Fire up those cigars!

In Charlotte, North Carolina, a man having purchased a case
of very rare, very expensive cigars insured them against
fire among other things. Within a month, having smoked his
entire stockpile of cigars and without having made even his
first premium payment on the policy, the man filed a claim
against the insurance company.

In his claim, the man stated the cigars were lost "in a
series of small fires". The insurance company refused to
pay, citing the obvious reason that the man had consumed
the cigars in the normal fashion.

The man sued....and won. In delivering the ruling, the
judge agreeing that the claim was frivolous, stated
nevertheless that the man held a policy from the company in
which it had warranted that the cigars were insurable and
also guaranteed that it would insure against fire, without
defining what it considered to be "unacceptable fire", and
was obligated to pay the claim.

Rather than endure a lengthy and costly appeal process the
insurance company accepted the ruling and paid the man
$15,000 for the rare cigars he lost in "the fires".

AND NOW, THE REST OF THE STORY...

After the man cashed the check, however, the company had
him arrested on 24 counts of arson. With his own insurance
claim and testimony from the previous case being used
against him, the man was convicted of intentionally burning
his insured property and sentenced to 24 months in jail and
a $24,000 fine.