19 La. 28 | La. | 1841
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff seeks to recover #1257 25 under a policy wherein defendants insured her against fire to the amount of $3000, on household furniture, liquors, bar room fixtures and billiard tables contained in a building- situate at the corner of
The decision of this case must rest on the meaning and effect to be given to the foregoing clause inserted in the policy. It seems to us that its object was to render certain, by a positive stipulation, that which otherwise would have depended upon general principles and judicial decisions, to wit: that the policies of the company should not be obligatory any longer than the property insured continued in the individual named in the policy as owner, and that by the transfer of his interest the policy should be void; fraudulent claims upon fire offices have been so frequent that the character of the fparty proposing to insure has been deemed a matter of importance, and clauses resembling the one under consideration, aro now generally to be found in all policies of insurance. It is believed that the nullity they pronounce or imply, according to the terms used, is generally understood as relating to cases where the insured has absolutely and permanently divested himself of all interest in the subject matter of the insurance ; being then without any interest at the time of the loss, the insured has sustained no in
It is sufficient if the insured has an interest or property in the subject matter of the insurance at the time of insuring ’
It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the Parish Court he affirmed with costs.