Petitioner Melia R. Johnson commenced this action against Respondent South State Insurance Company [the Company] to recover fire insurance benefits. A jury returned a verdict for Johnson. The Court of Appeals reversed.
Johnson v. South State Insurance Co.,
286 S. C. 235,
Petitioner contracted with the Company to insure his home in Cherokee County. In 1977,, the house was destroyed by fire. Johnson submitted a claim to the Company, including a sworn “Proof of Loss” regarding the contents of the house. The Company investigated the fire, and thereafter denied the entire claim, alleging fraud in the contents claim. This action followed.
At trial, the Company argued that fraud as to the contents voided the entire contract, including loss of dwelling and additional .living expenses. Their position was based on a clause within the insurance policy. The trial judge ruled, however, that the policy was severable; therefore, fraud as to contents would not defeat other recovery under the policy. The jury returned a verdict for Johnson as to dwelling and *241 expenses, but returned a verdict for the Company as to contents because of Petitioner’s fraudulent acts. The Company appealed.
The Court of Appeals reversed, holding the policy was not severable, and fraud as to one portion voided the entire contract. We disagree.
In
Trakas v. Globe & Rutgers Fire Ins.,
141 S. C. 64,
... [I]n the absence of fraud or any act condemned by public policy, the contract is divisible, and recovery may be had for the loss of property not affected by the particular warranty broken. 201 S. C. at 280,22 S. E. (2d) at 880 .
This rule has been cited with approval in subsequent cases.
See Nabors v. South Carolina Farm Bureau,
273 S. C. 126,
Although the rule was phrased with a fraud exception, neither Evans, nor Nabors or Mulkey dealt with situations where fraud was found to be present. The Trakas rule, as restated in these later cases is, at best, dicta.
The most recent case interpreting South Carolina law in this area is
Kerr v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co.,
It is well-established under South Carolina law that forfeitures of insurance contracts are not favored.
Trakas,
141 S. C. at 68,
We are mindful that the result reached today has been accepted only in a minority of jurisdictions.
See Kerr; Fratto v. Northern Ins. Co. of N. Y.,
Accordingly, the opinion of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the jury verdict is reinstated.
Reversed.
Notes
South Carolina is one of a small number of jurisdictions to adopt the crime of feticide.
