Matthews v. Queen City Insurance

2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 109
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJanuary 15, 1872
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 109 (Matthews v. Queen City Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matthews v. Queen City Insurance, 2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 109 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1872).

Opinion

Miner, J.

Three grounds are urged by the defendant ' for a new trial:

1. That the plaintiffs had no insurable interest.

2. That after the policy was issued, insuring the plaintiffs on a building “ occupied as a planing and saw mill,” they leased a part of the premises to be used as a carpen ter shop, a specially hazardous business, without permission.

3. That the warranty that a watchman was kept on the premises was broken; and that the judge, in his charge, did not give the defendant the benefit of it.

This case was argued in this court some time since, before Judges Storer, Taft, and Hagans, and upon much consideration, as we are advised, a majority of the court, as then constituted, were of opinion that a new trial should be granted for errors of law in the charge of the judge before whom the case was tried in special session; and an opinion to that effect was prepared by Judge Taft. That opinion we have seen and examined, and as we have, upon consideration and an examination of the authorities cited by counsel, arrived at the same conclusions, in respect to the first two propositions considered in said opinion, we adopt and present so much of. it as our decision. Judge Taft says:

“ As to the first point, there does appear to be a good deal of looseness in the statement of the title of the property. But we are satisfied that the parties had an insurable interest, either in their own right, or as trustees for others, of [111]*111which the defendants were aware; and the loss being made payable to the plaintiff's, we do not find it necessary to stop the suit for want of insurable interest.

There does not appear to have been any fraud or concealment in regard to the title, or misrepresentation, and if there was a mistake, it was made by the agent of the company. To sustain the defense on this ground, would be yielding to a mere technicality, which we do not feel bound to do, under the circumstances proven in this ease.

“As to the second defense, the judge at Special Term charged the jury, that the use and occupation of a part of the premises, by the consent of the insured, as a carpenter’s shop, with the use of the power furnished by plaintiff's’ engine, does not affect the right of the plaintiffs to recover, unless by such use and occupation the risk taken by the insurer was thereby increased.

“ This defense presents a difficulty, upon which different courts have held different opinions.

“By the classification of hazards appended to the policy planing mills, saw mills, and carpenter shops, respectively, fall under the denomination of risks known as ‘specially hazardous.’

“ It was agreed in the policy, ‘ that in case the building or any part thereof, should thereafter be appropriated, applied, or used, to or for, the purpose of carrying on, or exercising therein, any trade, business, or avocation named, or any business whatever in any of the articles denominated hazardous, extra hazardous, or specially hazardous, in the conditions annexed to this policy, named,’ ‘ unless herein otherwise specially provided for, or hereafter agreed to by said company, and indorsed upon this policy, then, and from thenceforth, so long as the same shall be so appropriated, applied, or used, these presents shall cease, and be of no force or effect.’

“ The planing and saw mill, which were expressly insured by the policy, falling within the same class of hazards with the carpenter shop, for which the second story of the build[112]*112ing was leased and used, without permission, the question is, whether such use was a violation of the conditions. A condition in the policy must be kept. The natural construction of the conditions requires, that these special hazards should, in many cases, be specially provided for in the body of the policy, or indorsed thereon, and the fact that the policy was made to cover one specially hazardous trade, would not relieve the insured from the necessity of having a special agreement indorsed of the privilege of using any part of the premises for another specially hazardous purpose.

“Such was the ruling of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, in the case of Lee v. Howard, Fire Ins. Co., 3 Gray, 592-594, where the point involved in this case was decided in favor of the insurer; the court holding, upon a condition precisely like that in this policy, ‘that the use"of part of the premises for a trade or business, specified in the memorandum of special rates, and not mentioned in. the policy, nor indorsed thereon, avoided the policy, although the trades disclosed in the policy were also special hazards, and that parol evidence was inadmissible to show that the use, not disclosed, did not increase the risk.’

“The insurance in that case was upon ‘ a chair shop, tub and pail factory, saw mill and store-houses, and blacksmith shop,’ and the item not mentioned in the policy, was ‘a grist .mill.’ But they all fell under the same classification of risks in the policy. The court in that ease say, Bigelow, J.: ‘It is conceded that the premises insured, in addition to the purposes specified in the policy, were at the time of the fire, appropriated to carrying on a grist mill. This was a distinct use of one of the buildings insured, not assented to by the defendants, for an occupation included in the classes of hazards, annexed to the policy, as a “ special hazard.” It was, therefore, a violation of the express stipulation in the policy, and by its terms avoids the contract. Nor does it at all affect the result, that this additional unauthorized use of the premises was for a purpose compre[113]*113hended within the same class of hazards as that which was specified in the policy, and originally covered by the insurance. The manifest purpose of this stipulation was to prevent any use of the premises for an occupation or business included in any of the classes of risks denominated hazardous, extra hazardous, or special, without the express sanction of the company in writing. It was not intended to limit the assured, in the use of his property, to the same class of risks as those specified in the policy, and to allow him to change the mode of its occupation, or appropriate the premises to additional uses of the same grade of hazards, at his pleasure. Such is not the import of the language of the policy, nor would such a construction of it be just or reasonable. To prevent the accumulation of hazardous occupations in the same premises, without their assent, was the object which the defendants sought to accomplish by this agreement. Each distinct use of the building insured, for a purpose, or business, of a hazardous nature, might, in the opinion of the insurers, increase the risk by fire.’

“Our own court, in the case of the Merchants and Manufacturers Insurance Co. v. Washington Mutual Insurance Co., has acted upon the same principle.

“ The insurance in that case was upon a steam flouring mill. A kiln-drying corn-meal apparatus was introduced into the premises.

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Related

Smith v. Mechanics' & Traders' Fire Insurance
32 N.Y. 399 (New York Court of Appeals, 1865)
Merchants & Manufacturers Insurance v. Washington Mutual Insurance
1 Handy 181 (Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati, 1854)
Merchants' & Manufacturers' Mutual Insurance v. Washington Mutual Insurance
1 Handy 408 (Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati, 1855)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Cin. Sup. Ct. Rep. 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-queen-city-insurance-ohsuperctcinci-1872.