29 Ill. App. 180 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1888
This was an action upon a policy of fire insurance resulting in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $189.20. There was some effort to show that the fire was set by the plaintiff but the evidence wholly failed to establish the charge.
The policy was payable to plaintiff and insured him against, loss to the extent of $400 on his frame barn and $150 on his buggy, tanks, street sprinkler and farming implements therein, and $800 on his hay and grain therein.
The total insurance as shown by these separate amounts was $1,350, and it was so expressed in figures in the margin; but in the body of the paper it was written “thirteen and 50-100 dollars.”
This apparent mistake was urged as a sufficient reason for excluding the policy on the ground of a variance. The declaration described the policy according to its legal effect and the court properly overruled this objection. Upon reading the whole instrument it is clear that the amount insured was as alleged, $1,350.
The most considerable objection urged here arises from the fact that the ownership of the real estate was in the plaintiff and his wife. The lot npon .which the barn was situated was conveyed nearly twenty years before the policy was issued to the plaintiff, Jacob Hofing, and his wife, Clarissa Hofing. The grantees, though husband and wife, held under this conveyance (it being made subsequent to the married women’s act of 1861) as tenants in common. Prior to that act they would have held under such a conveyance as tenants by entirety, or as sometimes expressed, by the entireties. Cooper v. Cooper, 76 Ill. 57. It is no doubt true that ‘in the application as well as in the proof of loss there was, in a technical sense at least, a mistake in stating the ownership of the real estate to be in Jacob Hofing. This condition of the • title was as a matter of fact unknown to the company until after the proof of loss was made, and it is quite evident that the insured did not understand the legal effect of it. Indeed, it is probable the fact was not on liis mind, and that he was not aware of the clause in the policy which vitiated the insurance because of the misstatement in that regard. When, upon the trial, this point was presented, he abandoned his claim to recover for the loss of the barn. It was urged, however, that lie wras barred in respect to the personal property of which he was the sole owner, because of a provision in the policy that an attempt to defraud the company in the matter of a claim for loss, by false swearing or otherwise, shall cause a forfeiture of this policy and all claim for loss thereunder.”
The position taken in this respect is that plaintiff concealed the true condition of the title, and in the proof of loss, falsely swore that he was the sole owner of the barn. The jury found, under full instructions, that there was no attempt to de-. fraud the company in this matter, and, we think, properly, under the evidence. The objection is wholly untenable.
In this connection it is urged that the policy is an entirety and indivisible, and the breach of its condition as to the barn avoided the whole policy. This position is based upon a clause in the policy which reads thus: “If insurance is desired on property bold in trust, * * or on property of any bind in which the interest of the applicant for insurance does not amount to the entire, sole and absolute ownership, it must, in every such case, be so represented to the company, and clearly expressed in the body of the policy, otherwise there will be no liability hereunder as to such property or limited interest.”
It seems very clear that by the language of this clause the forfeiture is confined to the property affected by the misrepresentation. “ As to such property” there was to be no liability. Commercial Ins. Co. v. Spankneble, 52 Ill. 53. The court properly refused the instructions asked by the company on this branch of the case.
' The remaining points, that the damages were excessive and that the verdict was induced by improper remarks of plaintiff’s attorney in the closing argument, we consider were properly overruled by the trial court. It is true the amount of damages exceeds the statement as to the personal property as it appears in the proof of loss, but we think under the circumstances in evidence the plaintiff was not estopped by that statement. The remarks of the attorney referred to, while somewhat heated and forcible, were not of such a character as to vitiate the verdict.
Upon the whole case we think the company has no cause for complaint and that the judgment should be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.