The policy clearly reveals that unscheduled personal property is not covered (against theft) where it is kept in a dwelling on premises owned, occupied by or rented to the insured, except while the insured is temporarily residing therein. See Provisions 1 and 3. However, property is covered where placed for safekeeping in an occupied dwelling not owned, occupied by or rented to the insured. See Provision 2.
The location of the property in question was clearly not owned by or rented to the insured. The defendant insurance company contends that by placing the goods in the garage on 2327 Getzen, the plaintiff was occupying such within the purview of the policy. If so the quoted language in Provision 2 is meaningless. If the mere placing of goods at a locale for safekeeping would constitute “occupancy” of such area, then there could be no “occupied dwelling” which was not also occupied by the insured. In considering an insurance contract, this court will not construe the language, ostensibly written to show limits of coverage, to completely disallow any coverage whatsoever. “A contract must be given a reasonable construction which will uphold and enforce the instrument, if possible, rather than a construction which would render it meaningless and ineffective or which would lead to an absurd result.”
Brown v. Chrysler Corp.,
*243 There is no question that the principal building situated on the premises at which the garage was located was occupied. Thus, the sole question that remains is whether the garage in question constitutes an “occupied dwelling” so as to be within the limits of coverage.
Historically, the term “dwelling” or even the more restricted term “dwelling house” “embraces in law the entire congregation of buildings, main and auxiliary, used for abode.”
North British &c. Ins. Co. v. Tye,
Basically, there is authority for the proposition that dwelling includes all within the curtilage, although some cases have predicated their rulings on whether the particular structure is attached, contiguous or appurtenant to the “main” house. See 13A Words and Phrases 561, Dwelling.
Here with reference to the “dwelling” on the described premises the contract distinguishes between property which is attached to the principal building (listed under Coverage A— Dwelling) and private structures appertaining to the premises and located thereon (Coverage B—Appurtenant Private Structures). This is the only definition of the term “dwelling” contained in the policy.
While ambiguous terms are construed most strongly against the insurer and in favor of the insured, the construction must be reasonable and not strained.
Mattox v. New England Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
“Words contained in the contract will be constrúed in the sense in which they are apparently mutually employed by the contracting parties, irrespective of their proper and logical meaning.”
Brooks v. Folds,
Judgment affirmed.
