Norris v. Connecticut Fire Insurance

80 A. 960, 115 Md. 174, 1911 Md. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 4, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 80 A. 960 (Norris v. Connecticut Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norris v. Connecticut Fire Insurance, 80 A. 960, 115 Md. 174, 1911 Md. LEXIS 142 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The suit in this case was instituted by the appellant against the appellee in the Baltimore City Court on a contract of insurance against loss or damage by fire.

The policy of insurance is dated June 1st, 1909, and was issued by the appellee to the appellant, to indemnify the latter for a period of one year against loss or damage by fire to an amount not exceeding seventeen hundred dollars on a two-story dwelling house, and additions thereto, occupied as a dwelling house, and situate on the north side of Deep Creek near Churchton, in the Eighth district of Anne Arundel County, lid.

The policy also covered any loss by fire, on the household furniture and other articles, situate therein, to an amount not exceeding three hundred dollars.

*176 The duration of the policy was for the term of one year, from its date—that is, it was in force and covered any loss by fire prior to the first day of June, 1910.

It is averred in the declaration that on the 7th. day of July, 1909, and while the policy was in force the dwelling house and the personal property covered by the policy were totally destroyed by fire, and that the loss and damage sustained by the plaintiff on the dwelling house was $2,629.00, and that on the. furniture and other articles the sum of $301.00.

The policy of insurance is what is known as a fire insurance policy of the New York standard form, and contains the following stipulation against vacancy or unoccupancy: “This entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement endorsed hereon or added hereto, shall be void * * * if a building herein described, whether intended for occupancy by owner or tenant, be or become vacant or unoccupied and so remain for ten days.”

At the trial of the case, the defendant relied upon three special defenses in its pleas to the suit, but as the verdict was directed by the Oourt below, upon the defendant’s third plea to the seventh count of the plaintiff’s declaration, to wit, the defense of vacancy and unoccupancy of the dwelling house, at the date of the fire, and the other pleas not being insisted upon here, it will only be necessary for us to consider this defense upon the third plea. This plea is as follows, the defendant says that the policy of insurance sued on in this case contained a condition as follows:

“This entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement endorsed hereon or added hereto, shall be void * * * if the building here described, whether intended for occupancy by owner or tenant, be or become vacant or unoccupied and so remain for ten days.”

And the defendant says that the building described in the policy of insurance mentioned in the plaintiff’s declaration was a dwelling house which became vacant or unoccupied and so remained, for more than ten days prior to its destruc *177 tion by fire, and said building was vacant or unoccupied at tbe time of its destruction by fire; whereby the whole policy was rendered void, there being no provision to the contrary by agreement endorsed on or added to the policy.

The record shows, that during the progress of the trial, the plaintiff noted three exceptions, two to the rulings of the Court upon the evidence and one to the granting of the defendant’s prayer, at the conclusion of the testimony withdrawing the case from the jury and instructing a verdict for the defendant.

The rulings of the Court upon the first and second exceptions, upon the evidence, in the view we take of the case, are unimportant because even if erroneous, they did not prejudice the plaintiff’s case. There is no reversible error on these exceptions. Bowman v. Little, 101 Md. 296.

The substantial question and the only important one presented by the record, is whether under the pleadings and evidence, the jury were properly instructed, in accordance with the well settled principles of law applicable to this character of case, and whether it was error in the Court to have withdrawn the case from the jury, by granting the defendant’s prayer.

The instruction is somewhat unusual and is as follows: “At the request of the defendant, the Court instructs the jury as follows: It appears by the plaintiff’s own testimony,”

1. That the policy sued on contained a condition as follows : “This entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement endorsed hereon or added hereto, shall be void * * * if the building herein described, whether intended for occupancy by owner or tenant, be or become vacant or unoccupied and so remain for ten days.”

2. That the dwelling house insured under the policy was vacant or unoccupied within the meaning and proper construction of said phrase as contained in said policy, at the time of the fire of July 6th, 1909, and said house had been and remained so vacant or unoccupied for more than ten days prior to said fire.

*178 3. That the defendant did not consent to said unoccnpancy of said building by agreement endorsed on or added to the policy, or otherwise.

4. That the policy sued on is an entire contract, which was made void as. a whole by the unoccupancy of the dwelling house for more than ten days, and, therefore, under the pleadings the verdict of the jury must be for the defendant.

There can be no difficulty, as to the principles of law involved on this appeal and we do not understand that they are contested.

The effect of the stipulation clause as to the vacancy and unoccupancy of a dwelling house, contained in a policy of fire insurance, like the one in this case, has been considered and announced by this Court, and in other jurisdictions. In Agricultural Co. v. Hamilton, 82 Md. 88, it was said: “Obviously the word ‘unoccupied,’ as applied to a dwelling .house in a fire insurance policy, signifies not used as a residence, and consequently a designated tenement becomes unoccupied when it is no longer used for the. accustomed and ordinary purposes of a dwelling or place of abode. Hence, no matter what other use it may be devoted to, so long as it ceases to be a place of actual abode—a place really occupied as a residence or habitation—it is vacant or unoccupied according to the plain import of those words, and according, too, to the sense in which they are manifestly employed in the contract of insurance. It is not a mere casual or occasional sleeping in a house that constitutes an occupancy of it. The element of a fixed abode is an essential ingredient of every concept of occupancy when applied to a dwelling house; and the term ‘unoccupied’ in employed to express the directly opposite condition.

In Sleeper v. Insurance Co., 56 N. H. 401, it was hold, when the occupant of a dwelling house moves out with his family, talcing part of his furniture and all the wearing apparel of the family and makes the place of his abode in another town, although he may have an intention of returning in eight or ten months, such dwelling house while thus *179

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 A. 960, 115 Md. 174, 1911 Md. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norris-v-connecticut-fire-insurance-md-1911.