This action was brought upon a fire insurance policy issued by the defendant to Jane A. Lasher, insuring her to the amount of $2,500- “on her household furniture,” contained in a hotel known as the Woodstock Overlook Hotel, the “ loss, if any, payable to Artemas Sahler and William Lounsbery as their interest may appear.” The insurance was for one year from Aug. 21, 1874, and the furniture was destroyed by fire April 1, 1875. The action has been defended on several grounds, but one of which need be noticed.
Mrs. Lasher did not own the furniture, but she was in possession thereof under a contract to purchase the same at the price of $19,000 from the other two plaintiffs, Sahler and Lounsbery, with a covenant or condition in reference to such purehase, that the title should not pass until the ptirchase-price was fully paid; and the further condition, that she should keep the furniture insured in the sum of $10,000, loss, if any, payable to Sahler and Lounsbery as their interest might appear. *426At the time of the fire she had paid upon the purchase-price only about the sum of $2,680.
The policy contained a-provision that it should be void “if the interest of the assured in the property, whether as owner, trustee, consignee, factor, agent, mortgagee, lessee or otherwise, be not truly stated ” in the policy. It is claimed that this provision in the policy was violated and we are of that opinion. Mrs. Lasher was the assured, and it was her interest only which was insured. The representation to the company was that the property was hers, and that representation under the circumstances implied ownership or title in her. It was the obvious purpose of the provision quoted to require the assured to state truly her interest, whatever it was. This she did not do. It is true that she had an interest which was insurable, but what that interest was she should have truly stated.
The transaction as to the insurance may be stated in its legal effect as follows: Her agent went to the defendant and applied for the insurance and it said to him that her interest, whatever it is, must be truly stated, else the policy will be void, and he then replied that the furniture is hers. That was tantamount to a representation by him that she was the real and-true owner of the furniture, and so it was held in Mers v. Franklin Ins. Co. (68 Mo. 127). In that case the policy contained a similar provision, and it was said that the object of the condition was to require in all cases a representation as to the interest of the assured, and to make such representation.a warranty. There the insurance was upon a house, and there was no evidence that the assured made any representation as to the ownership of the house, but it was described in the policy as “ his,” and it was said in the opinion that •“ where, by the terms of the policy, no disclosure is required of the assured as to the extent of his interest, and no inquiry is made by the company in reference thereto, a lessee may, in effecting insurance, properly describe the premises as his. * * * But when a disclosure of the true interest of the assured, if the same is not absolute, is required to be made by a condition of the policy, such interest must be stated to the company or the policy will be *427void. The acceptance of a policy containing the condition under consideration, without any representation as to title or any statement of the specific interest of the assured, amounts to a declaration on the part of the assured that his interest is an absolute one.” We think these views contain a true exposition of the law applicable to this case.
The necessity for a true statement of plaintiff’s interest in the furniture was not obviated by the clause making the loss payable to Sahler and Lounsbery as their interest might appear. Her representation was that she had title to, and owned the property, and she applied for insurance upon the property as hers. That clause at most implied that Sahler and Lounsbery had some lien upon, or some other interest in, the furniture which was consistent with title and ownership in her. It was not tantamount to a notice to the defendant that Sahler and Lounsbery owned the furniture, and that she had but a small interest therein under an unperformed contract of purchase, but simply to a notice that they had a lien upon or interest in the furniture which she owned.
The defense based upon this provision of the policy was sufficiently set up in the answer and taken upon the trial.
Fredenburgh, through whom the plaintiff, Mrs. Lasher, obtained the policy of the defendant, was not the agent of the defendant but was her agent, and hence his knowledge as to the title of the furniture and her interest therein cannot be imputed to the defendant.
The order should, therefore, be affirmed, and judgment absolute ordered against the plaintiffs, with costs.
Folger, Oh. J., Bapallo and Finoh, JJ., concur; Daneorth and Andrews, JJ., dissent; Miller, J., absent.
Order affirmed, and judgment accordingly.