Republic County Mutual Fire Insurance v. Johnson

76 P. 419, 69 Kan. 146, 1904 Kan. LEXIS 225
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 9, 1904
DocketNo. 13,593
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 76 P. 419 (Republic County Mutual Fire Insurance v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Republic County Mutual Fire Insurance v. Johnson, 76 P. 419, 69 Kan. 146, 1904 Kan. LEXIS 225 (kan 1904).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J. :

A policy of insurance against loss by fire, lightning, tornado and wind-storm covered a dwelling-house, a double corn-crib with a stable addi[147]*147tion, and hay and grain, all situated on the east half of the northwest quarter of section 22, township 2 south, range 4 west of the sixth principal meridian, in Republic county. A single premium was paid for the entire policy, but the insurance was distributed upon separate items of property as follows : House, $125 ; hay and grain, $80; double corn-crib, $95. The policy contained a provision that it should, become void “. . . if the above-mentioned premises . . . become vacant for thirty days.”

The corn-crib stood some 200 or 800 feet from the house. About the site of the buildings were a few fruit-trees and a small orchard, and all together they fixed the dwelling-place of occupants of the farm. There were no other buildings on the land. At the date of the policy the house was occupied as a dwelling by a tenant of the land. Subsequently the tenant moved away and the owner of the land farmed it from his own residence on an adjoining tract. During the period the double corn-crib was used for the purpose of housing unused farming implements, including a self-binder, two listers, a riding-plow and a stalk-cutter. More than thirty days after the removal of the tenant a wind-storm destroyed the double corn-crib. In an action upon the policy against the company issuing it, the assured recovered a judgment for the value of the double corn-crib, and the question now to be determined is, Were the premises vacant, within the meaning of the contract of insurance?

To sustain the judgment rendered, the doctrine of the divisibility of insurance contracts must be given an application so strained and so extreme that the agreement of the parties must be entirely ignored. The argument in brief is that the relations between the insurer and the assured were the same as if [148]*148separate policies had been issued, one covering the house, another covering the crib, and the third the hay and grain ; that hay and grain could not become vacant at all; that human beings were not expected to occupy the double crib with its stable addition; which was properly usable for the storing of machinery, and that the vacancy of the house had no bearing whatever upon-any other subject of insurance.

In adopting the theory of the divisibility of insurance contracts which place separate valuations upon separate subjects of insurance (Insurance Co. v. York, 48 Kan. 488, 492, 29 Pac. 586, 588), this court quoted extensively from the opinion of Mr. Justice Folger in the case of Merrill v. Agricultural Ins. Co., 73 N. Y. 452, 29 Am. Rep. 184. A portion of that opinion bears directly upon the proposition under discussion, and is as follows :

“Where a separate valuation has been placed upon different subjects of insurance, as $800 on a dwelling-house and $200 on household furniture, the contract is severable and not indivisible. . . . Again, the principle in the case of a contract about several things, but with a single consideration in gross, is this : that we are not able to say that the party would have agreed for one, or for more than one, yet less than all of them, without he could at the same time acquire a right to have them all. But our daily experience and observation show that an insurance company, is as ready to insure buildings without insuring the contents, and the contents without insuring the buildings, as to insure them together ; so that that principle does not press so hard in considering such a contract as that before us.”

In the policy under consideration there is nothing whatever to indicate that the company would have insured the hay and grain at all except as it fell under the protection of a guardian of the premises, or that [149]*149it would have entertained for a moment an application for the insurance of an isolated, unfrequented corn-crib and stable, the prey of the elements, devoted merely to the shelter of unused implements and machinery and subject to be made the rendezvous of tramps. To assume that it would have done so involves an absolute and perfectly arbitrary repudiation of the conspicuous purpose of the vacancy clause in the contract. Any ordinary individual in charge of premises would exercise a preservative superintendence over them—would take some steps to anchor a ruffed or toppling stack of hay before he would suffer it to scatter before the wind, and would secure loosened boards about the crib, close widening apertures, brace racked timbers, and otherwise fortify the rigidity of the structure against storms.

The courts have given expression to the fundamental conception of the vacancy clause in insurance policies just noted when expressed in different ways and applied to different states of facts.

“From the nature of the contract, whether it be divisible or not, we are constrained to infer that the existence of the condition 'had a potent influence in securing the assumption of the entire risk, for it is a matter of common knowledge that a farm with its dwelling and outbuildings constitutes a single establishment, generally remote from other habitations, and that the protection of the whole must, in a great measure, depend upon the occupants of the dwelling. Almost without exception, the outbuildings of a farm are clustered about a place of abode, and for that reason are deemed to be more secure than the occasional outlying barn or crib, which, because of its isolation, becomes the bane of its apprehensive owner. It seems to be impossible not to assume, in this case, that the proximity uf the outbuildings to the dwelling influenced the insurer to enter into its contract [150]*150or contracts under the protection of .the condition here questioned. It is natural and reasonable that it should be held to have intended that the continuance of the insurance upon all the subjects thereof was to depend upon the occupation of the dwelling.” (Hartshorne v. Agricultural Ins. Co., 50 N. J. L. 427, 431, 14 Atl. 615, 618.)
“A dwelling-house and barn are unoccupied, within the meaning of an insurance policy which provides that buildings unoccupied shall not be covered by the policy, where the house is only used by the insured and his servants for the purpose of taking their meals there when engaged in carryihg on a contiguous farm, and the barn is only used for the purpose of storing hay and farming tools. . . . Occupancy as- applied to such buildings implies an actual use of the house as a dwelling-place, and such use of the barn as is ordinarily incident to a barn belonging to an occupied house, or at least something more than a use of it for mere storage.” (Ashworth v. Builders' Insurance Company, 112 Mass. 422, 424, 17 Am. Rep. 117.)

The principle is the same whether the danger be from fire or from wind.

“The condition cann'ot be disregarded when the contract is attempted to «be enforced. The parties contracted that the building should not be permitted to be vacant or unoccupied. We cannot vary or depart from their contract. It may be, but the point we do not determine, that if the condition required the performance of acts which in no way affected the hazard, or the non-performance of which could work defendant no prejudice, the courts would not regard it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 P. 419, 69 Kan. 146, 1904 Kan. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/republic-county-mutual-fire-insurance-v-johnson-kan-1904.