101 Ga. 331 | Ga. | 1897
The Phenix Insurance Company issued to Clay a policy of insurance on a house of the latter, which had been by him let to a lewd woman with knowledge on his part that it was to be used by her for purposes of prostitution. The question to be decided here is as to whether the fact that the house was so rented and used will, in case of loss, defeat Clay’s action on the policy. In the absence of any stipulation in the policy under which the immoral use of the house would vacate the contract, the policy would not be vacated unless it be shown that the contract is immoral or illegal or is against public policy and not enforceable. It is well settled that contracts will not be avoided by the courts as against public policy, except “where the case is free from doubt and where an injury to the public interest clearly appears. ” Therefore, to defeat the action on the policy, it must be shown either that the policy is itself illegal as promoting or tending to promote the maintenance of a lewd house, or that the contract of insurance, while in itself legal, is so- connected with the illegal act or business or with the contract of rental that the courts, on grounds of public policy, will not lend their aid in its enforcement.
The policy was for a valuable and legal consideration and .for what appears on its face to be a good and lawful purpose. It was made not to protect the business of keeping a lewd house, but to protect the property of the owner of the building. Even were the owner the person conducting this illegal business, the policy would be issued to him, not as one engaged in such business, but as the owner of the property insured; not to protect him against the consequences of the illegal business, but .against accident to his property. For this reason the present -case is to be distinguished from decisions cited in which policies of lottery and marine insurance have been held void. The distinction is well drawn in the case of Niagara Falls Insurance Co. v. DeGraff, 12 Mich. 124, by Campbell, J., a part of whose opinion is here adapted to the present ease. The in.suranee of a lottery-ticket requires that the lottery be drawn in order to attach the insurance on the risk. Where a ship is insured for an illegal voyage, that voyage is the only one upon which the insurance would apply, and the underwriter becomes thus directly a party to the illegal act. In some cases the insurance is against loss by forfeiture or penalty incurred by reason of the illegal trade, and the purpose and object of the insurance .are therefore a violation of law. In some of the cases, again, the insured property is liable to seizure and forfeiture, and a doubt • arises as to whether the assured has an insurable interest. To make analogous to these the case of an insurance on property used for immoral puiposes, the insurance must be against the consequences of a breach of the law, as would be the case if this policy in express terms insured the party maintaining a lewd house against loss by fine or penalty incurred by reason • of the illegal business. The policy, as in fa'ct made, differs widely from this; for, as we have seen, it insured against loss by fire, and not against the consequences of the unlawful conduct of the assured. The owner could, without violating the policy, use his house for any other and lawful purpose which
Were insurance policies not enforceable when issued on buildings used as houses of prostitution, the owners of such buildings might be less willing to have them so used. To hold such policies good and binding might, therefore, while holding out absolutely no aid to such uses, indirectly and negatively encourage owners to let their buildings for immoral purposes. A consequence so negative in its character, so remote in its. effect, is one which can not be said in law to promote or to tend to promote the maintenance of these houses. Such policy of insurance can be said to promote the illegal business only by failing to discourage it, to aid it only by declining to throw obstacles in its way, and certainly this is not a case “free from doubt, where an injury to the public interest clearly appears.” See 3 Joyce on Insurance, §§2536, 2537. To refuse to enforce transactions relating to property used by the owner for immoral purposes, unless such transactions tended positively to discourage such illegal use, would be to infringe on the property rights of the owner and to extend the penalty beyond that prescribed by law. The statute which forbids the maintenance of a lewd house does not subject the building to any forfeiture, but renders him who maintains the lewd house guilty of a misdemeanor and personally liable for a penalty. The rights of the owner in his property are not therefore lessened, for the penalty relates to his person and not to the house. If an insurance policy on a building used as a house of prostitution will not be enforced by the courts, why should they not also refuse to enforce a contract for the sale of the building? For, while to allow the sale of the house would not encourage its illegal use, yet to disallow the sale would discourage such use
Judgment affirmed, with direction.