163 Pa. 443 | Pa. | 1894
Opinion bk
This is an appeal from the refusal of the court below to set aside a compulsory nonsuit in an action on a policy of insurance. The action was brought to recover compensation for the loss the plaintiff sustained in the death of his horse in a stable in Philadelphia, from an injury received there, and the nonsuit was entered on the ground that by removing his horse from Jenkintown, where the insurance was effected, to the place where the injury was received and the death occurred, he forfeited his right to the indemnity guaranteed by the policy. Two questions are raised by the appeal. They are (1) whether there was a forfeiture, and (2) if there was, whether there was evidence of a waiver of it by the company. The first question turns on the construction of section 14 of the by-laws which is as follows: “ The insurance of this company shall be confined to a distance not exceeding twelve miles from the borough of Hatboro.” The learned judge of the court below construed this by-law to mean that the property must be kept within the distance limit to' entitle the insured to indemnity in case of loss, and he cited 95 American Decisions, 751; Wood on Ins., sec. 47; London Ins. Co. v. Lycoming Ins. Co., 105 Pa. 424, and Insurance Association v. Evans, 102 Pa. 281, as in accord with and supporting his construction. In all the- cases cited except in Ins. Co. v. Evans, supra, the location of the property was desigmated in the policy. In some of them the designation of the location of it was held to be merely descriptive; in others it was regarded as consti
The specifications of error are sustained.
Judgment reversed and procedendo awarded.