This is an action on a fire insurance policy. The cause was tried to the jury and the plaintiff had a verdict. The defendants move for a new trial for a misdirection and for a verdict against evidence. On one point in the case we think the verdict was clearly against the weight of evidence, and we will confine our attention mainly to that.
The property insitred is described in the policy as follows: —“Furniture, fixtures and tools, used by the assured in his business as renovator of furniture, clothing and carpets, and on the improvements to the building put in by him.” Then follows this clause:—“The assured has permission to use naphtha in his business, but fire or lights are not permited in the building, except a small stove in the office.” At that *114time there was no other stove in the building. The policy issued July 7th, 1877, for one year. About the first of January following a large stove was placed in a room used for a drying room, and was thereafter used in connection with hot water pipes for warming1 the naphtha-in tanks in the basement. The fire occurred in April, and was caused by an explosion of gas.
The court charged the jury as follows:—“The defendants claim that the plaintiff put in a stove and other apparatus, after the policy was issued, without the consent of the company, and that this materially increased the risk. Now if this was done, and materially increased the risk, it vitiated the policy. You are to decide whether putting in that additional stove and apparatus and using it increased the risk. The question- is whether there would be more likelihood of danger from two stoves, with the pipes for heating naphtha, .than from one stove.”
It was conceded that the additional stove was used in the manner and for the purpose stated, and that the use of naphtha caused an accumulation of highly inflammable gas in the room where the stove was. The defendants chose to insure property in a building in which there should be but one small stove, and that definitely located in as safe a place probably as there was in the building. By strong implication the use of any other stove was prohibited. We must presume that the defendants would have refused to insure with liberty to use two stoves in the manner they were used at the time,of the fire. It will not do to say that they insured business carried on with naphtha and that therefore the insured had a right to use the ordinary means for carrying on that business. The conditions and manner of use were clearly defined and limited, to which he agreed, and he had no right to use means which involved a violation1' of his agreement. Nor was it necessary; for obviously the naphtha could have been heated by means of steam or hot water pipes from a fire at a safe distance.
But the plaintiff says that it is not expressed in the policy that the use of another stove shall make it void, and there*115fore tliat such use is not of itself a defense. It may be true that such use, irrespective of the increase of risk, will not have that effect; but the policy in another part expressly provides that if the risk is increased it shall be void; so that the real question was whether the additional stove increased the risk. The court correctly instructed the jury that if it did the plaintiff could not recover. The jury therefore must have found that the risk was not increased. There was no evidence to justify such a finding. The testimony the other way was clear and conclusive. In addition to the obvious danger from the use of such materials, two witnesses, familiar with the business of insurance, testified unqualifiedly that the use of the additional stove materially increased the risk and rendered the property uninsurable; and there was no conflicting evidence. It seems very clear that the jury must have disregarded the evidence.
The case is not met by the suggestion, that there was evidence tending to show that the fire caught from the office stove. The difficulty reaches back of that. The defendants not only did not insure against the risk of two stoves, but virtually refused to insure at all if the premises were subjected to that additional risk. They had a right to refuse insurance in a case in which the question would be an open one, whether a loss was occasioned by a risk insured against or one that was not insured against. The difficulty of proving the origin of a fire, to say nothing of the inclination of juries to find against corporations, is a sufficient reason1 for the exercise of the right; and when a party has clearly exercised the right, as the defendants have in the present case, the court ought not to deprive him of the benefit of it by a strained interpretation of the policy.
Nor is the plaintiff’s claim a tenable one that the policy continued in force during the term for which it issued, notwithstanding the increased risk, by virtue of the eleventh condition in the policy. That condition provides for a renewal of the policy at the expiration of the term, and then adds, “but in case there shall have been any change in the risk, either within itself or by neighboring buildings, not *116made known to the company by the assured at the time of renewal, this policy and renewal shall be void.”
It is obvious that this is not inconsistent with the first condition, which provides that the increased risk shall avoid the policy; nor was it intended to modify that condition; but was intended to extend 'it to the renewal in case one should happen to issue in ignorance of the increased risk.
Feeling constrained as we do to grant a new trial for the reason given above, it is unnecessary to consider the other questions raised by the motion.
A new trial is granted.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.