(dissenting). The property insured and subsequently destroyed by fire consisted of a steam saw and shingle mill. At the time the policy was issued the mill *314was being operated. Tbe owners failed; the mill was shut down, and left unoccupied. By the terms of the policy such vacancy rendered it void, unless the consent of the insurance company thereto was indorsed upon the policy. Mr. Stephenson, who was the local agent of the defendant, was appointed receiver. He obtained the consent of the company to continue the insurance during a certain period while it remained unoccupied. The condition upon which this consent was obtained and the' policy was to be continued in force is as follows: “Warranted by the assured that a watchman shall be employed about the premises night and day during the period of this permit.” Plaintiff purchased the property from the receiver, and the like permit and the same condition were indorsed upon the policy. During his receivership Mr. Stephenson employed watehmén as required. Upon the sale to plaintiff Mr. Stephenson asked him if he desired to employ the same watchmen, to which he replied, “No;” that he would put on watchmen of his own.
Upon the trial the defendant introduced no evidence, and upon the plaintiff’s own case its counsel requested the court to instruct the jury to render a verdict for it, on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to employ a watchman in accordance with the terms of the policy. The court submitted to the jury the question, as one of fact, whether such watchman had been employed, instructing them as follows:
“If you find from the evidence that a watchman was not employed about the mill insured during every hour of the day from September 1, 1891, until said mill was on fire, then your verdict must be for the defendant.”
This instruction was correct if there was any evidence to sustain it. It therefore becomes necessary to state the evidence fully upon this point.
Plaintiff owned a mill, which he was then operating, *315-situated about 450 feet from this one to the south. In the mill yard of the one he was operating he had a large number of men employed in hauling, sorting, and piling lumber. No workmen or watchmen were employed in the mill which was destroyed, nor upon the premises belonging thereto. Plaintiff had no man employed during the day to watch this mill, except as some of his employés about the other mill might watch it while engaged in their usual work there. He does not claim that he watched it himself. His testimony on this point is as follows:
“ My men were instructed to watch the property during the day-time. The foreman had charge of it. His name is Frederickson.
“Q. You say you instructed him to watch this north mill?
“A. No; I instructed him to have a watch for that mill at all times during the day.
“Q. You told Frederickson to have somebody watch this north mill all the time during the day?
“A. Yes; that is, he had general instructions to that effect.
“Q. When did' you give Frederickson those instructions?
“A. At the time we purchased the mill. * * *
“Q. I understand Mr. Frederickson’s duties were in the mill yard as foreman?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. You instructed him to watch the property?
“A. I instructed him to give instructions to watch the property during the day.
“Q. Did you instruct him to watch the property also?
“A. I instructed him to have the property watched during the day.
“Q. I ask you whether you instructed Frederickson himself to watch the property?
“A. I instructed him to have the property watched.”
He further testified that the men to whom he told Frederickson to give these instructions were employed about the south mill; that they were teamsters and pilers of lumber; that their business was to work during the day industriously in piling or hauling or whatever they had to *316do; that he hired and paid them for that; and that he did not employ or hire a man to watch around the mill which was burned, during the day, any further than these men did it. In reply to leading questions by his counsel, plaintiff further stated that he was positive the mill was watched, but lie could not give the name, of a single person, aside from Frederickson, to whom he had ever spoken about watching it. Furthermore, he did not produce a single employe or other person, aside from Frederickson, to give any evidence in regard to the matter. Iiis testimony is therefore valueless, and does not tend to establish the fact, essential to his right of recovery, that he had employed a watchman. W e must therefore look to Frederickson's testimony, which is as follows:
“ I was foreman for Mr. Spies. He told me to watch the mill there.
“Q. What did you do? Did you watch it?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. How long did you. watch it?
“A. I watch it since he buy it there,
“Q. You watched it in the day-time until the fire occurred?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did you have any other men that you gave instructions to watch it?
“A. Yes, sir.”
This is all of his direct testimony. On cross-examination he testified that his duties were to look after the men piling the lumber and the truckmen; that he was at work most of the time where they were loading the lumber on the tramway next to Mr. Spies’ mill; that his duty was to see that the lumber was piled in good order, to tell the men where to haul it, to attend to sorting it, to see that all of one kind was put on one wagon and all of another kind on another, to see when the wagons were loaded heavily enough, and to tell the men when to go *317away with it. He also testified that he was engaged in this general work on the day of the fire.
We think it entirely clear that Mr. .Frederickson was not such a w'atchman as was contemplated by the contract. He does not say that he went upon the premises in dispute at all, nor does he specify a single act of watching. From where he was at work he could not see one side of the mill, nor could he see into it. Boys or tramps might break into it from that side without being seen by him. His entire time was employed at the south mill, and it is not claimed that he left that work for a moment to look after this property. According to plaintiff’s own testimony, he did not instruct Mr. Frederickson to watch, but to see that the watching was done by some one else. The burden of proof was upon the plaintiff so show the employment of a -watchman. The facts were undisputed, and the question, therefore, became one of law for the court, and not of fact for the jury. Frederickson was engaged in an occupation which evidently required his constant attention. He was not expected to, could not, and did not leave it to -walk four or five hundred feet to act as a watchman under this contract. He did not go upon the premises. To hold that plaintiff’s action was a fulfillment of his contract would, in our judgment, be contrary to the plain terms of the contract. Can it be. said that the property was watched “ every hour during the day,” as the court instructed the jury they must find in order to render a verdict for plaintiff? Is a man, engaged constantly in another occupation several hundred feet from a vacant mill, and not on the mill property, sucl a watchman as these parties contemplated?
The case of Au Sable Lumber Co v. Insurance Co., 89 Mich. 413, does not govern this case. That case, as regards the watchman, was placed upon the ground that “from the time the watchman left in the morning until *318he came on again in the evening the mill was in charge of the book-keeper and barn man, whose duty it was to look after and care for the property."
The' judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered.
Hooker, C. J., concurred with Grant, J.