Eddy v. Hawkeye Ins.

30 N.W. 808, 70 Iowa 472
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 21, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 30 N.W. 808 (Eddy v. Hawkeye Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eddy v. Hawkeye Ins., 30 N.W. 808, 70 Iowa 472 (iowa 1886).

Opinion

EotheocK, J.

I. The policy upon which- the action is founded is dated on the twenty-fourth day of April, 1882. i. vire insur-statementas hraiiees: subsequent in-enmbranees: immaterial to risk. The property insured consisted of a dwelling-house and contents, a barn, and certain farm implements, and live-stock. The dwelling-house . . „ ,. , . ,. -, , . was insured tor ¡1)700, and it was totally destroyed u “ by fire on the tenth or eleventh day of July, 1885. The action was brought for the full amount of the insurance, and recovery was Had therefor. Before the policy was issued, the usual written application for insurance was made, and a copy of the application was indorsed on the policy. The application and policy described the insured property as being situated on the N. W. ^ of section 29, and the S. E. J of section 30, range 8, in Buchanan county. It might be inferred from this description that the plaintiff was the owner of a farm of three hundred and twenty acres, upon which the insured property was situated. This, however, was not the fact, as appears from the evidence, and from an answer to an interrogatory in the application, which is as follows: “Question. How many acres of land in your farm whereon the above building stands? Answer. Two hundred and sixty.”

The policy contains this clause: “That the basis of this contract is the said application and obligation, which shall be deemed and taken as a part of this policy, and as a warranty on the part of the assured, and any false or untrue answers or statements therein, material to the hazard of the risk, shall render this policy null and void. This contract of insurance is embraced wholly in such application and obligation of the assured, and this policy. This company [474]*474shall not be liable for any loss or damage while the above-mentioned premises shall be vacant or unoccupied. * * * In case any of said property shall be sold, conveyed or incumbered, whether by judicial decree, voluntary transfer, or otherwise, * * * without the written consent of this company is obtained, * * * this policy shall, in either event, immediately thereafter be null and void. *’ *

The application contained the following further questions and answers: “(18) Is any of such land or buildings incumbered, either by mortgage, judgment, unpaid amounts on bond or contract of purchase, mechanic’s liens, or otherwise? Yes. (19) If so, what is the nature of the incumbrance? Mortgage. (20) And to what amount? $2,000. (21) When is the incumbrance due? Two years. (22) Have there been any proceedings to enforce the same? No.” In answer to another question, it was stated in the application that the house which was insured was built in 1870.

The defendant, by its answer, alleged, in substance, (1) that the house was vacant and unoccupied when it was destroyed by fire; (2) that the land was incumbered by mortgage for an amount largely in excess of $2,000; (3) that, after the policy was issued, the land and buildings of plaintiff were incumbered by a mortgage and a judgment without the consent of the defendant; and (4) that the dwelling-house was built in 1862, and not in 1870.

There is really no conflict in the evidence upon the issues raised by the answer. The plaintiff did not own a farm of two quarter sections. He owned the N. E. ^ of section 29, The property insured was situated on the southwest forty acres of this tract. He also owned 100 ames in section 30, which cornered with his land in section 29. With this explanation as to the description of the land, it is sufficient to say that none of the mortgages which defendant sets up to defeat the policy were upon the land upon which the insured property was situated. All of the insured buildings were on [475]*475the S. "W. ¿ of the N. ~W. ¿ of section 29, and there was no mortgage upon that tract, nor upon the forty acres adjoining it on the north, when the application for insurance was made, nor at any other time since then.

Counsel for appellant insists that, because there were mortgages upon other tracts in the farm, the policy is void. It seems to us that it ought to be a sufficient answer to this position to say that the defendant did not insure the land against loss by fire, and the plaintiff could not have been apprehensive that the earth would be consumed by fire during the life of the policy.

But it is insisted that the answers to the questions in the policy are warranties, and the position seems to be that, if these answers are not literally correct in every joarticular, there is a breach of warranty; and the defendant is discharged from liability; and, in order to hold the plaintiff to the letter of the contract, it is claimed that the questions and answers with reference to incumbrances have reference to the whole farm, and not to the governmental subdivisions upon which the insured buildings were situated. Let this be admitted, and still we think that the mortgages do not discharge the defendant from liability. It is true, the policy provides that the application is a warranty on the part of the assured, but the same clause of the policy provides what kind of untrue answers to questions in the application shall be a breach of the warranty. The clause is as follows: “ A.nd any false or untrue answers therein, material to the hazard of the risk, shall render this policy null and void.” It is apparent that the answer that the farm was mortgaged for $2,000, when in fact the amount was about $2,600, was wholly immaterial, inasmuch as the eighty acres upon which the insured property was situated was not mortgaged at all, and the farm, as shown by the evidence, was worth $40 an acre, and the house, which was insured for $700, was worth $1,500. The same considerations apply to the subsequent mortgage. It in no manner affected the hazard of this risk.

[476]*476Before leaving this branch of the case, we desire to again refer to the fact that none of the mortgages covered the forty acres upon which the house was situated. There is oral testimony in the case which seems to assume that a mortgage given to one Smith, after the policy was issued, was on that tract, but the copy of the mortgage introduced in evidence by defendant shows this to be a mistake; and we infer, from the arguments of counsel for both parties, that the subsequent mortgage did not embrace the land upon which the house was situated.

II. It appears from the evidence that after the policy was issued, and before the loss, a judgment was rendered against MUS SAME. the plaintiff for $49.75, in the district court of 1 , mi - „ - . . Buchanan county. The defendant claims that this judgment renders the policy void. But the evidence shows that the house and other property insured, and that part of the land upon which it was situated, had been for many years the homestead of the plaintiff, and that it was his homestead when the loss occurred. It is true that the house had been temporarily occupied by a tenant, but it had not lost its homestead character. The judgment was therefore no lien upon the insured property, and did not affect the contract of' insurance. This point requires no further consideration.

III. The plaintiff in his application stated that the house was built in 1870. The fact is that it was built in 1862. 2.-; false statement as to age of material to risk. The defendant seeks to avoid liability on this J ground.

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Bluebook (online)
30 N.W. 808, 70 Iowa 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eddy-v-hawkeye-ins-iowa-1886.