| Me. | Feb 25, 1897

Peters, C. J.

The contention in this case is whether the risks of an insurance on the house in question were or not materially increased by its non-occupancy, the terms of the policy, which must have been well understood by the insured, declaring the *43policy to be void for such cause when not consented to by the insurance company. The facts are not in dispute.

An insurance of five hundred dollars was obtained by the plaintiff, December 7, 1892, on his two-story frame building and ell, the property having been estimated at the time as worth seventeen hundred and fifty dollars. The insurance came within the denomination of a farm risk. The buildings became vacant and unoccupied in March, 1894, and continued so, without the consent or knowledge of the company, for fourteen months, when, May 4, 1895, the same were totally destroyed by fire.

The house was situated on a large and finely cultivated farm, having a frontage of nearly half a mile on a county road, being Main street extended, running past it in a northerly and southerly direction. The farm extends easterly two miles to the easterly boundary of the city of Ellsworth, the easterly section of the same consisting variously of field, pasture and woodland. The uncultivated portion of it is traversed by the Maine Central Railroad which runs northerly and southerly across it. The house, sixty years old and more, and in rather an indifferent state of repair, was located about twenty rods back from the road, and two barns that were not burned, nor insured that we are aware of, are still standing on the pj'emises about twenty rods east of the location of the house. The farm on which the house stood is really in the outskirts of the city of Ellsworth in quite a secluded and isolated situation, being four-fifths of a mile from the Maine Central railroad station which is itself quite out of the central part of the city. There were at the time of the fire a few neighbors scattered along the road on both the north and south sides of the plaintiff’s land, living in small, ordinary houses but not in close proximity to it; the jiearest on the other side being eighty-five rods distant from the house. The city had an imperfect and inadequate fire system, but unavailable for the protection of such buildings as these situated two-thirds of a mile away. The fire department attempted to offer relief but failed to do so. The counsel for the plaintiff regards the fact as important that there is a running brook not far distant from the buildings, but neither firemen nor neighbors *44had any means by which its waters could be used to extinguish the fire.

The fire was first discovered in the ell and shed attached to the main house at two o’clock in the night and soon resulted in a total loss. The premises were well cared for by the owner and his hired man in the day time, on account of his barns of hay and stock of cattle kept there, but neither owner nor laborer stayed on or near the premises during the night. It was customary for some one at work on the farm to visit the buildings daily or of tener, and on the afternoon preceding the fire the owner was about the house overseeing the work of his men who were engaged in repairing the stone foundation under the ell. He closed the house at about seven o’clock and went home, seeing no signs of fire or of anything unusual about the premises.

We feel constrained to declare, in view of all the facts respecting the condition and situation of the property, that its exposure to the risks of fire was seriously increased because of the vacancy of the unoccupied buildings. Whether the fire was caused either by accident or design, had there been some person living in the house at the time, the chances are that it might have been discovered in season to control it, or that it never would have occurred. The reasoning of the court in Lancy v. Home Insurance Co., 82 Maine, 492, is applicable in this case, although of more forcible application in that case than in this.

It is doubtful if the meaning of the court in their interpretation of the statute which casts the burden of proof on insurance companies to show in case of loss of unoccupied houses that the non-occupancy materially increased the risk, as enunciated by the court in White v. Phœnix Insurance Co., 83 Maine, 279, — the case again reported in 85 Maine, 97, — was correctly understood in the present case at the argument. The court does not deny that the burden of proving that fact rests on the insurance company, but decides that such burden, in a case devoid of any proof of the attendant circumstances, may be sufficiently sustained in the first instance by the natural presumption to that effect which is based upon the observation and experience of intelligent men generally. *45Tn most courts the opinions of witnesses or the experience of companies on this point cannot be testified to, for the reason, that it is the common knowledge of mankind generally rather than the peculiar knowledge of specialists and experts. The court does not suppose that the legislature intended to deprive the insurance company of the aid of this common and natural presumption in support of the burden of proof which perhaps rather illogically rests upon it.

It is not pretended that the general burden of proof shifts from the insurer to the insured; and if, after all the facts on both sides are presented, the case in its proofs stands in equilibrio then the company does not prevail and the issue must be determined against the company. The principle is illustrated in the case of a suit on a piece of commercial paper where the general burden is on the plaintiff to prove value for the defendant’s promise, and that burden does not change in any stage of the evidence in the case, although it is sustained, until weakened by other evidence, by the presumption of value which attaches to commercial paper. Small v. Clewley, 62 Maine, 135.

Mr. Best, in his valuable work on evidence, says that presumptions or presumptive evidence is as original as is direct evidence; and that the presumption of a fact is as good as any other proof of such fact when the presumption is legitimate. As illustrations of the principle that presumptions stand for proof until rebutted by evidence, the author remarks in this way: — “Although the law presumes all bills of exchange and promissory notes to have been given and endorsed for good consideration, it is competent for certain parties affected by these presumptions to falsify them by evidence..... To this class also belongs the well known presumptions in favor of innocence, and sanity, and against fraud, etc.; the presumption that legal acts have been performed with the solemnities required by law, and that every person performs the duties or obligations which the law casts upon him.” Best, Evidence *426.

The presumption which in this case is strong enough to stand as prima facie proof, until contradicted by evidence, is denominated a *46presumption of fact sanctioned by the law, or a mixed presumption of law and fact. Tbe law authorizes its adoption because it is in consonance with reason and experience, and because from its importance and frequency of occurrence it has attracted the attention of the law and received its commendation.

The fact that any property is not in the-possession or under the close supervision of its owner naturally produces a belief that it is exposed to more than usual risks, such risks being more or less according to circumstances. Insurance companies invoke the benefit of this sort of presumption, and we think they are entitled to it in aid of the burden of proof which the statute imposes on them. At the same time any construction of the statute has but little, if any, pertinency in a consideration of the facts disclosed in the present case.

Judgment for defendants.

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