DocketNumber: No. 6350
Citation Numbers: 44 Wash. 388
Judges: Root
Filed Date: 11/14/1906
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 8/12/2021
This was an action to recover on an insurance policy, issued by respondent to appellant, against loss of property by theft, larceny or burglary. From a judgment in favor of defendant, this appeal is prosecuted. On the 18th of December, 1904, the policy sued upon was issued to appellant, covering, for the period of one year, various items of personal property contained in appellant’s home in. Seattle. On or about the 1st day of May, 1905, part of the property thus insured was stolen from said house. Some four months prior to the time of the theft, the appellant, without the written or other consent of defendant, and without its knowledge, leased the house to tenants who occupied it
“For direct loss by burglary, theft or larceny of any of the property described in the schedule hereinafter given and constituted to be insured hereunder occasioned by its felonious abstraction from the interior of the house, building, apartments, room or rooms, actually occupied by assured, and described in said schedule, and hereinafter called the premises, by any domestic, servant or employee of the assured, or by any person or persons, except the assured, and for direct loss by damage to said property and to the said premises caused by burglars and thieves.'
“This policy shall be void if the conditions or circumstances of the risk are changed without the written consent of the company, or if the assured attempts in any way to defraud the company, or if the policy is assigned without the written consent of the company.”
Respondent contends, and the trial court upheld the contention, that the leasing of the premises by the assured without respondent’s consent constituted a change in the “conditions and circumstances” of the risk which rendered the policy void under and by virtue of the provisions just quoted. Appellant meets this contention by a reliance upon the following provision in said policy:
“-If the premises are left without an occupant for a period exceeding six consecutive months, unless a written permit for such nonoccupancy, signed by an executive officer of the company, is endorsed upon or attached to the policy,”
the defendant should not be liable for loss or damage. It will be observed that this provision is absolutely inconsistent with the others above quoted. Those portions implied that the property was to be insured while in a building actually occupied by assured, and expressly stated that a- change in “conditions or circumstances of the risk” should render the policy void. But the provision relied upon by appellant plainly contemplates that the assured might change the conditions
Adjudicated cases upon questions of burglary insurance appear to be scarce, in so far as they throw any light upon the questions here involved; but it would seem that policies of this character are analogous to those of life, accident, and fire insurance. As to such policies, the rule is well established that, Avhere by reason of ambiguity, inconsistency and uncertainty, either of two divergent constructions might find support, a policy Avill be given that interpretation which is the more favorable to the assured. As the instrument is prepared by the insurance company, it is presumed that appropriate language has been employed to safeguard its interests ; and the rule is particularly applicable in determining the effect to be given clauses and proAdsions which are more or less obscure, and which are claimed to limit the company’s obligations or reserve exceptions to its general liability. The section of the policy, relied upon by appellant, authorizing him to leave the premises for a period not exceeding six months without the “Avritten permit,” being at variance AA'ith the provisions as to the house being “actually occupied by assured,” and as to the change in “conditions or circumstances . . . Avithout the written consent,” and these latter provisions being intended to limit the liability of the company, Ave must hold, under the accepted rule applicable to insurance contracts, that the appellant herein had the right to leave the premises for a period not exceeding six consecutive months Avithout the consent of the company;
In the case of Starr v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 41 Wash. 199, 83 Pac. 113, this court said:
“It is the established and universal law that insurance policies are to be construed in favor of the insured, and most strongly against insurance companies. This is a reasonable rule, considering the fact that these policies are prepared by men who are learned in the law and trained in preparing contracts of this kind, and who have studied the legal effects of all the multifarious provisions in the ordinary insurance policies, whether accident or life.”
In the case of Equitable Acc. Ins. Co. v. Osborn, 90 Ala. 201, 9 South. 869, 13 L. R. A. 267, the supreme court of Alabama employed the following language:
“Exceptions of this kind are construed most strongly against the insurer, and'liberally in favor of the insured. This is now the settled rule for construing all kinds of insurance policies, rendered necessary especially in modern times to circumvent the ingenuity of the insurance companies in so framing contracts of this kind as to make the exceptions unfairly devour the whole policy.”
See, also, Rumsey v. Phoenix Ins. Co., 1 Fed. 396: Crane v. City Ins. Co., 3 Fed. 558; American Credit Indemnity Co. v. Wood, 73 Fed. 81; Olson v. St. Paul Ins. Co., 39 Minn. 432; Boon v. Aetna Ins. Co., 40 Conn. 575; Moore v. Phoenix Ins. Co. [64 N. H. 140], 10 Am. St. 390 and note: 1 Cooley, Brief on Ins., pp. 632-4; 2 Id., pp. 1723, 1743-6.
The judgment of the honorable superior court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment in favor of appellant for the value of the goods as found by the trial court, together with legal interest and costs.
Dunbaii, Crow, Fullerton, and Hadley, JJ., concur.
Mount, C. J. and Rudkin, J., took no part.