Dohlantry v. Blue Mounds Fire & Lightning Insurance
This text of 53 N.W. 448 (Dohlantry v. Blue Mounds Fire & Lightning Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
[187]*187The case is not distinguishable from that of Fitzgerald v. Conn. F. Ins. Co. 64 Wis. 463, wherein it was held that a dwelling house, used almost precisely as the one in question here was used, ivas "unoccupied,” within the meaning of that term as used in policies of insurance. That decision rules this case. It must be held that the dwelling house insured by the policy in suit was unoccupied, to wit, vacant (as that term is employed in the policy), for more than thirty days before it was burned, and hence it was competent for the company to insist that the policy was inoperative and void when the dwelling house and its contents were burned.
In Loomis v. Rockford Ins. Co. 77 Wis. 87, the rule derived from a somewhat extended examination of the cases was laid down and applied, that, “although the insurance is distributed to the different items of insured property, the contract is indivisible if the breach of the contract as to an item of the property affects, or may reasonably be supposed to affect, the other items by increasing the risk thereon.” It requires no argument bo show that in this case the continued absence of any occupant of the dwelling house may reasonably be presumed to increase the risk of loss of the barns and granary, and the contents thereof, situated on the same farm, and presumably subject to the care and watchfulness of an occupant of the dwelling house, which the contract calls for.
The record of the annual meeting of the company, held in January, 1888, shows that such meeting was advised of the action of the board of directors of April 1, 1881, and did not disapprove the same. The record also shows, if we understand it correctly, that the directors reported to the same meeting a list of outstanding valid policies, and among these was the policy in suit for the full amount of $1,575. 3SÍ o objection was made to the validity of the policy, nor was there any suggestion that it had been or should be declared forfeited and erased from the list. At the annual meeting in January, 1889, the directors again reported the policy in suit as a valid policy, to the full amount thereof, against the company. Again the validity of the policy passed unchallenged. On May, 7, 1889, an assessment of two per cent, was made on all outstanding policies of the company, and the policy in 'Suit was assessed, with the others, to the full amount thereof. The plaintiffs were notified to pay such assessment, and paid the same to the treasurer of the company. This payment, with others, was reported regularly to the board of directors. No objection was taken thereto, or atternpt to refund the money' thus paid, until after this action was commenced.
It seems to us that the above-mentioned acts and omissions of the company and its board of directors are entirely inconsistent with the claim that the policy is forfeited. By holding the plaintiffs as members of the company, and [189]*189their property as insured in it,— thus interposing an impediment to their obtaining other insurance on their property,— and by requiring them to pay an assessment for losses occurring after the alleged forfeiture of the policy,— thus treating the policy as valid by holding plaintiffs to the performance of obligations which had no existence if it was invalid,— the company is now estopped to deny its validity. The cases in this court which hold this doctrine are cited in the brief of counsel for plaintiffs. The principle upon which-they are decided is that although grounds exist for declaring the policy forfeited, yet if the company, having knowledge of all the material facts, takes any action to the prejudice of the insured, inconsistent with the claim that the policy is forfeited, it is estopped to assert the invalidity thereof. We are of the opinion that this is such a case. Hence it was error to direct a verdict for the defendant, for such direction was given solely upon the ground that the policy is forfeited.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause will he remanded for a new trial.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
53 N.W. 448, 83 Wis. 181, 1892 Wisc. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dohlantry-v-blue-mounds-fire-lightning-insurance-wis-1892.