This was a suit upon a policy of insurance by which, on the 10th day of March, 1873, the defendant insured the plaintiff for one year against loss or damage by ffre to the amount of $2,000; as follows: $1,000 on a two-story frame hotel in Pleasant Hill, Missouri, and $1,000 on personal property. On the 18th day of April, 1873, all of the foregoing property was destroyed by fire. The plaintiff recovered judgment for the full amount of the policy, and the defendant has appealed.
The policy contained, among others, the following condition : “ If the interest in the property to be insured be a leasehold interest, or other interest not absolute, it must be so represented to the company and expressed in
Agent, M. B. Yocum.
F. D. Mers.”
At the same time the foregoing instrument, which relates to the property in question, was executed, Briant, as the agent of Yocum, leased the hotel to the plaintiff for one year. Briant, in his testimony, said: “ The lease was of the same date as the agreement to reconvey, and both executed same date, December 16th, 1872,” and it was in evidence that he received rent from the plaintiff. On the 14th day of July, 1875, Briant, who had in the mean time purchased the property of Yocum, executed and delivered to the plaintiff a deed therefor. On the 18th day of April, 1873, the day on which the property insured was destroyed by fire, the plaintiff had paid nothing under the written agreement of Yocum to reconvey. On this state of facts the defendant contends that the policy is void as to the building.
We think it quite clear from the record that the plaintiff had, at the time of the fire, only a leasehold interest in the building. The instrument executed by Yocum, through his agent, Briant, was not a contract of sale, and conferred upon the plaintiff none of the rights of a vendee of the property in question, and,hence, does not come within the rule laid down in Gaylord v. Lamar Fire Ins. Co.,
We are next to consider whether the condition of the policy above recited has been complied’with. A warranty is a part of the contract, and must be exactly ,. . . and literally fulfilled. It is m the nature of a . condition precedent, and no inquiry is allowed into the materiality or immateriality of the fact warranted. Loehner v. Home Mut. Ins. Co.,
When, by the-terms of the policy, no disclosure is required of the assured as to the extent of his interest, and/ no inquiry is made by the company in reference thereto, ■ a lessee may, in effecting insurance, properly describe the premises as his, but his recovery will, in case of loss, be restricted to his qualified interest. Niblo v. North American Fire Ins. Co., 1 Sand. 551, 561; Fletcher v. Commonwealth Ins. Co.,
Reversed.
