Planters Fire Insurance v. Steele

McCulloch, C. J.

This is an action on a fire insurance policy issued by appellant company on a house owned by appellee .Steele in Prescott, Arkansas. The policy was issued on November 8,1912, and covered a period of three years. The fire occurred'on July 15, 1914. The application was taken by a soliciting agent and contained a statement that the building was occupied as a private dwelling, and the answers in the application were warranted to be true. The applicant did in fact occupy the premises as a private dwelling house, but thereafter removed from the place and rented it to a tenant. The first tenant moved out and subsequently it was rented to another tenant named Taylor. Taylor vacated the premises in April, 1914, and the house remained vacant for three weeks or a month, when Taylor rented it again from Steele, the owner, and reoccupied it. He remained in the house until July 11, when he again moved out, and it was not again occupied by any one.

The proof shows that Mr. Steele, the assured, intended to move into the house on July 16, and reoccupy it as his dwelling. He was making preparations to move When the fire occurred. There is also testimony to the effect that when Taylor moved out he left a cooking stove and a table, and that the owner claimed the property as compensation for balance of rent which Taylor owed him. After Taylor moved out in April, the assured applied to the company for a vacancy permit, and the permit was issued to him for a period of thirty days from date. There is some controversy in the testimony as to the precise dates when Taylor moved out of the house and moved back into it, and also as to the date of the permit. Mr. Steele, the owner, testified that Taylor moved out in April and moved back in May, and that the permit was dated in April, and that the period of the permit had expired when Taylor moved 'back into the house. A copy of the permit was introduced in evidence by the company, and showed that it was dated May 8, and was for a period of thirty days. The conflict with respect to those matters is not material, for it is undisputed that the vacancy permit had expired before Taylor moved out of the house the last time. The policy contains a stipulation that “if said building * * * shall become vacant or unoccupied, * * * or any change takes place in the title, occupancy or possession thereof whatever, then and in every such case this contract shall be absolutely null and void.” Appellant pleaded, among other defenses, that there was a violation of each of those conditions of the policy.

The case was submitted to a jury, and a verdict was rendered in favor of appellees for the sum of $500, the amount of the .policy. The sureties on the bond of the company were joined as defendants, and they have appealed, as well as the company itself. A receiver has been appointed for the company and has been substituted here as appellant.

(1) We are of the .opinion that according to the undisputed testimony in the case, the verdict was without evidence to support it, and that the judgment for that reason must be reversed. This conclusion rests on two grounds, namely, that the house was unoccupied within the meaning of that term mentioned in the policy, and also that there was such a change in the occupancy as invalidated the policy. Upon the last point the case is ruled by Planters’ Mutual Insurance Association v. Dewberry, 69 Ark. 295. The policy in that case contained a clause identical with the one in question, and we held that where the house was occupied by the applicant as a dwelling at the time of the issuance of the policy, and that a subsequent change was made by the owner’s removal and a tenant taking possession, that operated as a change of occupancy within the meaning of the policy. The only difference between the two cases is that in the Dewberry case the house was occupied by a tenant at the time the fire occurred, whereas in the present case the tenant had moved out three days before the fire oc-eurred. That difference, however, is not controlling, for it is the change of occupancy which operated as a ¡breach of the conditions of the policy; and even if it were held that the return of the owner to the property reinstated the status so as to come within the terms of the policy, that would not occur until there had been an actual re-occupancy by the owner. In this case the premises had not been occupied by the owner for a considerable length of time. There was, according to the proof, an intention on the part of the owner to re-occupy the premises, but he had not actually done so. We are therefore of the opinion that the policy was rendered void, and that there can be no recovery thereon. The policy is void also by reason of the fact that the premises were vacant and unoccupied at the time of the fire. There is some discussion in the authorities as to the distinction between the terms “vacant” and “unoccupied,” and “vacant and unoccupied,” and “vacant or unoccupied,” but a discussion of that distinction is without importance here, for the language here is that the policy shall be void if the premises become “vacant or unoccupied.” Limburg v. German Fire Ins. Co., 90 Iowa 709, 57 N. W. 626, 23 L. R. A. 99.

The court, over objections of appellant, gave the following instruction, which we think was erroneous: “If the jury believe that Taylor went out on Saturday, and that plaintiff immediately began preparation to move in, and if the fire had not occurred, he would have moved in on Thursday morning, then the policy would not be void if the jury believe from Saturday till Thursday would be a reasonable length of time for plaintiff to get ready to move. ’ ’

(2-3) There are authorities to the effect that where the insured property is occupied by a tenant, it is impliedly contemplated by the parties to the contract of insurance that “any temporary vacancy caused by or incident to such change is not within the purview of the vacancy clause.” 2 Cooley’s Briefs on Insurance, 1675. That principle does not apply, however, in this case for the reason that the property was occupied as a dwelling, and it was contrary to the terms of the policy to change the character of the occupancy. Insurance Association v. Dewberry, supra. Therefore, there could he no presumption that a temporary vacancy or period of unoccupancy was within the contemplation of the parties. That point is emphasized in the case of Barry v. Prescott Ins. Co., 35 Hun (N. Y.) 601. The facts of that case are quite similar to the facts of this case, except that the period of un-oeoupancy was longer. The stipulation of the present policy was unconditionally to the effect that if the building 'become “vacant or unoccupied,” the.policy should be void, and it can not be said that there was any period of time contemplated at all for unoiecupancy, for the reason that the policy also provides that any change of occupancy should also operate as an avoidance of the policy. No presumption could be indulged in the face of that express stipulation. The fact that Taylor left a stove and table, which the assured expected to appropriate as" compensation for balance of rent due, does not prevent this clause attaching. In order that such state of facts may constitute an occupancy, there must be a substantial quantity of furniture, evincing an actual and personal occupancy. 2 Cooley’s Briefs on Insurance, 1659, 1667; Weidert v. State Ins. Co., 19 Or. 261; Corrigan v. Connecticut Ins. Co., 122 Mass. 299; Cook v. Continental Ins. Co., 70 Mo. 610; Continental Insurance Co. v. Kyle, 124 Ind. 132, 9 L. R. A. 81; Feshe v. Council Bluffs Ins. Co., 74 Iowa 676.

The policy is therefore void on both the grounds stated. Reversed and remanded for a new trial.