159 Iowa 121 | Iowa | 1913
The building was of hollow brick, with shingle roof. The main part was about thirty feet wide, forty feet long, and twenty-two feet high, to which was attached an engine room twenty feet by twenty-two feet and thirteen feet high. The latter, with the first floor of the main building, had been constructed for use as a creamery, while the second floor of the main building was finished for occupancy as a dwelling. Use as a creamery continued from 1899, when built, until 1904, when it ceased, and the machinery was removed. In 1905 the building, with an' acre of ground on which it stood, was sold by the owner to the plaintiff, who had acquired the farm out of which this acre had been taken. In December, 1909, she procured a policy of insurance in which defendant contracted to indemnify her in event of loss or damage to the building by fire in the sum of $2,000. It burned July 22, 1910, and in this action recovery for the loss is sought.
A family had occupied the second story a portion of the time since acquired by plaintiff, and Waters, who was a single man and an employee of plaintiff, was in actual occupancy at the time the policy was issued, as well as when the building was destroyed by fire, though then temporarily absent. The defendant’s agent had not been in the building, but had seen it with windows and doors below covered with boards nailed on the outside, and the outside stairway to the second story, and was informed, at the time the application was made, that the occupancy was by Waters. In view of this state of the record, it is manifest that the issue as to whether the value and character of the building as a dwelling had been misrepresented by plaintiff in her application with the design of deceiving the insurer was for the jury to determine, and there was no error in so ruling.
No evidence of the cost of taking the hollow brick from the wall wa¿ adduced, nor was their value, save as this may have appeared from the testimony of the value of hollow brick on the market. The dimensions of the building were shown, and also of the brick, so that, as they were laid in the wall but one thickness, the number of good brick might have been ascertained approximately, and, from the value of new blocks, the value of the salvage estimated. That the expense of removing the brick from the walls was not proven can hardly be said to have been prejudicial to defendant; and, if it desired a more accurate basis of computation, it had the
The judgment is Affirmed.