Fletcher v. Commonwealth Insurance
Fletcher v. Commonwealth Insurance
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court. If the concealment was material, it will avoid the policy notwithstanding the assured did not intend to commit any fraud. And it is true that the materiality of the fact concealed is a question for the jury. These general principles are well established. But the assured may well be silent as to various matters connected with or having some relation to the property insured, without any prejudice to his insurance, provided that such silence was not intended to deceive or to defraud the under writer. Aliud est celare, aliud lacere. In the case at bar the defendants say, that the plaintiff withheld information which was material to the risk, and which, therefore, ought to have been communicated. And the fact so withheld is stated to be, that the plaintiff did not inform the defendants who owned the land on which the building stood. Now it seems to us very clear, that it was not necessary that he should. He stated his property in the building, goods, &c. &c. He slated in what town and street it stood. He stated every thing truly. And it
This is the more equitable, because the law would require the plaintiff to take reasonable care of the property insured. He could not recover if it were proved that the fire was caused oy his own fraud or neglect.
If the Chief Justice had left the cause to the jury with instructions, to find for the defendants, if they should think there was a concealment material to the risk, and they had returned a verdict for the defendants upon that ground, we all think the verdict could not have been supported, upon the evidence produced- The fact is to be settled by the jury, but it must be upon legal and sufficient evidence ; and where the evidence is agreed, it is a question of law whether it be sufficient or not to establish the fact. Now the evidence is, that the plaintiff did not say whether he owned the land or not; and it is no! in our power to see how that varied the risk which the defendants assured against fire It would have been just as material to
Reference
- Full Case Name
- George Fletcher versus The Commonwealth Insurance Company
- Status
- Published