Court Opinion

ID: 3854306
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:38:13.935438+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:16:23.585270
License: Public Domain

Argued April 29, 1924.
This judgment must be affirmed on the authority of Goldberg v. Knickerbocker Ins. Co., 82 Pa. Super. 302.
The policy of insurance in suit contained a clause warranting that the automobile, the subject of insurance, had been fully paid for by the assured and was not mortgaged or otherwise encumbered; and a condition that the policy should be null and void, "if the interest *Page 428 
of the assured in the property be other than unconditional and sole ownership."
At the time the policy was issued, July 26, 1920, the assured, the plaintiff, was not the sole and unconditional owner of the automobile. He held it under a bailment lease, executed twelve days before, which called for an initial installment and a series of monthly payments as rental. No fraud was practiced on the plaintiff. He could read and write, and if he did not read the terms of the bailment before he insured the automobile, he alone is to blame. That he had an insurable interest in the property is beside the question; he did not have the interest described and insured in the policy: Duda v. Home Ins. Co., 20 Pa. Super. 244, 249. It was not contended that the insurance company had knowledge of the plaintiff's true interest in the property at the issuance of the policy as in Hoffman v. Ins. Co., 274 Pa. 293.
The case is not altered by the fact that the plaintiff paid the last installment of rent reserved under the lease a few days before the automobile was stolen. The warranty in the policy related to the time the policy was obtained: Puro v. Franklin Fire Ins. Co., 83 Pa. Super. 164. "The assured, by his warranty, engages that, whatever may be the condition of things when he makes his application, the facts shall be as warranted when the policy attaches": State Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Arthur, 30 Pa. 315, 331. As the insurance was conditioned on the assured's sole and unconditional ownership of the property and such was not the fact when the policy was issued, it never went into force: Goldberg v. Knickerbocker Ins. Co., supra: and nothing was done by the parties, or either of them, between the date of such final payment and the loss, to render it effective.
Under the facts in evidence the court below was obliged to enter judgment non obstante veredicto in favor of the defendant.
The assignment of error is overruled and the judgment is affirmed. *Page 429