on them to prove very clearly that the misrepresentation has been
made. If I have. correctly construed the question, it is beyond doubt that the statement made in the answer was not true.
I need not further indicate the opinion that the misrepresentation was on a question material to the risk. And the proposal in which it was embodied was the basis of the contract and became part of the policy.
It has been suggested that the "particulars" warranted at the foot of the proposal are only the particulars of property indicated at the head thereof, and that the remainder of the particulars given by the proponent in answer to questions are not the subjects of warranty. I think that this is a narrow construction, and that it should not be adopted, as the document is not ambiguous. It is plain to my mind that the word "particulars" as it is used at the foot is used in the wide and general sense to cover everything in the proposal that is fitly described by that term, and that " particulars of property" at the head is visibly employed to denote one class of particulars only.
I am of opinion that the appellant Company is entitled to succeed on the first ground, and I need go no further.
ISAACS J. Ultimately the only point of importance left is the effect of omitting from the answer to a question any reference to the previous claim for the burnt motor-car. That omission is relied on by the Company as a defence in two ways, both of which concern not merely this case but other fire insurance policies, and are of immense importance to every one who thinks he has a reliable insurance on anything-life, accident or otherwise.
There is no charge of fraud or wilful deceit raised against the respondent. Suggestions were made during the argument of suspicious conduct relative to the motor-car fire, but no suggestion was made on the pleadings, nothing which would prepare a litigant to meet by evidence any charge of wrongdoing. We must take it that the respondent's honesty is not challenged.
The proposal, which, as usual, is on a printed form and prepared by the Company, contains, besides the "particulars of property," several questions. One question was this "Has proponent ever