55 W. Va. 63 | W. Va. | 1904
Virginia Fire Insurance Company issued a policy to W. F. Tyree insuring a house and some furniture. The policy is in Tyree’s name. The policy contains a. clause that the company should not be liable under it “if the title or interest of assured is less than the entire, absolute, unconditional, unincumbered fee simple ownership” in Tyree. The land was the separate estate of his wife. He built the house upon it at his own expense, and lived in it with his wife. When Tyree applied to the agent for insurance, Tyree says he said to the agent, “I want my house insured,” but the agent did not interrogate him as to his title. There is controversy only as to the loss from destruction of the dwelling house. The company tendered return of the premium. Tyree brought suit on the policy, recovered verdict and judgment for $1,875 of the $2,000 insurance on the house, and the company brought the case to this Court.
A vital question is: . Had Tyree an insurable interest in the dwelling house, it being his wife’s separate estate? I am perplexed upon the question. “It has become a fixed rule of insurance law that tire assured must have an interest of some kind in the subject matter of insurance, whether property or life. Two reasons may be assigned for this rule. In the first place, it is inexpedient that a contract so necessary for the protection of legitimate business should be prostituted to illegal uses as a mode of speculation; and in the second place, it is opposed to public policy, because demoralizing to the insured, that he should be permitted to enter into any contract under which he would have an interest in the destruction of the subject matter rather than in its preservation.”- 16 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 846.-
“When there is no interest at all to be protected, a policy will be invalid, as counter to the spirit and purpose of the contract, as well as against public policy.” “When the insured has nothing to lose, but everything to gain, by the event insured against, it would be dangerous and demoralizing to subject the insured to so great a temptation to destroy the property or the life upon which the insurance is effected.” May on Ins. ss. 74, 75. “The question whether the husband has insurable interest in the wife’s property must depend, in. great measure, upon the
Another question. Tyree represented to the agent that he owned the house. As he himself says, he said to the agent, “I want my house insured,” and in the policy he represented that he had “entire, absolute, unconditional, unincumbered fee simple ownership.” An insurer has right to know the truth about ownership. It would be willing to insure the fee owner, because he would have a motive not to burn the property, but not willing to insure one not owning, for he might have a motive to burn and get the money. “If the insured states the nature or extent of his interest, he must state it truly. If the nature of the insured’s interest is such that it would influence
“A false representation as to the interest of the assured in the property is regarded as material, and such as, if substantially false, avoids the policy.” Wood on Tus. s. 179. Chief Justice Marshall said: “Insurances against fire are made in confidence that the assured will use all precautions to avoid the calamity insured against which would be suggested by his interest. The extent of his interest must always influence the underwriter in taking or rejecting the risk and estimating the premium. So far as it may influence him in this respect, it ought to be communicated to him.” Columbian Ins. Co. v. Lawrence, 2 Peters 48. If the' policy requires a statement of interest, it is thus made material, and must be true. 1 May on Ins. ss. 285, 287. “When the condition requires 'the applicant to have the entire, unconditonal and sole ownership, a policy issued to one who described the property as his frame dwelling house, when his title was only a quit-claim deed from a second mortgage, avoids the policy under the sole ownership clause.” Idem, s. 287 B. “A representation may be made by express stipulation material, in the sense that inquiry into its materialit]'- is thereby precluded, and the insured will be bound in such case, oven though the fact be actually immaterial. The 'truth of the statements being generally made in such case the basis of the contract, it is sufficient to show they are actually untrue.” Joyce on Ins. s. 1912. In the.same section we find it said, “If a fire insurance policy is conditioned to be void fin case of any misrepresentation whatever/ any misrepresentation, whether material or not, will avoid it.” If a person does not like the conditions, he need not accept the policy. Tyree in words represented that he was sole owner. He assured the company that he had absolute fee simple, and he agreed that if he had not, the policy should be void. The agent had no knowledge to the contrary. Surely the company had-the right to insert this condition as a reasonable one for its protection.
Plaintiff’s instructions 1, 3 and 4 and special replication to plea 2 are bad for reasons above given. The defendant’s five instructions should have been given for the same reasons.
Judgment reversed and new trial awarded.
Reversed.