By the Court,
Cole, J.This was an action to recover the amount due upon a policy of insurance. The appellant insured the respondent against loss or damage by fire, to the amount of eight hundred dollars, on his two-story wooden dwelling house, situate on block 58 of the school section in the city of Racine. It was stipulated and agreed in the policy, that the same was made and accepted in reference to the conditions thereto annexed, which were to be used and re*140sorted to in order to explain tbe rights and obligations of parties, in all cases not otherwise specially provided for. And case turns upon tbe construction which is given to C0n(^011 annexed to the policy, which is in the following language: “ Unoccupied premises must be insured as such, or the policy is void; and in all insurance by this company on unoccupied buildings, it is understood and agreed on the part of the assured, that the premises shall be securely closed. Houses, barns or other buildings insured as occupied premises or on occupied premises, the policy becomes void when the occupant personally vacates the premises, unless immediate notice be given to this company, and additional premiums paid."
It appears that the policy was issued on the 16th of April, 1858, for one year, and was twice renewed, the last renewal being on the 16th of April, 1860, for a year from that date. The house and premises insured were examined and surveyed by the agent of the company. The house was then occupied by persons known to the agent, and it continued to be occupied until the last of April, 1860, when the tenant moved out, leaving the house securely locked and fastened. The house remained unoccupied and vacant until destroyed by fire in the month of December following. It is admitted that no notice was ever given to the company or its agent that the house was vacant and unoccupied, nor had the company any knowledge of that fact until after the fire. It is further conceded that no additional premium was ever paid or offered to be paid by the assured in consequence of the building being thus vacant and unoccupied.
Under this state of facts the question arises, Can the re spondent recover ? We are clearly of the opinion that he cannot
It will be readily seen by the condition above cited, that where houses, barns or other buildings were insured as occupied premises, the policy became void when the occupant personally vacated the premises, unless immediate notice was given to the company and additional premium paid. And although the premises in the present case were vacant and unoccupied for some months previous to, and up to the time of the fire, yet it is not pretended that any notice of that *141fact-was ever given to tbe company, or that any additional premium was offered in consequence of tbe property in tbis condition. But still tbe plain, obvious stipulations of tbe parties required tbis to be done, or otherwise tbe policy was to become void. It seems impossible to escape tbis result without doing manifest violence to theJ spirit and meaning of tbe 5th condition of tbe policy. Most assuredly tbe respondent undertook and agreed to give immediate notice to tbe company in case tbe premises became vacant; and to pay such additional premium as might reasonably be required in consequence of any increased risk or hazard to tbe property. But it is said there is no evidence in tbe case anywhere tending to show that tbe risk was increased in tbe slightest degree by tbe vacating of tbe premises by tbe tenant, and that if tbis were so, tbe burden of establishing that devolved upon tbe company. It is by no means clear that a vacant dwelling is not exposed to greater hazard than it ordinarily would be when occupied; that it is not more likely in tbis condition to provoke tbe malignity or invite tbe rashness of tbe malicious felon or wanton intruder. Certainly it would seem that tbe company in this instance acted upon that idea, otherwise it would not have annexed such a condition to tbe policy. However tbis may be, it is a sufficient answer to tbis argument to say, that tbe parties thought proper to make it a condition, that in tbe event tbe premises became vacant, immediate notice thereof should be given tbe company; otherwise tbe policy should be void. It is not for tbe courts to dispense with tbis agreement of tbe parties. Even if we could assume that the risk to tbe premises did not increase by their becoming vacant, still tbe parties have made it a condition that notice should be given tbe company, and tbis has not been done. Tbe courts might with as much propriety attempt to relieve tbe assured from any other executory stipulation which be undertook to perform, as from tbis. So, whether tbe risk to tbe premises in fact became greater because they were vacant and unoccupied, it is not material now to inquire. Tbe parties expressly stipulated in tbe policy, or in the above condition annexed to tbe policy, and made a part of it, that if tbe insured prem-*142*ses become vacant, immediate notice of that cireum-should be given to tbe company. If this were not ¿on6) p; avoided tbe policy. Sucbis tbe manifest agreement ^e parties, and they must be bound by it.
Again it is said that tbe policy is silent as to tbe occupancy of tbe premises, and that a stipulation that they should continue to be occupied during tbe term of insurance, cannot be supplied by argument or implication. It is provided that “ unoccupied premises must be insured as such, or the policy is void." Surely tbe premises in this case were not insured as “unoccupied premises,” and therefore by tbe clearest and most necessary implication, it appears they were insured as occupied. For if they were vacant they should have been insured as unoccupied. This is what tbe policy required. And a neglect or omission to insure them as such, if they were indeed vacant, likewise rendered the policy void. But it fully appears from the case that at tbe time of tbe making of the policy, and at each of the renewals, the house was occupied. The fact was well known to the agent of the company at tbe time he made the survey, and it was admitted on the trial that it was not known to the company that the premises had become vacant until after the fire. In view of this admission and of the fact that the premises were not insured as “ unoccupied premises,” we must assume that it was the clear understanding and idea of the parties, that this dwelling house, when insured, was occupied, and should continue to be occupied, or in the event it became vacant during the life of the policy, that then notice thereof should be given the company. If this were not so, it would affirmatively appear in the policy itself that the premises were vacant, in conformity to the 5th condition above referred to.
The counsel for the respondent, in support of his view of the case, referred to O'Neil vs. The Buffalo Fire Insurance Co., 3 Coms., 122; Catlin vs. The Springfield Fire Ins. Co., 1 Sumner, 434; and Gates et al. vs. The Madison Mutual Ins. Co., 1 Selden, 469. An examination of these cases will show that they are not applicable to the question we have been considering. In O’Neil vs. The Buffalo Fire Ins. Co., the property insured was described in the policy as a “ two story
*143In Catlin v. The Springfield Fire Ins. Co., the words in the policy were, “at present occupied as a dwelling house, but to be occupied hereafter as a tavern, and privileged as such and Judge Story held that the language did not import, on the part of the assured, a warranty that the premises should be so occupied during the continuance of the risk. Such language, it was said, at farthest was but a mere representation of an intention on the part of the assured to occupy the building as a tavern and to secure for it the privileges of the policy as such. Whereas if the building continued to be occupied as a common dwelling house, the risk would be far less, while the premium remained the same. In construing the language of the policy, Judge Story puts the hypothetical case referred to by the counsel for the respondent. He says: “ Suppose a policy against fire underwritten on the house of A in Boston, described as a dwelling house, frame building fronting on Riclout and Market streets, in the town of London, Canada West, occupied by the Hon. J. Goodbue as a private dwelling.” It appeared that about three weeks before the fire, Goodhue removed from the house, leaving it vacant. And it was contended that as the house was insured as an occupied dwelling, and not as a vacant building, and as the assured suffered it to become vacant without the assent of the company, this circumstance avoided the policy. The court, however, overruled the objection, holding that when, in an application for insurance, and in the policy issued, the property was described as occupied by a certain individual as a private residence, this did not amount to a warranty of the continuance of the occupation during the risk, and therefore that the company was liable, although before the loss the occupant had removed and left the premises vacant. But it does not appear that there was any such condition annexed to the policy in that case, as the 5th condition in the policy we have been considering ; and therefore we deem the reasoning of the court inapplicable. Eor we know of no sound principle of law or morals which would warrant a court in relieving the assured from an express stipulation in his contract to give immediate notice to the company when the building became vacant. *144or occupied as a dwelling bouse; would tbe policy be void if tbe bouse should cease for a time to bave a tenant ?” 11 Sucb a doctrine,” be adds, “has never to my knowledge been asserted, nor should I deem it maintainable.” We apprehend that eminent jurist would hardly reach sucb a conclusion in view of a condition which distinctly and expressly provided that the policy should become void when the occupant vacated thé premises, unless immediate notice were given the company and additional premium paid. Eor this reason we deem the doctrine of that case not applicable to the one at bar.
We do not deem it necessary to make any further or other remark upon the case in Selden, than to say we do not discover anything in it which at all conflicts with the conclusion which we have already announced.
It follows that the judgment of the circuit court must be reversed, and a new trial ordered.