Western Farmers' Mutual Insurance v. Miller

1 Handy 325
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJanuary 15, 1855
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Handy 325 (Western Farmers' Mutual Insurance v. Miller) 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
Western Farmers' Mutual Insurance v. Miller, 1 Handy 325 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1855).

Opinion

Storer, J.

The plaintiffs seek to reverse a judgment, rendered in Special Term by Gholson, Judge.

[326]*326On the trial, it appeared, that the plaintiffs in error, who were then defendants, had insured the present defendant, Miller, “ against lost or damage ly fire on his Brick Tavern House]' on the corner of Lawrence and Front Streets, Cincinnati, in the sum of Two Thousand Dollars, the risk was to commence on the 17th January 1852, and continue for one year next succeeding. The premises were destroyed by fire, on the 14th of December 1852, and the policy assigned to the Executor of Stone on the 28th December in the same year.

The defendant pleaded the general issue, and filed a special plea, setting forth among other things, that the plaintiff ought not to recover, u because, at the time the policy issued, the plaintiff was in possession through his tenants of a brick building, adjoining the property insured, which building had, by and with the plaintiff’s consent, been used as and for a manufactory of laths, and afterwards, and before the premises insured had been burned, the occupation and use of said building had, by and with the plaintiff’s consent, been changed from a lath factory to a manufactory of spokes; by which change of use, the risk of loss by fire of said building, and of the property insured, was enhanced, and afterwards, and in consequence of said use as a manufactory of spokes, the building, in which the same was carried on, took fire and was consumed, and said fire was communicated and ex- ' tended to the property insured, which was also consumed, whereby the loss occurred, &c., as alleged.” To this plea the plaintiff below demurred.

The Judge at Special Term sustained the demurrer, and gave judgment against the defendants, for the amount of the loss.

[327]*327The only error assigned, is the refusal of the Court to sustain the above plea.

It is admitted that the insurers, at the time the risk was taken, knew, that an adjoining building, to the premises insured, was used and occupied as a lath factory. There is no proof of concealment, or misrepresentation, on the part of the insured, and no warranty in the policy, that the use of the adjoining property should be restricted to any particular employment. It is not alleged that there was fraud, or bad faith, in the occupation of the building at the time the policy was issued, or afterwards; the ground is taken generally, that the risk was increased by the change of use, and as the fire commenced in the buildiDg thus occupied, the insurers are discharged.

Among the many stipulations and conditions in the policy, there is none that subjects the insured to a forfeiture of the contract, if the risk should be increased by the occupation of the adjoining building; in fact, there is no reference to it for any purpose.

It is sought, however, to sustain the plea, on the assumption, that if a loss should happen to the property insured, by the destruction of the adjoining property, the insurers are discharged, if there should be an increase of risk in the mode of occupation.

We have already intimated, that the insurers have provided for no such contingency in their policy. They might very properly have made it the subject of contract, and stipulated accordingly; but they have forborne to do so, and we are therefore to determine the rights of the parties, by the ordinary rules of law, in relation to the construction of agreements.

It has been said, and very justly too, that the contract [328]*328of insurance is eminently one of good faith, and so we regard it, especially as the rule is applicable to marine risks, where so much confidence is placed in the representations, and the knowledge of the assured; but we find no difference in the degree of fairness, and honest intention, required in all agreements, whether they pertain to the sale of merchandize, the performance of stipulated duties, or the insurance upon property. Good faith lies at the foundation of all contracts, and where it is essentially wanting, the obligation to perform them is at an end; but what good faith is, how far it extends, and how it is to be estimated, must depend, not upon doubtful constructions, or nice distinctions; it is simply the application of the maxim, as old in law as it is true in ethics: “ Sic uteretuum, ut alienum non laedas" 1 Sandford S. C. R. 137—151. Howe vs. Mutual Ins. Co.; 1 Selden 469-474. Gates vs. Madison Mutual Ins. Co.

If the adjoining building, to the property destroyed, was not the subject of representation, or warranty by the insured, and no mention is made of it in the policy, nor any increase of risk provided for, our inquiry is narrowed down to this: does the mere change of use or employment in that building, where no fraud is suggested, furnish a defence to this action, if the loss of the property insured was occasioned by the destruction of the adjoining building ?

In Pim vs. Reid, 6 Man. & Granger 1, Tindal, C. J. said with great propriety: “ There is a material distinction between matters to vitiate the policy arising subsequently to the execution thereof, and such matters existing at the time the policy was effected.” Coltman, J., in the same case remarked: “ Independently of the conditions, there [329]*329is nothing contained in the policy, from which we can say that it would be vacated by a mere change of business. It is effected upon a paper-machine, and other property therein described; and the circumstance of cotton-waste having been lodged on the premises, and the danger of fire thereby increased must be provided against by specific condition, otherwise the policy would not be avoided; ” and Maulé, J. held, “ that in the absence of fraud such an alteration would not vitiate the policy; and that the insurers must pay for any loss, nothwithstanding such alteration, unless they have provided against it in the contract.” Cresswell, J. agrees fully with his brethren, and holds, “ that without fraud on the part of the assured, where the conditions of the policy did not forbid the change of business, the policy would not have been void by the general law of insurance.” See also Shaw vs. Robberds, 6 Adolph, & Ellis 75.

In 5 Hill 16, Grant vs. The Howard Ins. Co., it was-held: “As there was no express prohibition contained in the policy agaixxst the erection of additional or adjoining buildings, it is not for the Court to interpolate such a condition by construction or implication, so as to avoid the contract, whether the company had sustained any injury thereby, or not.”

There can be no warranties, but those that are inserted in or made part of the policy, 14 Barbour 384, Wall vs. Howard Ins. Co.; do. 547, Young vs. Washington Ins. Co.; 5 Hill 190, Burritt vs. Saratoga Mut. Fire Ins. Co., where the cases are collected by Judge Bronson. The same ruling is found in 22 Ohio 468, Protection Ins. Co. vs. Harmer.

Where there is no clause or condition prohibiting [330]*330another use of the building insured, though the occupation afterwards may be more hazardous, than the use to which it was appropriated when the risk was taken, we understand it to be the settled law, that such a change by the insured does not vacate the policy.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Handy 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-farmers-mutual-insurance-v-miller-ohsuperctcinci-1855.