A fire insurance policy contained a warranty exempting the
insurer from liability for loss occurring while the hazard was
increased by any means "within the control or knowledge of the
insured," and another warranty exempting the insurer if loss
occurred while there were kept on the premises certain prohibited
articles, including gasoline. A rider altered this prohibition to
the extent of permitting gasoline to be kept and used for the
purpose of bottling automobile oils "or for other mercantile
purposes not more hazardous." Fire occurred during occupancy by a
tenant engaged in the illegal manufacture of intoxicating liquor
who kept on the premises a large quantity of gasoline for use in
that connection.
Held:
1. A determination of the hazard involved was essential to
maintaining the defense under either warranty. P.
285 U. S.
116.
Page 285 U. S. 113
2. The increase-of-hazard warranty is not violated unless there
is increase of hazard within the knowledge and control of the
insured; the prohibited articles warranty may be violated
irrespective of the knowledge and control of the insured. P.
285 U. S.
116.
3. Whether the business of operating moonshine stills was or was
not more hazardous than that of bottling automobile oils was a
question of fact for the jury. P.
285 U.S. 117.
4. If the illicit business was more hazardous, the prohibited
articles warranty was violated.
Id.
5. An allegation in a specification of defense under the
prohibited articles warranty, charging the insured with knowledge
and control, is to be regarded as surplusage.
Id.
6. The burden of proof was upon the insurer to show that the
occupancy was not one to which the gasoline permit extended.
Id.
7. The court could not take judicial notice that the operation
of the stills was more hazardous than bottling automobile oils or
say that it was not a mercantile purpose. P.
285 U. S.
118.
8. The defendant's failure to ask proper instructions does not
cure the error in instructions which were given, and to which
exceptions were taken.
Id.
49 F.2d 158 reversed.
Certiorari, 284 U.S. 605, to review a judgment affirming a
judgment against the insurance company in an action upon a policy
of fire insurance.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action to recover on a policy of fire insurance was brought
in the federal court for Northern West Virginia by Sophia C.
Bachmann, a citizen of that state, against
Page 285 U. S. 114
the St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, a Minnesota
corporation. The parties stipulated that the plaintiff was entitled
to recover
"unless the policy had been forfeited and nullified by the
alleged violations as set forth in defendant's Specifications for
Defense Nos. 1 and 2 filed in this case."
The first specification recited the increase of hazard
warranty:
"Unless otherwise provided by agreement in writing added hereto,
this company shall not be liable for loss or damage occurring (b)
while the hazard is increased by any means within the control or
knowledge of the insured;"
and alleged that, by means "within the knowledge and control of
the plaintiff and her agent or agents" the fire hazard had been
increased. The second specification of defense recited the
prohibited articles warranty:
"Unless otherwise provided by agreement in writing added hereto,
this Company shall not be liable for loss or damage occurring (d)
while . . . there is kept, used or allowed on the described
premises . . . gasoline . . . ;"
and alleged that,
"at the time of the fire complained of, and prior thereto, large
quantities of gasoline were being kept . . . upon and about the
insured premises, all of which was well known to the plaintiff and
her agent or agents, and was in violation of the foregoing
condition and warranty."
To each defense, the plaintiff replied that the warranty recited
had been modified by a rider added to the policy, and also that,
prior to the fire she had no knowledge or control, as alleged, of
the circumstances relied upon as showing breach of the warranty.
The rider set forth in the reply altered the occupancy clause of
the policy, which had originally described the insured building as
"occupied as Produce Store," so that it read, "occupied for
bottling automobile oils, offices, and other mercantile purposes
not more hazardous." Another clause of the policy permitted the
insured "for present and other occupancies not more hazardous" "to
do such work and
Page 285 U. S. 115
to keep and use such materials as are usual in such
occupancies," and a rule of the West Virginia Fire Underwriters'
Association (concededly a part of the insurance contract) provides
that
"the word 'materials' as used above, includes gasoline and such
other materials as are prohibited by the printed conditions of the
policy, when kept and used for such purposes as are usual to the
occupancies permitted."
Gasoline is used in the business of bottling automobile
oils.
The case was tried before a jury. The defendant introduced
evidence tending to show that the premises were occupied at the
time of the fire by a tenant engaged in the illegal manufacture of
intoxicating liquors, and that a large quantity of gasoline was
kept on the premises for use in that connection. But it failed in
its effort to prove that the plaintiff had knowledge of these
facts. The verdict was for the plaintiff, and the judgment entered
thereon was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. 49 F.2d 158.
The writ of certiorari was granted because of alleged conflict with
decisions of this Court and of the Eighth Circuit Court of
Appeals.
The only error assigned here by the insurance company relates to
the construction of the prohibited articles warranty, and to the
Circuit Court of Appeals' approval of the trial court's
instructions with reference thereto. It is contended that, under
that warranty, even as modified by the rider, the presence of
gasoline in connection with the use of the premises for the illegal
manufacture of intoxicating liquors was an absolute bar to
liability, regardless of the plaintiff's knowledge or control of
the conditions, and that the trial court, in instructing the jury
that the defendant must establish the fact of such knowledge and
control, confused the requirements of the prohibited articles
warranty with those of the increase of hazard warranty, and in
effect read the condition against the use of gasoline out of the
policy.
Page 285 U. S. 116
In passing upon this contention, the Circuit Court of Appeals
said:
"At the time of the inspection by the agent of the insurance
company, and the attachment of the rider to the policy, the
building was being used for the handling and bottling of automobile
oil, and it was shown that gasoline was stored in the building, and
that the agent of the insurance company saw that gasoline was being
used and stored in the building. It was contended on the trial
below that this rider constituted a permit for the handling of
gasoline within the building, and that its effect was to remove
gasoline from the prohibited articles warranty, and that the
quantity of gasoline, if greater than used at the time of the
issuance of the permit, brought this question into the increased
hazard class. The trial court took this view of the case, and we
think properly so. The agent of the insurance company knew that the
rider permitted the use of gasoline at least to some extent, and,
in order to show that the hazard was increased by a greater use of
gasoline, as a defense to the recovery by the insured, the
insurance company must, under the terms of the policy, as above
discussed, bring such fact 'within the knowledge and control' of
the insured or her agent."
In so holding, the court was in error. Because of the terms of
the rider, a determination of the hazard involved was essential to
maintaining the defense under the prohibited articles warranty, as
well as that under the increase of hazard warranty. But the two
warranties are distinct. The latter is not violated unless there is
increase of hazard within the knowledge and control of the insured.
The former may be violated if a tenant keeps the prohibited article
on the premises, even if this was done without the knowledge and
control of the insured.
Liverpool & London Ins. Co. v.
Gunther, 116 U. S. 113,
116 U. S.
128-129;
Gunther v. Liverpool & London &
Globe Ins. Co., 134 U. S. 110,
134 U. S. 116.
Compare 151 U. S. S.
117� Ins. Co. v. Coos County,
151 U.
S. 452, 151 U. S.
463-464. The rider attached to the policy altered the
prohibition against gasoline only to the extent of permitting it to
be kept and used for the purpose of bottling automobile oils, or
for "other mercantile purposes not more hazardous." The court could
not say as a matter of law whether the business of operating
moonshine stills was or was not more hazardous than that of
bottling automobile oils. Compare Royal Exch. Assur. of London
v. Thrower,
246 F. 768, 772; Phoenix Assur. Co. v.
Franklin Brass Co.,
58 F. 166, 171; Schaffer v. Hampton
Ins. Co.,@ 183 Minn. 101, 235 N.W. 618. If it was more hazardous,
the presence of the gasoline constituted a violation of the
warranty. The question should have been submitted to the jury.
It is urged on behalf of the respondent that the insurance
company is not in a position to complain of this error. Stress is
laid on the circumstance that, in its specifications of defense,
the company alleged knowledge and control by the insured of the
presence of the gasoline and the operation of the stills, and it is
argued that the parties are bound by the issue as thus joined. But
the pleading set forth the prohibited articles warranty and
asserted a defense under it. Any additional matter which might by
implication be read as an attempted construction of the warranty is
to be regarded as surplusage.
Compare Lawrence v. Hyde, 77
W.Va. 639, 643, 88 S.E. 45;
Lohr v. Wolfe, 71 W.Va. 627,
628, 77 S.E. 71;
Jones v. Sanitary District, 265 Ill. 98,
100, 101, 106 N.E. 473;
Hall v. Spaulding, 42 N.H. 259,
262. When the defendant later sought instructions that proof of
knowledge and control by the insured was not essential to
establishment of the defense, the plaintiff made no effort to show
that it had been prejudiced.
A more serious difficulty is that the defendant did not itself
seek proper instructions. The burden was upon
Page 285 U. S. 118
it to prove that the occupancy was not one to which the gasoline
permit extended.
Compare Logan v. Provident Savings Life
Assurance Society, 57 W.Va. 384, 390, 50 S.E. 529. Yet it
presented no request that the jury be instructed as to the meaning
of the rider. Nor did it request an instruction that the jury find
whether the occupancy at or before the time of the fire was more
hazardous than that of bottling automobile oils. Its request was
merely that the jury be charged that the plaintiff could not
recover if at and prior to the time of the fire substantial
quantities of gasoline were being kept on the premises "either for
the purpose of operating moonshine stills or for any other purpose
not permitted by the policy." Thus, it requested the court to hold
as a matter of law that operating moonshine stills was outside the
scope of the permitted occupancies. The court could not take
judicial notice that the operation of the stills was more hazardous
than bottling automobile oils, or say that it was not a mercantile
purpose.
But the defendant's failure to ask proper instructions does not
cure the error in the instructions which were given and excepted
to.
Compare Texas & Pacific Ry. Co. v. Volk,
151 U. S. 73,
151 U. S. 78. At
the plaintiff's request, the trial judge charged that,
"unless the plaintiff . . . had control or knowledge of the
keeping and using of such gasoline or the operation of such stills,
such keeping, using, and operation . . . constitute no
defense;"
that
"the defendant, by the issuance of the rider . . . , is estopped
to avoid the policy because of the fact that quantities of gasoline
were kept and used upon the premises, since the said rider
permitted the bottling of automobile oils which, according to the
uncontradicted evidence, contained gasoline."
These instructions, while correct insofar as they bore upon the
defense under the increase of hazard warranty, were erroneous in
respect to that under the prohibited articles warranty.
Page 285 U. S. 119
The fact that the defendant had incorporated errors of law in
the instructions which it sought upon the second defense did not
justify putting the case to the jury solely upon the first.
Compare Westchester Fire Ins. Co. v. Fitzpatrick, 2 F.2d
651, 654;
Sutherland v. Payne, 274 F. 360, 361;
Rothe
v. Pennsylvania Co., 195 F. 21, 25;
Audubon Bldg. Co. v.
F. M. Andrews & Co., 187 F. 254, 260. We are constrained
to reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals with
directions that the case be remanded to the District Court for
further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS thinks the judgment should be
affirmed.