27 Ga. App. 367 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1921
1. Where a contract of insurance insures the proprietor of a jewelry store against robbery committed on his premises, which robbery is defined in the policy as “ an overt felonious act committed in the presence of a custodian and of which he was actually cognizant,” a felonious taking or conversion by a customer of a diamond-ring on the premises of the insured, even though done in the presence of the clerk or custodian as contemplated in the policy, is not such a felonious taking as is insured against by the policy, unless the clerk having the ring in custody had actual knowledge of its felonious taking or conversion.
2. In a suit by the insured against the insurer to recover for a loss covered by the above-recited clause in the policy, an allegation in the petition, that, after the clerk or custodian had placed a tray containing rings upon the counter, the customer extracted from the tray a diamond-ring of a certain value and then hurriedly left the petitioner’s •store before he could be apprehended or detained by the petitioner’s employees, and where the petition further alleges that such taking was “ a robbery of jewelry from petitioner as covered and included in the-terms of said policy,” the petition will be construed as alleging that
Judgment reversed.