Subject to the provisions of this section, the assured must disclose to the insurer, before the contract is concluded, every material circumstance which is known to the assured, and the assured is deemed to know every circumstance which, in the ordinary... A Digest of the Law Relating to Marine Insurance - Page 22by Sir Mackenzie Dalzell Edwin Stewart Chalmers, Douglas Owen - 1901 - 180 pagesFull view - About this book
| Engineering - 1974 - 994 pages
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| Law - 1923 - 462 pages
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| Sir Joseph Arnould, Edward Louis De Hart, Ralph Iliff Simey - Average (Maritime law) - 1901 - 912 pages
...contract may be avoided by the other party. 18. — (1.) Subject to the provisions of this section, the assured must disclose to the insurer, before the...such disclosure the insurer may avoid the contract. (2.) Every circumstance is material which would influence the judgment of a prudent insurer in fixing... | |
| Frederick Pollock - Law - 1903 - 498 pages
...disclose to the insurer. (a) Every material circumstance which is known to himself, and an agent to insure is deemed to know every circumstance which in the ordinary course of business ought to be known by, or to have been communicated to him. It seems at first sight strange that the words I have put in italics... | |
| Law reports, digests, etc - 1925 - 1300 pages
...party. By section 18 of the same Act it is provided that " Subject to the provisions of this section, the assured must disclose to the insurer, before the...material circumstance which is known to the assured," and further, that " Every circumstance is material which "• 6Edw. VII. cap 41. • In re Casey's Patents,... | |
| Edward Louis De Hart, Ralph Iliff Simey - Insurance, Marine - 1907 - 152 pages
...to the insurer — (a) Every material circumstance which is known to himself, and an agent to insure is deemed to know every circumstance which in the ordinary course of business ought to be known by, or to have been communicated to, him (m) ; and (b) Every material circumstance which the assured is... | |
| Lawrence Duckworth - Insurance - 1907 - 240 pages
...to the insurer — (a) Every material circumstance which is known to himself, and an agent to insure is deemed to know every circumstance which in the ordinary course of business ought to be known by, or to have been communicated to, him ; and (b) Every material circumstance which the assured is bound... | |
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