69 Vt. 116 | Vt. | 1896
The action is assumpsit upon a fire insurance contract, by which the plaintiffs were insured in the sum of nine hundred and sixty dollars on their two-story frame building, occupied for a storehouse and paint-shop. The policy contained the following provision: “This entire policy shall be void if the insured has concealed or misrepresented, in writing or otherwise, any material fact or circum
As the defendant did not desire to go to the jury upon any issue of fact, the following circumstances must be considered in passing upon the questions presented by the defendant’s motion for a verdict: That the building was insured as a storehouse and paint-shop; that it was consumed by fire; that the fire was caused by the use of benzine, mixed with asphaltum, in the paint-shop; that benzine was an article necessarily used in a paint-shop and indispensable in the business; that the damage equalled or exceeded the insurance; that due notice and proofs of loss were furnished; that plaintiff Emma owned in fee simple the land on which the building was erected; that the building was erected with money belonging in part to both plaintiffs; that the building and lot were worth twenty-five hundred dollars; that there was a mortgage for two hundred dollars on same at the time the contract of insurance was made and ever since has been; and that the incumbrance was not represented to the defendant at the time the contract of insurance was made. It did not appear that any written application for insurance was made by the plaintiffs, nor that the- agent of the defendant made any inquiries respecting incumbrances.
(1) The defendant insists that the contract of insurance is void because the plaintiffs were not owners in fee simple of the land on which the building was erected, and this fact was not indorsed on the policy or added thereto. Emma
In Rankin v. Andes Ins. Co., 47 Vt. 144, the action was upon a policy of insurance on a woolen factory, which was issued to the Essex Mills Co. and George H. Wilbur. The factoi-y was owned by the Essex Mills Co. but was operated by Wilbur under a contract with the company. The court found, that, at the time of the proof of loss, Wilbur had no interest in the property insured. The policy provided, that, if the interest or property insured be leasehold, or that of mortgage, or any other interest not in fee simple, in case of real estate, or absolute as to personal property, such must be made known to the company and expressed in the policy. The court held that this condition was obligatory upon the insured only in cases where the united interest of the insured was less than absolute.
In Warner v. Milford Mutual Fire Ins. Co. 153 Mass. 335, it is held, that, if a person has such an interest in property that he will suffer pecuniary loss by its destruction, he has an insurable interest; and if he has an insurable interest, it is sufficient to describe the property as belonging to him, unless some inquiry is made of him, the answer to which amounts to a false warranty or a misrepresentation.
In Dohn v. The Farmers' Joint Stock Ins. Co. 5 Lansing’s Rep. (N. Y.) 275, a condition in the policy required, that, if the applicant had a less estate than a fee in the property to be insured, he should state the nature of such estate; and it was held, that, inasmuch as no question as to the nature of the title of the applicant was included in the written form of application furnished by the company, it was liable upon such policy, although the title held by the insured was, in fact, an equitable one, only, under a contract of sale.
In Imperial Fire Ins. Co. v. Dunham, 117 Penn. St. 460: 12 Atlantic Rep. 668, the insurance was upon certain buildings on land which the insured had purchased, but on which he had made no payment. The policy contained a condition that insurance on buildings on land not owned by the insured in fee simple should be void, and it was held that the insured had an insurable interest.
In Niblo v. The North American Fire Ins. Co. 1 Sandford (N. Y.) 551, it is held, that the description of the buildings in a fire insurance policy as “his buildings” is not equivalent to a warranty on the part of the assured that he is the owner of the same; that it does not constitute a misrepresentation of the fact, when the only interest in the buildings is as tenant for a year; and that, where no inquiry is made
(2) The defendant also insists that the contract of insurance is void because benzine was used in the building, contrary to a printed condition in the policy. The contract of insurance provided for the occupancy of the building for a paint-shop. Benzine, mixed with asphaltum, was used in the paint-shop; and it must be held, from the statements in the exceptions, that it was necessarily used and indispensable in the business authorized by the contract of insurance to be carried on in the building. It is fair to presume, that, when the defendant made the contract for insurance upon the building and authorized its use for a paint-shop, by a clause written in the policy, it was acquainted with the business usually carried on, the work usually done, the materials necessarily used in prosecuting the business, in a paint-shop; that it knew that the business authorized to be -carried on could not be conducted in the usual and ordinary way without the use of benzine; that it included in the risk such materials as were necessarily used in the business and intended to permit their use; and that the written portion of the policy in this regard was intended to control the printed portion, prohibiting the use of benzine. It is a well •established rule, that, when the ^written and printed portions of a policy are inconsistent, the written portion prevails, as it expresses the special agreement and declared intention of the parties at the time of the contract. Carrigan v. Lycoming Fire Ins. Co. 53 Vt. 418. It is clear that the parties intended that the paint-shop, as it was and as it .must necessarily continue if used for the purposes authorized by the written portion of the policy, should be carried on with all the usual and necessary incidents thereto; and that as such it was protected by the contract of insurance. We think the rule is well settled, that, when a policy of insurance, by the written portions, covers property to be used in conducting a particular business, .the necessary using of an
In Faust v. American Fire Ins. Co. 91 Wis. 158: 30 L. R. A. 783, the written portion of the policy insured the building as a “furniture store and repair shop,” and the printed portion declared that it should be void if benzine was kept on the premises. It was held that the policy was not forfeited by keeping benzine for necessary use in the repair shop.
In Carlin v. Western Assurance Co. 57 Md. 515: 40 Am. Rep. 440, the policy covered a factory and machinery and prohibited the keeping or use of petroleum. The court held, in effect, that, if the engine room and machinery were included in the description of the insured premises, the keeping of petroleum, although among the prohibited articles, would not avoid the policy, if the evidence showed that it was an appropriate and customary article used in the insured’s business for lubricating machinery, and he kept it solely for that purpose; that the insurance company knew, when it issued the policy, that the factory could not run without machinery, and it must be supposed to have contracted with reference to such use as an ordinary incident of the business; that, .if petroleum oil was usual and necessary, such use must have been contemplated, though prohibited in the printed portion of the policy.
In Hall v. Ins. Co. of North America, 58 N. Y. 292, it is held, that, where a policy is issued upon the material used in a business, it includes and authorizes the use of all such materials as are in ordinary use in the business, although, by the printed clause of the policy, the keeping or use thereof upon the premises is prohibited, and although other materials might be substituted.
In Fraim v. National Fire Ins. Co. decided by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in 1895 and reported in the Atlantic Reporter, vol. 32, p. 613, the policy was issued to a silver-
In Viele v. Germania Ins. Co., 26 Iowa 9: 96 Am. Dec. 83, the policy expressly prohibited the keeping of benzine upon the premises. It was necessary in the preparation of paints and varnish used in the manufacture of rustic window shades; and it was held that consent to the manufacture of window shades in the building implied a consent to use. benzine, if it was necessary or commonly used in making those articles, and that the permission operated to dispense with the prohibition.
In Citizens' Ins. Co. v. McLaughlin, 53 Pa. 485: 6 Am. Law Reg. N. S. 374, the keeping of benzine upon the premises was prohibited. It was a necessary article in the manufacture of patent leather. The fire consuming the building was caused by benzine, and the court held that the permission to use the building for a patent-leather manufactory carried with it the permission to use all articles necessary to the business and dispensed with the prohibition in the policy.
The same rule is announced in Harper v. Albany Ins. Co., 17 N. Y. 194; Harper v. New York Ins. Co., 22 Id. 441; Pindar v. Kings County Ins. Co., 36 Id. 648; Collins v. Farmville Insurance and Banking Co., 79 N. C. 279: 28 Am. Rep. 322; Whitmarsh v. Conway Ins. Co., 16 Gray 359; Marti v. Connecticut Fire Ins. Co., 95 Ga. 604: 30 L. R. A. 835; Wheeler v. Traders' Ins. Co., 62 N. H. 450:13 Am. St. Rep. 582.
(3) The clause in the policy against concealment and misrepresentation provides that the entire policy shall be
The terms of the condition relied upon by the defendant are not those which would naturally direct the attention of the insured to the necessity of disclosing incumbrances upon the property, or suggest that they were material to the risk. A concealment of a fact not material would not avoid the policy. The question of whether the policy shall be void by reason of concealment or misrepresentation is, by the terms of the policy, made to depend upon their materiality. The fact that there is a mortgage for two hundred dollars would not seem to be material in effecting an insurance for nine hundred and sixty dollars. The defendant did not desire to go to the jury upon the question of whether such concealment was material, and we cannot, in view of the holding of the court below, assume that it was. As neither party desired to go to the jury on any issue of fact, it was for the court to direct a verdict on such a state of facts as it regarded proved by the evidence; and the verdict will be upheld if there is. any evidence to sustain it. Robinson v. Larabee, 58 Vt. 652.
The evidence tended to show, that, if there was concealment or misrepresentation, it was not material. The insured were the owners of the property, notwithstanding-
In Dolliver v. St. Joseph Fire and Marine Ins. Co., 128 Mass. 315, the policy contained the following provision-: “If the interest of the assured be any other than the entire, unconditional and sole ownership. of the property, for the use and benefit of the assured, it must be-' represented to the company, and so expressed in the written part of the -policy
In Fletcher v. The Commonwealth Ins. Co., 18 Pick. 419, the plaintiff obtained insurance on his store without disclosing the fact that it stood on the land of another person, under a verbal agreement terminable at the pleasure of such person upon six months notice. No inquiry was made by the insurer in regard to his title. It was held that there was not a concealment of a material fact; that the policy was not thereby avoided; and that the materiality of the fact concealed was for the jury.
In Commonwealth, by Insurance Commissioners, v. Hide & Leather Ins. Co., 112 Mass. 136, it is held that a provision in a policy of fire insurance that “the assured covenants and engages that the representation given in the application for this insurance contains a just, full and true exposition of all the facts and circumstances in regard to the condition, situation, value and risk of the property insured,” is waived by an insurer who issues the policy upon a bare request to insure the property, unaccompanied by any statement as to its condition, situation, value or risk.
In Washington Fire Ins. Co. v. Kelly, 32 Md. 421: 3 Am. Rep. 149, the policy was issued upon the condition, that, if the interest of the insured in the property was a leasehold interest, or other interest not absolute, the company should be so informed at the time of contracting the insurance, or the policy would be void. The insured at the time the insurance was negotiated, was the owner of an equity of redemption only, and no mention of that fact was made. It was held that the interest of the insured as mortgagor was absolute, within the meaning of the policy, and no explanation of that interest was required before the issuing of the policy.
Judgment affirmed.