90 Iowa 709 | Iowa | 1894
The defendant company issued to the plaintiff its policy of insurance for the sum of five
I. The provision of the policy on which the defense is chiefly based is: “This entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement indorsed hereon or added hereto, shall be void if a building herein described, whether intended for occupancy by owner or tenant, be or become vacant or unoccupied, and remain • so for ten days.” It becomes necessary, therefore, to determine when, in legal contemplation, a building may be said to be “vacant or unoccupied,” within the meaning of these words as used in the policy. At the outset it will be well to bear in mind that, in order to avoid liability under this clause of the policy, it is not incumbent on the defendant to show that both conditions existed for the ten days immediately preceding the fire. It is sufficient, under this provision of the policy, to defeat liability, if the building was either vacant or unoccupied for the required time, in the absence of other provisions indorsed upon or added to the policy.
A learned writer has said that the words “vacant and unoccupied” are not synonymous; that “vacant” means empty of everything but air, and that “unoccu
In Halpin v. Insurance Co. (N. Y. App.) 23 N. E. Rep. 482, it was beld that a building used as a morocco factory, and which was unused for about six months prior to the fire, was unoccupied within tbe meaning and contemplation of tbe parties, even though all tbe machinery remained in tbe building,, and it was closed and locked, and in tbe bands of tbe plaintiff’s agent for rent, and be visited it frequently. Tbe court said “that to constitute occupancy of a building used for manufacturing purposes there must be some use or employment of tbe property. Its use as a place of storage merely is not sufficient. *, * * Tbe insurer has a right, by tbe terms of tbe policy, to tbe care and supervision
Appellee relies upon and cites many cases, among
It will be observed that few if any of the cases relied upon by the appellee sustain his contention that the premises in controversy were occupied within the meaning of that word as used in policies of insurance. Facts touching vacancy or occupancy differ in each case presented; hence each case must be determined upon its own peculiar facts. It must be conceded, also, that
The undisputed facts in the case at bar are that the insured property was a two story building, the lower story being adapted and used for a storeroom, with access therefrom to the story above. There was no means of access to the upper story, except by going through the storeroom. When the policy issued, the building was occupied'by one Eeimbold as a tenant of the plaintiff. He had a cigar store in the front part of the building downstairs, and a cigar manufactory in the rear part. There were two rooms upstairs which seem to have been but little "used by the tenant. His lease expired on March 11,1891. He moved his stock out
II. The appellee contends that, as the policy provides that mechanics may be employed in the building, altering or repairing it, for not more than fifteen days at any one time, and it was being repaired, that should be considered as an occupancy within the terms of the policy. We do not think so. The repairs might be made while the building was occupied. .Again, it is not shown that these repairs continued up to within ten days before-the fire. The provision of the policy does not indicate that it was- in the contemplation of the parties that there should be no occupancy of the premises while repairs were being made. As the point is not pressed with any apparent confidence, we need give it no further consideration.
III. Under the instructions of the court, the jury should have found for the defendant. Indeed, under the undisputed facts,'there was no such occupancy as the policy contemplated, and hence the court, would have been justified in directing a verdict for the defendant.
IY. ' The jury were told by the court in an instruction that, if they found that the building was not totally destroyed, and it could be repaired at an expense of two hundred to two hundred and fifty dollars, then the plaintiff’s damages would be limited to5 the amount it would have cost to.repair said building, and put the same