Herrman v. . Adriatic Fire Insurance Co.

85 N.Y. 162, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 65
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 19, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 85 N.Y. 162 (Herrman v. . Adriatic Fire Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herrman v. . Adriatic Fire Insurance Co., 85 N.Y. 162, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 65 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Forger, Ch. J.

This is an action on a policy of fire insurance. The property insured consisted of different buildings, and different kinds of chattel property kept in those buildings, respectively. The different properties insured, and the different amounts put at risk, each are specifically named in the policy with much minuteness. The property destroyed and for the loss of which the action is brought was but parts of the whole at risk, being the dwelling-house, and most of the contents of it, and four outbuildings, essential or convenient for use with the dwelling.

The question in agitation at the trial term and at the General Term was, whether the policy was avoided by a breach of the condition, that if the premises should become vacant or unoccupied, and so remain for more than thirty days without notice to, and consent of, the defendant, in writing, the policy -should be void. The plaintiff contends that the two words “ vacant ” and “unoccupied” are synonyms, and are to be interpreted as having the same meaning, and that that meaning is empty. And then argues that, as the dwelling-house was not empty, there was no breach of the condition. There are doubtless conditions of a dwelling-house, or other like structure, when either word applied to it, or both words applied to it, will express a like state of it. There are, however, states of it when that will riot be the case. It is so, because the different things that are receptive of the epithets of vacant and unoccupied are different in then capability and susceptibility of being filled or occupied. Some cannot have one of those terms applicable to them, without the other at the same • time being also applicable. Some, from the nature of the use which goes with the occupation of them, may not be vacant, and yet they will, in any just use of the term as applicable to them, be unoccupied. A dwelling-house is chiefly designed for the abode of mankind. For the com *168 fort of the dwellers in it, many kinds of chattel property are gathered in it. So that, in the use of it, it is a place of deposit of things inanimate and a place of resort and tarrying of beings animate. With those animate far away from it, but with those inanimate still in it, it would not be vacant, for it would not be empty and void. And as a possible case, with all inanimate things' taken out, but with those animate still remaining in it, it would not be unoccupied, for it would still be used for shelter and repose. And it is because, in our experience of the purpose and use of a dwelling-house, we have come to associate our notion of the occupation of it with the habitual presence and continued abode of human beings within it, that that word applied to a dwelling always raises that conception in the mind. Sometimes, indeed, the use of the word “ vacant,” as applied to a dwelling, carries the notion that there is no dweller therein; and we should not be sure always to get or convey the idea of an empty house, by the words vacant dwelling ” applied to it. But when the phrase vacant or unoccupied ” is applied to a dwelling-house, plainly there is a purpose — an attempt to give a different statement of the condition thereof ,• by the first word, as an empty house, by the second word, as one in which there is not habitually the presence of human beings. In the case of Herrman v. The Merchants’ Insurance Company, * in this court, in June last, the decision went, not on the ground that the two words were used to mean, or that they meant, the same condition of the building, but that, by the use .of the copulative conjunction with them, there was a contract framed of which there was no breach, unless the house was at the same time in the double state expressed by the phrase; that is, both vacant and unoccupied. at the time of the fire, both empty and unuspd for abode.

It is clear, from the testimony, that the dwelling-house insured by the defendant was not occupied as such at the time of the fire. The fortnightly visits of the plaintiff and his wife to it were not the occupation that is meant when a dwelling- *169 house is spoken of. The weekly tours of inspection of the farmer and members of his family living on the grounds, and his supervision of it from his own house, were more useful, but they fell short of being occupation of it. The term unoccupied,” used in the policy, is entitled to a sense adapted to the occasion of its use, and the subject-matter to which it is applied. It does not need that we go into discussion of the good reasons for exacting the condition on taking a risk upon a dwelling-house. It is enough that the parties have come into that covenant. It is to have a meaning fitted to the circumstances in which it was made and to the subject to which it related. We have already said enough to show our opinion that, for a dwelling-house to be in a state of occupation, there must be in it the presence of human beings as at their customary place of abode, not absolutely and uninterruptedly continuous, but that must be the place of usual return and habitual stoppage. We think that a verdict of a jury would not have been allowed to stand, that found that this dwelling-house was occupied at the time of the fire, within the terms of the policy. But it is said, that though this may be so in general, yet that the defendant made its contract with a view to just the state of things that existed with this property; that it was chargeable with a knowledge of the character and use of the premises, and that there would be a change of occupancy, such as in fact occurred. We cannot yield to that view. It may be that the defendant knew that it was but the place of summer abode for the plaintiff. Its contract was issued in the summer when the property was in strict occupancy, and it provided for the coming of the fall, when that occupancy would be abandoned or modified ; for the policy was not void at once on a cessation of occupancy. That cessation must last for thirty days, and be unnotified to the defendants and continue .thereafter without its consent. There was opportunity for the plaintiff to keep up that indemnity or to get other; and to the defendant to retain the risk, or to be freed from it, when that occupancy was about to cease, and notice was given.

" Bor are we able, after much consideration, to agree with the *170 learned G-eneral Term on the ground upon which it put its judgment. The condition of the policy is: Or if the above-mentioned premises shall ■ * * " * become vacant or unoccupied "* * * this policy shall be void.” As we have above said, there were several different kinds and pieces of property insured, and, as was indicated by the description of them, the whole making up a well-to-do proprietor’s rural establishment. The understanding must have been that there was comprised in the whole the buildings on a j^arm or country seat and the chattel property usually kept at such a place. The contention is that the words “ above-mentioned premises” are collective and apply to all the property described, and the intent of the condition is that if all of it should be left .unoccupied, then the policy should be void; but that one or several, or many of the buildings might be unoccupied, yet, if the rest were occupied, the condition of the policy would be saved.

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Bluebook (online)
85 N.Y. 162, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herrman-v-adriatic-fire-insurance-co-ny-1881.