.), 157; Jenkins v. Quincy Ins. Co., 7 Gray, 370; Kibbe v. Hamilton Ins. Co., 11 id., 163; Falis v. Conway Ins. Co., 7 Allen, 46; Reynolds v. State Mut. Ins. Co., 2 Grant’s Cases (Pa.), 326; Phillips v. Knox Ins. Co., 20 Ohio, 174
It is readily conceded that there are adjudged cases which seem to controvert some of the views above expressed. We shall not stop to comment upon, or even to cite them. We are well satisfied, after most careful examination, that our conclusions are sustained by the great weight of judicial authority, and that we have interpreted this contract of insurance in strict accordance with those general rules of construction applicable thereto, of which mention was made in the opening paragraph of this opinion.
It is claimed on behalf of the plaintiff, that the proofs in the case are, that the agent of the defendant who received Pick-ard’s application for insurance, knew the state of the title and misled Pickard as to his obligation to make any further or other statement of his title and ownership than that which he did make. And it is argued therefrom, that the insurer is estopped to question the sufficiency of the title, or of the statement of Pickard in relation thereto. Were this proposition of
Certain • personal property in the building, and which was covered by the policy, was also burned. Pickard was the sole and absolute owner of such property. But the contract of insurance is entire, and, failing in part, it fails wholly. This is well settled. Hence the plaintiff cannot recover for the loss of any of the property. May on Insurance, § 189, and cases cited.
At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s testimony, a motion for a nonsuit was made on behalf of the defendant, and denied by the court. All of the material facts in the case had then been proved. It follows from the views above expressed, that the motion should have been granted. But, that motion having been denied, the court should have granted a new trial for the reason that the verdict and judgment are against all of the evidence in the case. We find it unnecessary to review the
By the Court. —The judgment is reversed, and a new trial ordered.