We think the statement contained in the policies issued by the defendants, describing the building which contained the personal property insured as "detached at least one hundred feet," is a warranty. We cannot hold it to be a mere description of the building for the purpose of identifying the personal property insured contained within it. The phrase is not adapted to any such purpose. It adds nothing to the identity of the storehouse, already sufficiently described by its ownership and situation on the lake. In Wall v. The East River Mut. Ins. Co. (7 N.Y. 370), the personal property insured was described as "contained in the brick building with tin roof, occupied as a storehouse, situated on the northerly side of and about forty-two feet distant from their ropewalk *Page 224 at Bushwick." The court said that the identity of the building was distinctly ascertained by other facts of the description, and that the phrase "occupied as a storehouse" related to the risk and could not be otherwise applied. The language in the policies before us, as to the detached character of the building, applies fitly to the risk, and is entirely inappropriate as matter of description. We must hold therefore, what indeed was not denied in the dissenting opinion at General Term, or on the argument at our bar, that the phrase in question is not merely descriptive of identity, but relates to the character of the risk. Thus understood and appearing on the face of the policy it amounts to a warranty. (Alexander v. Germania F. Ins. Co., 66 N.Y. 464;Richards v. Protection Ins. Co., 30 Me. 273; Parmelee v.Hoffman Fire Ins. Co., 54 N.Y. 193.) Such result is, however, disputed upon the ground that the language is that of the insurers and is vague and void for ambiguity. The argument is that to avoid a forfeiture the words used must be most strongly construed against the insurer; that the word "detached" will not be defined so as to destroy the contract; that in the sense of separate, or disengaged from, the policy does not add from what; that it may mean "detached at least one hundred feet" from "earth, sea, or sky," or from "Lake Champlain;" and that if it means from any building, it must be construed to mean any building which constitutes an exposure and increases the risk, which was not true of the office building, since the trial judge found as a fact that it did not so increase the risk. We do not think the language is so vague or ambiguous as to make the warranty void. The fair import of the words and the intent of the parties indicated by the terms of their agreement must guide the construction. (Higgins v. Phœnix Mut. Life Ins. Co., 74 N.Y. 26. ) It cannot be doubted that both parties perfectly understood the meaning of the phrase to be that the storehouse stood by itself as a detached or separate building and apart from other buildings at least a distance of one hundred feet. The expression, although brief, is not meaningless, but to the common understanding, and especially in connection with an insurance against fire, conveys *Page 225 unmistakebly the idea we have expressed, and must have been so understood by each of the contracting parties. If it did not mean that, it meant nothing, and what was intended as a serious business transaction becomes an idle play with words. But the further contention, that the language must be held to mean, detached one hundred feet from any other building of such character as to constitute an exposure and increase the risk, seems to us a sensible and just construction. The brevity of the language requires that something be added to complete and elucidate the meaning. The phrase may mean detached one hundred feet from any other building whatever its size or character. This would be a rigorous and severe interpretation, most favorable to the insurer and operating harshly upon the insured. So construed it would make any thing which could be deemed a building, however small or insignificant, as an ice-house, or privy, or open shed, within the prescribed distance, operate as a breach of the warranty. If a construction so literal or severe is intended by the insurer, he should at least say so by apt and appropriate language, and not ask the courts to supply it by intendment. If it be granted that such small and insignificant structures were not meant, and should be treated as if they did not exist, the question would remain how small and how insignificant must they be to be disregarded, and how large and of what character to justify a conclusion of breach of the warranty, and where and upon what principles is the line to be drawn between buildings strictly such, but proper to be disregarded, and those whose presence breaks the warranty. These questions can be wisely answered in but one way. The test must be whether the building within the distance named is or is not an exposure which increases the risk. One which does not can scarcely be supposed to come within the warranty, unless such result is indicated by explicit language which will bear no other reasonable interpretation. No such language is contained in these policies, and when the courts are asked to supply a defect and complete an imperfect phrase, they should remember that the necessity is the fault of the insurer, and construe the language in view of the natural understanding of the *Page 226 parties, and with justice to both. Declining to hold the phrase in the policy to be meaningless and void, we are compelled to choose between two constructions; the one rigorous and hard and producing a forfeiture, and the other natural and reasonable and supporting the obligation. We have heretofore decided that in such case the latter construction is to be preferred. (Baley v.Homestead Fire Ins. Co., 80 N.Y. 21; 36 Am. Rep. 570.) We hold, therefore, that the warranty in this case was that no other building, of such size and character as to constitute an exposure and increase the risk, stood within one hundred feet of the storehouse.
Thus construed it is apparent that the warranty was not broken. The findings of fact, taken together, show that the only building within the prescribed distance of one hundred feet was the small office. This was described as being ten by twelve feet on the ground and seven feet high; a frame building clapboarded and ceiled inside; having a chimney, but no stove in it; used sometimes as an office, and at the time of the fire containing a quantity of gunpowder, temporarily stored. The evidence showed, or at least tended to show, that this building, standing seventy-five feet from the subject of insurance, was not an exposure and did not affect the risk, and the trial court found that fact substantially, and refused to find the contrary. It follows that there was no breach of the warranty and that the General Term erred in so deciding and in reversing the judgment.
We have examined the other grounds upon which the reversal is sought to be sustained, and do not think they can be deemed sufficient for that purpose, or that they require further discussion.
The orders of the General Term should be reversed, and the judgments on trials at the Circuit affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except RAPALLO, J., dissenting, and MILLER, J., not voting.
Orders reversed and judgments accordingly. *Page 227