59 So. 336 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1912
The suit being on an insurance policy for loss or. injury occasioned by fire, the defendant company set up in special pleas, together with other defenses, certain stipulations or clauses in the policy, and averred that-the policy was void, or had become void because, with the knowledge of the insured, foreclosure proceedings had been commenced, by virtue of a mortgage on the property, before the loss occurred. Plea No. 3 is as follows: “This defendant says that this suit is based upon a policy of insurance issued by the defendant to the plaintiff on a certain house in the town of Opp, Ala., and that in said policy it is provided that said policy shall be void if, with the knowledge of the insured, foreclosure proceedings be commenced or notice given of sale of any property covered by this pol
“Conditions in a policy will not be extended by implication to cover matters not clearly and unmistakably within the meaning of the. condition according to' the usual and ordinary meaning of the words used. The insurer has a right to ingraft any lawful condition he sees fit upon the policy; but he must do so by the use of terms that leave no doubt as to the extent and purport of the condition, and will receive no aid from forced inferences.” — 1 Wood on Fire Insurance, p. 587, § 249.
The validity and wisdom of such a provision in fire insurance policies as is set up in the third plea is not doubted. Such a stipulation has universally been held to be valid by the courts in practically all of the states; but to say that the court ivas in error in sustaining demurrers to the fourth plea would in effect be holding
Considering the fourth plea alone, and the averments therein contained as to the general stipulation in the contract of insurance, and the sufficiency of these allegations as tested by demurrer, we do not construe the general clause invalidating the policy because of any increased risk to embrace or have reference to the act of a third party commencing mortgage foreclosure proceedings. The company has a right to make its own contract, and specify the terms and conditions upon which it will take the risk, and it is for the court to construe the contract and give such effect to the language used as the parties evidently intended. If the provision set up in the third plea is embodied in the contract, the defendant gets the benefit of it as a defense under that plea; and it could hardly be said under any reasonable
Then, too, in the absence of an express stipulation to that effect in the contract (policy), it could hardly be said that the mere fact of the commencement of foreclosure proceedings by a third party would, as a matter of law, constitute such a material or substantial increase in the risk as to avoid the contract of insurance, under a clause having reference generally to any increase in the risk. Whether the clause was sufficient to avoid the policy being a question of law, to put the court in error for sustaining demurrers to the plea the clause or terms of the policy under which the defendant claimed the policy to be void should have been set out in the plea. — Cont. Ins. Co. v. Parkes, 142 Ala. 650, 39 South. 204.
The appellant’s counsel cite and rely upon the case of Kelly & Co. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 56 Fla. 546, 47 South. 742, 16 Ann. Cas. 654. The plea under consideration is that case set up a specific stipulation contained in the policy, whereby it was expressly agreed that the policy should become void if foreclosure pro
We do not consider that the court erred in sustaining the demurrers to the fourth plea, and the case will be affirmed.
Affirmed.