The opinion of the Court was delivered by
In this action on a fire insurance policy covering a stock of goods, the defendant sets up the failure of the plaintiff to comply with three stipulations of the policy:
1. “This entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement indorsed hereon or added hereto, shall be void * * * if the interest of the insured be other than unconditional and sole ownership.”
2. The provision that the proof of loss shall be rendered within sixty days, “signed and sworn to by said insured, *77 stating the knowledge and belief of the insured as to the time and origin of the fire; the interest of the insured and of all others in the property,” etc.
3. “The insured, as often as required, shall exhibit to any person designated by this company all that remains of any property herein described, and submit to examination under oath by any person named by this company, and subscribe the same.”
The fourth request was manifestly covered by the charge made under the first and second requests.
*80
“It is the province of courts to enforce contracts — not_ to make or modify them. When there is neither fraud, accident nor mistake, the exercise of dispensing power is not a judicial function.”
The Harriman
v.
Emerick,
*81
It need hardly be said that if circumstances arise without fault of the insured which make it practically impossible for him to appear for examination, from necessity he will be excused. In this case, however, the excuse offered in evidence on the part of the plaintiff for his failure toi submit to the examination was that a few weeks before the fire he had killed a man, and was at the time of the demand and of the trial a fugitive from justice. The Circuit Judge refused to charge, “That the fact that plaintiff is a fugitive from justice, if such be the fact, would not excuse him' from' appearing and submitting to an examination, if demanded by defendant.” This was a manifest error. Mere unexplained absence would not be sufficient to excuse compliance with the contract. Certainly intentional and wilful absence will not excuse.
Firemen’s Fund Ins. Co.
v.
Sims, 42
S. E., 269 (Ga.);
Gross
v.
Ins.
Co.,
The Circuit Judge did not submit to the jury the construction of the letters introduced in evidence, as the defendant charges, unless a general submission to them of the question of waiver could be so regarded. There was no request for a specific charge as to the true construction of these letters, or any particular expressions used in them. Indeed, our attention has not been called to any letter or portion of a letter that seemed sufficiently doubtful in meaning to require judicial construction, and that would have been made plainer by any words the presiding Judge could have used.
For the errors in the charge above mentioned, the judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed and a new trial ordered.
