6 A. 27 | N.H. | 1886
The defendants claim that the action cannot be maintained, because it was not commenced in this court within twelve months from the date of loss, as stipulated in the policy. *142 The action was commenced within twelve months of the loss, in the circuit court of the United States. Subsequently, after the lapse of more than twelve months, by agreement of the parties, the suit was transferred to this court. The entry of the action here was not of a new action then first commenced: it was the same action before begun in the federal court. The agreement to enter the action here and prosecute the defence was a waiver by the defendants of the limitation in the policy. The limitation was not pleaded, and this defence could not be made except under a special plea.
The buildings were occupied at the time the insurance was effected, August 15, 1876. From August 24, 1876, to December 11, of the same year, they were not occupied. They were consumed by fire December 20, 1876. The policy contained the condition that "if the premises shall be occupied or used so as to increase the risk, or become vacant and unoccupied for a period of more than ten days, or the risk be increased by any means whatever within the control of the assured, without the consent of the company * * * then, and in every such case, this policy shall be void." It seems to have been conceded at the trial that the plaintiff's buildings had been "unoccupied," within the meaning of that term as used in the policy for a period of more than ten days. But a different meaning was given to the phrase "vacant and unoccupied;" and, under instructions of the court upon the definition of the word vacant, the jury found that the buildings were not "vacant and unoccupied" for a period of more than ten days between the date of the policy and the fire.
The meaning of the words "vacant and unoccupied," as used in the contract of insurance, is that which the parties intended to give them; and that intention is to be found from the whole instrument, the subject-matter of the contract, and the situation of the property insured. The object of the stipulation against vacancy and non-occupancy was to guard against the increased risk which arises from the absence of everybody whose duty or interest might afford some protection. In the same clause of the contract, "increase of risk" from the mode of occupation and use of the premises, and "increase of risk by any means whatever," are mentioned as express grounds for avoiding the policy. "If the buildings shall be occupied or used so as to increase the risk, or become vacant and unoccupied for a period of more than ten days, or the risk be increased by any means whatever," is a statement in which the leading idea in the condition of forfeiture is "increase of risk," and that idea must have been intended as a part of the definition of the words "vacant and unoccupied." It was the increase of risk from the loss of care and attention of persons otherwise present which the parties intended to guard against by the stipulation of forfeiture in case of vacancy and non-occupancy for more than ten days. They intended by the words "vacant and unoccupied," *143 as used in the policy and in the connection in which they were used, such a desertion of the premises and removal from them as would materially increase the risk.
The case of Sleeper v. Insurance Co.,
In Keith v. Insurance Co., 10 Allen 228, the policy contained a provision that "if the building insured remains unoccupied more than thirty days without notice, the policy will be void." The building was a trip-hammer shop, and had not been used for business for more than thirty days, the machinery and tools remaining there, and the plaintiff's son going through the shop nearly every day to see if things were right. It was decided that these facts did not constitute occupancy, but that some practical use must have been made of the building; and if it remained thus, without *144
any practical use, for the space of more than thirty days, it was within the meaning of the policy, unoccupied, and the policy became void. And in Ashworth v. Insurance Co.,
In all the cases referred to, the terms "vacancy" and "non-occupancy" are used interchangeably, and as equivalent in meaning. "When the policy specially provides, that in case the premises `shall be left unoccupied' [Paine v. Agricultural Ins. Co., 5 Th. C. 619], or `shall remain unoccupied' [Keith v. Insurance Co., supra], or `shall become vacant' [Cummins v. Insurance Co., 5 Hun 554], or `unoccupied' [Wustum v. Insurance Co.,
The question of vacancy and non-occupancy, and the question of increase of risk from these and other changes of circumstances, are questions of fact for the jury. Gamwell v. Merchants' Insurance Co., 12 Cush. 167; Luce v. Insurance Co.,
The defendants, at the trial, moved that a verdict be directed for them on the ground that there was no evidence to be submitted to the jury that the insured premises were not "vacant and unoccupied." The motion was denied, and the question of vacancy and non-occupancy was submitted to the jury under instructions making a distinction in meaning between these terms as used in the policy, and leaving the question of vacancy to be determined upon the evidence, without reference to the question of increase of risk. Taking the meaning of the phrase "vacant and unoccupied," as used in the policy, to be such vacancy and non-occupancy as materially increased the risk, there was no evidence that the buildings insured were not "vacant and unoccupied," for a period of more than ten days, in that sense. The premises were not occupied for nearly three months between the date of the policy and the fire. Little or no furniture of sufficient value to remove was left in the house, which was remote from habitations, five miles in one direction and two in the other. There was no person in the vicinity whose duty or interest required him to have any care over it. The house was open, some of the windows broken, some entirely gone, and it was exposed to the incursions of chance travellers, pleasure-seekers, sportsmen, and tramps. Nothing short of destruction, which subsequently came, could have added to the abandoned character of the premises and the desolation which sat upon them. The facts all point to one conclusion. There is no circumstance showing or tending to show that the buildings were not "vacant and unoccupied," and there was no evidence showing or tending to show that the risk was not increased. There is no fact that lessens or modifies the force of the facts that show increased danger. It does not alter the case that the plaintiff did not know of the vacancy and non-occupancy until the time of re-occupation. Reasonable care required that he should have known of the tenant's removal, and it was his duty to see that the terms of the contract were carried out. Sleeper v. Insurance Co., supra.
In his application, the plaintiff did not answer the question whether he would agree to keep the premises occupied. But this omission cannot contradict or expunge the express stipulation of the policy on the subject, and was not a waiver of it. The defendants did not consent to the non-occupancy. They were not *146 informed of it until long after the fire, and even in the plaintiff's proof of loss, he failed to give this material information. The parties could not have intended such an abandonment of the premises as the case shows, and at the same time not have intended that they would be "vacant and unoccupied" in the sense in which those words were used in the forfeiture clause of the policy. There being no evidence competent to be submitted to the jury that the buildings were not for more than ten days after the insurance "vacant and unoccupied," and vacancy and non-occupancy being manifest from undisputed evidence, the motion of the defendants for a verdict should have been granted, and the exception to the refusal is sustained.
Judgment for the defendants.
CARPENTER and BINGHAM, JJ., did not sit: the others concurred.