112 Me. 379 | Me. | 1914
Action of assumpsit upon an insurance policy issued by the defendant on October 30, 1912, for the sum of $1200. The case was submitted to the presiding Justice on an agreed statement of facts with right of exceptions in matters of law. The presiding Justice found in favor of the plaintiff and the defendant alleged exceptions. The single question open to the defendant is whether or not the plaintiff in his application for insurance made a false representation as to ownership when in answer to the question 1 ‘Who owns the buildings referred to” he replied “Nelson P. Cummings.”
’ This agreed statement demolishes the contention of the defendant. The plaintiff’s representation in his application that he was the owner of the property, was true in fact. It might well be claimed that he was the legal owner and that the full legal title was in him.
But conceding what the defendant contends, that this delivery was only conditional, and made for the purpose of obtaining the greater part of the purchase price by mortgage, and when that purpose failed the delivery failed, still, under the agreed statement, the father, by the subsequent deed, took only the naked legal title while the son took the equitable title. The father was the trustee, and the son was the beneficiary and the equitable owner. The father had paid nothing. The son had paid in $300 and orally agreed to pay the mortgage. This not only gave him an insurable interest, Gilman v. Ins. Co., 81 Maine, 494, Getchell v. Ins. Co., 109 Maine, 274, but made his answer in the application a truthful one. Had the defendant desired more particular knowledge as to the kind or extent of his ownership it should have sought the information by more specific inquiry. Getchell v. Ins. Co., supra. But this it did not do. Had it done so, the additional information would doubtless have been satisfactory and the policy would have been issued just the same, because the real party in interest was obtaining the insurance, and to ascertain that fact is the object of the inquiry on the part of the Company.
Exceptions overruled.