35 F. 30 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland | 1888
This is a suit at law upon a fire insurance policy, submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury. The issuing of the policy, and the loss by fire of the goods insured to the amount underwritten by the defendant, are admitted. The policy contains the usual clause providing that if there be other insurance the company issuing it would not be responsible for a greater proportion of the loss than the sum insured,by its policy bore to the whole amount of insurance, whether prior or subsequent thereto. And the defense to this action is that there was other insurance at the time of the loss by fire.
To sustain this plea the defendant produces a policy of insurance issued by the Orient Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn., on the 30th of April, 1886, for $2,500, which, by a renewal certificate, it appears
The premium charged bv the defendant company upon the risk it assumed was at the rate of $1.50 per $100, while that premium which the Orient charged, prior to such occupation by a steam bakery, was at the rate of 75 cents per $100. To consider the Orient’s policy additional insurance under these circumstances would do violence to the facts. To constitute double insurance, not only must the thing insured and the parties be the same, but the same risk must be assumed. It is clear that the rear building occupied by a candy manufacturer on the fourth floor, while the other floors are occupied as places of storage, does not offer the same risk of fire as it does when it becomes a steam bakery, with the necessary accompaniment of ovens for baking, which the evidence shows were placed in this. And though it be true that no bread or calces had been baked on the premises up to the time of the fire, yet other communication had been made with adjoining premises, and fire had been made in the bakery oven to dry it before use. And though it is likewise true that the fire which occasioned the loss did not originate in this rear building, that is not necessary to avoid the policy. The change in the occupation of the building was material to the risk. It increased it, of which fact the premium charged by defendant, while not conclusive, is significant, evidence; and, whether the fire occurred by reason of the increased risk or not, the policy of the Orient did not assume it, and was void the moment the change in occupation took place. With this view of the evidence and finding of facts the court is of opinion there was no insurance on the goods and merchandise belonging to the plaintiff lost on the morning of the 4th of August, 1887, other than that of the defendant.
Judgment will be entered for the plaintiff for the whole amount of the loss as ascertained by the adjusters mentioned in the policy of the Fire