Insurance Co. of the State of Pennsylvania v. O'Connell

34 Ill. App. 357, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 257
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 16, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 34 Ill. App. 357 (Insurance Co. of the State of Pennsylvania v. O'Connell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Insurance Co. of the State of Pennsylvania v. O'Connell, 34 Ill. App. 357, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 257 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

C. B. Smith, J.

This was an action upon an insurance policy issued by appellant to appellee, insuring his barn in the sum of $800. The declaration is in the usual form, setting out the policy, with its various clauses and conditions, alleging the insurance of the barn and its subsequent burning while the policy was in force. The plea was the general issue. A trial resulted in a verdict for appellee for $836, and after overruling a motion for a new trial the court rendered judgment for appellee against appellant on the verdict. Appellant brings the case here on appeal, and assigns numerous errors, and asks for a reversal.

The property insured was described in the policy as a “ one and one-half story frame building, shingle roof, occupied by a tenant as a private barn, situate on lot 1, block 2, S. W. J-section 5, Braidwood, Illinois.” One of the clauses in the policy read as follows: “And any false representation by the assured of the condition, situation or occupancy of the property ór any omission to make known any fact material to the risk, or an over-valuation, or any misrepresentation whatever, either in a written application or otherwise, * * * or if the above mentioned premises shall be occupied or used so as to increase the risk, or become vacant or unoccupied, and so remainfor more than ten days without notice to and the consent of this company, in writing, * * * then, and in every such case, this policy shall be void.” Another clause in the policy contained the following language: “It is a part of this contract that any person other than the assurer who may have procured this insurance to be taken by this company, shall be deemed to be the agent of the assured named in this policy, and not of this company under any circumstances whatever, or in any transaction relating to this insurance.” The first and chief contention of appellant urged upon our consideration is that the description and occupancy of the property described in the policy as above set out, is false, and therefore a fraud upon the company, and that the other provisions above set out make the statement of the description and occupancy of the property a warranty of its truthfulness. And that if it is not true in any respect, then the policy is void and appellee is not entitled to recover.

The facts, as disclosed in this record and heard by the court and jury, are these: Appellee O’Connell owned the barn in question for a good many years—while he lived in Braidwood; he used it himself and kept it insured, through John H. Ward, an insurance agent in Joliet. Some time prior to the insurance in question appellee closed up his business in Braidwood and packed some wagons and butchers’ tools and a variety of other things in this barn and locked it up, and moved to Chicago. At the time - the former insurance upon the barn expired appellee wrote from Chicago to John H. Ward, who he supposed was still in the insurance business, and inclosed him money to pay for the insurance, and requested him to again insure the barn, but gave him no specific directions and made no written application. Mr. Ward knew the condition of the property and its location, and how it was occupied; but when he received this letter and the money to pay for the insurance, he had gone out of the insurance business and was no longer acting as an agent; however, being desirous to accommodate appellee, he called on James Egan, the agent of appellant, and asked him to take the risk. Ward testifies that he told Egan when he went for the insurance what the property was, that it was one of his own risks ever since the property was built, and that he represented to Egan that the barn was occupied by a Mr. Burk, O’Connell’s step-father, but that he could not tell Egan what was in the barn because he did not know, and that he told him all he knew about the barn or its occupancy. O’Connell testifies that when he locked up the barn and left, his step-father, Burk, looked after it, and took care of the barn and some other property he had and still owns there, and that he appointed his step-father to take charge of and look after the barn in his absence for him..

Patrick Burk, the step-father of appellee, testified that when appellee left Braidwood, he left the barn in his care and charge, and that he left the key with him, and that he had the key all the time. The front door was fastened by a padlock, and the back door fastened inside, and that he lived about a mile from the barn, and that he put hay in there to have it handy for market, and that he had control of the property for the plaintiff; that he went to the barn almost every time he went to Braidwood, and thát he weut to it almost every Sunday when he went to church, and walked around it, and sometimes went inside and looked about it; that he had charge of it at the time of the fire, and had some three or four tons of hay in it. Appellee testified that he had not “rented” the barn to any one, but that he had left it in the charge and care of his step-father. Appellant insists, in a very elaborate argument, that because there was no proof of a technical renting, that it follows that the statement in the policy that “ the property was occupied by a tenant ” as a private barn, was therefore false.

But this position is without force and can not be maintained That the property was occupied and used and in the charge and under the care of Burk, there can be no doubt. He was actually using it for storing his hay, in the ordinary mode of using barns. He had the key and was fully and rightfully invested with the care and possession of the building, under appointment from the owner; it was a matter of no importance that he did not live on the same lot with the barn, or even in the same town, for there is no declaration in the policy that lie was living or should so live on the lot or in the town. It is by no means necessary to create a tenancy, that there should be a formal hiring, leasing or letting the property in question. Webster defines a tenant to be “ one who holds or possesses land or other real estate by any kind of right, either in fee simple, in common or in severalty, or for life or years or at will; one who has the occupation or temporary possession of land, whose title is in another.” Under this definition (and it is the language of all the law boobs) Burk was clearly the tenant of O’Connell, and there was no misdescription nor falsehood in calling and describing him in the policy as the occupying tenant of appellee. We think, under the undisputed facts in the case, that the statement in the policy is not only substantially but technically true under the proof. But assuming that appellant is correct in its contention that said statement is false and a warranty, still .it can not aid appellant. The proof is (and no one contradicts it) that Ward, who made the application for this insurance, told Egan, the agent of appellant, about the situation of the property. And that when Egan took the insurance he was advised of the condition and surroundings of the barn.

Upon the trial below Ward was asked by appellee to state all he told Egan concerning this property when he made the application, but the appellant objected to this testimony, and the objection was sustained by the court, but upon what principle we are not able to understand. This was the clear right of appellee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Ill. App. 357, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/insurance-co-of-the-state-of-pennsylvania-v-oconnell-illappct-1889.