There is such an entire absence of all findings by the circuit court on the issues made by the answer that the judgment would be reversed for that reason, if all of the evidence had not been preserved in a bill of exceptions and brought to this court as~a part of the record. Dogge v. N. W. N. Ins. Co., 49 Wis., 501; Wis. River Lumber Co. v. Plumer, id., 666.
The policy was written on the building as a dwelling, and *546the answer in effect charges that such building was after-wards converted into a school-house, and at the time of its loss by fire it had become and was a school-house, and was used and occupied as such. The prohibition of town insurance companies by sec. 10, ch. 103, Laws of 1872, and sec. 1931, R. S., from insuring buildings of this character without a majority vote of its members, is clear and explicit. It is not contended that if the policy had been written upon a school-house it would have been valid, nor, as we understand the brief of the respondent’s counsel, that if the dwelling insured had been converted into a school-house proper that the policy would not thereby have become void. A policy of this company without such vote cannot lie and subsist on a school-house. That a policy of insurance on a dwelling, which was afterwards, during the life of the policy, converted into a school-house, would thereby become void, is clearly within the reason of the legislative prohibition. Such a prohibited policy is ultra vires, and becomes so whenever the building falls clearly within the prohibited class of buildings which are not allowed by law to be insured by such a company, whether at the date of the policy or afterwards. The doctrine of consent and waiver is not applicable to such a case, because the law makes the restriction of power, and not a mere regulation of the company. Janesville Bridge Co. v. Stoughton, 1 Pin., 667; Madison, etc., Plankroad Co. v. Watertown, etc., 7 Wis., 59; Rock River Bank v. Sherwood, 10 Wis., 230; Clark v. Farrington, 11 Wis., 306; N. W. Union Packet Co. v. Shaw, 37 Wis., 655. The most important question in this case, and the only one which we deem it necessary to consider, is whether in fact this building had been converted into a school-house and was such at the time of the loss.
A school-house, according to Webster, is “ a house appropriated to the use of schools, or for instruction; ” and according to Worcester, “ a house or building in which a school *547is kept.” The statute unquestionably used the term “ schoolhouse ” in its generally accepted meaning, according to these standards, and did not use it in the restricted sense of a district school-house; for the reason of the law, if there was any, and we must presume there was, would be as applicable to any other school-house. That reason evidently was that this class of buildings might be more hazardous, or more likely to be burned through negligence, than a dwelling. In respect to that reason, the testimony of the plaintiff was especially significant: “ The teacher was in and built a fire for the school, and kept the children in, and before the school commenced it burned up.” The testimony of the plaintiff was to the effect that the building had not been occupied as a dwelling for about a year before the fire, and that the construction of one or more rooms in it had been changed to be suitable for a school, and the school-room so prepared was fitted up with a stove and benches, and a table or desk for each scholar, and a table or desk for the teacher, and that the plaintiff employed a teacher to teach his own children therein, and the children of his neighbors, for a term of three months, and that the school had from ten to twelve scholars, and that others who sent children to the school paid as tuition, or towards the teacher’s board, fifty cents a week for each scholar, and that the school had been kept two or three weeks before the fire. The instruction was in the German language. One John ETaper sent from two to four scholars to the school, an$ paid eight dollars for their tuition, according to his testimony, and his daughter Julia, one of the scholars, testified in relation to the school and its condition to the same effect as the plaintiff. The sole use of the building at the time of the fire was for this school, although the plaintiff testified that he intended the building to be used the next spring as a dwelling for his son and family. "Without argument on the question, it seems clear to us that this building was a school-house at the time it was *548burned, and comes clearly within the above definitions, as “ a house for instruction,” or as “ a house or building in which a school is kept,” and that it was within the prohibition of the statute. The policy of insurance was therefore void and of no effect at the time of the loss by fire, and the circuit court should have so found.
By the Oowrt.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded, with the direction that the complaint be dismissed.