Per Gavan Duffy J.: The rights and obligations arising under the policy still remained open.
Per Starke J.: A breach of warranty had been proved and the company was not estopped from relying on this breach, and consequently the policy was not good and binding on the company.
On the trial of the action the jury had found that the fact that a motor car of the respondent had previously been burnt, and in respect thereof a claim had been made by him on another insurance company, was not likely to affect the appellant in considering the acceptance of the proposal.
Held, that, the question of materiality being one of fact, the High Court, even if it had jurisdiction to interfere with the finding, should not on the evidence
By the policy the appellant insured the motor-car against loss or damage by collision, fire or theft to the extent of £350. A declaration having been made in the action by the Supreme Court of Victoria that the policy was valid,
Held, by Isaacs A.C.J. and Starke J. (Gavan Duffy J. dissenting), that an appeal lay as of right to the High Court under sec. 35 (1) (a) (2) of the Judiciary
Decision of the Supreme Court of Victoria (Mann J.) affirmed.
APPEAL from the Supreme Court of Victoria.
An action was brought in the Supreme Court by Baxter W. T. Dayton against the Western Australian Insurance Co. Ltd., by which the plaintiff claimed a declaration that a certain policy insurance issued by the defendant against loss or damage by collision, fire or theft to a certain motor-car to the extent of £350, was good and binding on the defendant.
By its defence the defendant alleged as follows, SO far as is material :-
4. On or about 20th April 1923 the plaintiff made a proposal to the defendant for (inter alia) insuring against damage to or loss by fire or theft of a Chevrolet motor-car No. 30952 (being the car referred to in the statement of claim); and by the said proposal it was declared that such proposal and the declaration therein contained were the basis of the contract of insurance for which it proposed, and the plaintiff by such proposal declared and warranted that the answers in the said proposal were in every respect true and correct and that the proposal for insurance was not in excess of the actual value of the car described and that he had not withheld any