28 A.2d 824 | Md. | 1942
Appellants, plaintiffs below, entered suit against appellee, The Grangers Mutual Fire Insurance Company, a corporation, defendant below, on a fire insurance policy issued by defendants to plaintiffs, Alexander Cherewaty and Mary Cherewaty, as tenants by the entireties, by reason of loss or damage by fire. Defendant filed the general issue pleas and also the following special plea, being the fourth plea: "That the policy of insurance sued on and the endorsements thereto provide that said policy shall be void and that defendant shall not be liable for any loss or damage if the insured shall have any other contract of insurance, whether valid or not, covering the insured property, unless permitted in writing thereon; and that the insured did have another policy of insurance in force covering the loss of the said barn *151 and silo at the time they were destroyed by fire on June 28, 1940, to wit: a policy of insurance No. A3390, dated October 1, 1935, and issued by the Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Chester County, Poolesville, Pennsylvania, in which policy Alexander Cherewaty, one of the plaintiffs herein, was named as the insured; and the defendant did not permit the same, in writing or otherwise." Plaintiffs' demurrer to the special plea was overruled and plaintiffs having elected to stand on demurrer, judgment was entered in favor of the defendant by the Circuit Court of Cecil County, on the motion by the defendant for the failure of plaintiffs to plead to said fourth plea. An appeal is taken to this court from that judgment.
The question for our decision is whether the policy on which suit was brought, issued to Alexander Cherewaty and Mary Cherewaty, as tenants by the entireties, was made void by reason of a prior policy in another company issued to Alexander Cherewaty alone, permission having not been obtained for other insurance and therefore whether the demurrer was properly overruled.
In a previous ruling by this court in the case of NationalUnion Fire Insurance Co. v. Menke,
It is necessary that the two policies cover the same property and the same interest. "Other or double insurance exists where there are two or more policies on the same interest and subject, and against the same risk." Richards on Insurance, 4th Ed., Sec. 250. "Other or double insurance exists where two or more policies of insurance are affected upon or cover the same interest in the same, or part of the same, property against the same risk and either in the name or for the benefit of the same person." Encyclopedia of Insurance Law (Couch), Vol. 5, Sec. 1039. As Lord Mansfield said in Godin v. London Assurance Co., 1 Burr 489, 97 Eng. Reprint 419, 421; Id., 1 W. Bl. 103, 96 Eng. Reprint 58: "If the same man, really, and for his own proper account, insures the same goods doubly, though both insurances be not made in his own name, but one or both of them in the name of another person, yet that is just the same thing: for the same person is to have the benefit of both policies."
It cannot be contended that double insurance does not apply in the instant case, since the first policy was invalid because it was issued in the name of the husband alone, while the property was owned by the husband and wife as tenants by the entireties, for the reason that the restriction applies to other insurance "whether valid or not." It, of course, is not contended that both policies do not cover the same property. Appellants, however, argue that because the second policy is in the name of husband and wife as tenants by the entireties, it does not cover the same interest as the first policy issued to the husband alone. Without doubt, both policies are intended to cover the interest of the husband, whatever that interest might be. The fact that the interest of the wife is also covered in the second policy still does not eliminate the fact that both policies are issued to cover the interest of the husband. In the case of Mussey v. *153 Atlas Mutual Insurance Co.,
In the case of Gillett v. Liverpool L. G. Ins. Co.,
In the case of Continental Insurance Co. v. Hulman,
It is not necessary to consider the incidents of the estate of tenancy by the entireties. If the insurance money were paid to Alexander Cherewaty and Mary Cherewaty, as tenants by the entireties, it could hardly be contended that there was no benefit to Alexander Cherewaty and that he had no interest in that money. Whatever the interest of the husband might be, it is intended to be covered by both policies, and by reason of *155 the provision against other insurance, the demurrer was properly overruled.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
SLOAN, J., dissents.