142 P.2d 806 | Kan. | 1943
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action on a fire insurance policy. The trial court overruled a motion of the plaintiff, Antone- Drewicki, (commonly known as Antone Price) for judgment on the pleadings and sustained his motion that the defendant be required to elect upon which one of the two defenses he relied. Both parties have appealed.
After the formal allegations, the petition alleged that the policy in question was a renewal of a former policy issued by the agent of the defendant; that plaintiff had asked his wife to secure this policy from defendant’s agent; that when it was first issued it was in the amount of $1,000 and in the name of plaintiffs wife and that he caused his wife to take the policy back to the agent and tell him to
An answer was filed to this petition denying the alleged conversation between the agent and Mrs. Price, alleging that the policy was issued in the name of Mrs. Price, that the fire was of incendiary origin; that she had been convicted of arson and that the policy was therefore void. A trial was had which resulted in the jury being discharged because it was unable to agree. At the request of the defendant insurance company Mrs. Price was made a party defendant subsequent to this trial and personal service was had upon her. A supplemental answer and counterclaim were then filed by the defendant. This is the answer at which the motions we are considering were directed. It admitted the formal allegations in the petition; then denied that the policy sued on was a renewal policy; denied that it ever had taken an application or issued a policy to the plaintiff or that it was ever represented to the defendant or its agent that anyone other than Mrs. Price had an insurable interest in the property. It further stated that about the 7th day of July, 1939, the agent of defendant had mailed to Mrs. Price a renewal of a policy issued by the agent to Mrs. Price in a fire insurance company other than defendant; that Mrs. Price had returned the policy to the agent and asked him to issue a new one increasing the amount of the insurance from $1,450 to $1,700; that the agent had written the policy upon which this action was brought to cover the property of
The plaintiff first filed a demurrer to the counterclaim on the ground that it was not a cause of action that could properly be pleaded as a setoff or counterclaim to the cause of action set' out in plaintiff’s petition; that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute any defense to the plaintiff’s cause of action and that it was a separate and different cause of action founded upon another and different contract than that set out in plaintiff’s petition. This demurrer was overruled February 12, 1943. About the same time the plaintiff filed a motion for judgment on' the pleadings on the ground that the defendant in its answer and counterclaim had admitted that plaintiff was insured under the policy and had charged him with no fraud or other act voiding the policy; that when the defendant accepted notice that the title of the property insured stood in the name of plaintiff, by not canceling the policy it thereby waived the right to claim as a matter of law that the plaintiff was not insured. This motion was also overruled on the 19th day of February, 1943.
The plaintiff also filed a motion to require the defendant to elect upon which ground of defense contained in its supplemental answer it relied. The motion alleged that the inconsistencies were a denial by the defendant that the plaintiff was the insured in the policy, and the defense set out in the counterclaim that the defendant was subrogated and claimed the right to foreclose the note and mortgage against plaintiff because defendant had paid the amount of the note to the loan company. On the 17th of April, 1943, the trial court found that these defenses were inconsistent and sustained the motion and ordered the defendant to elect upon which of the defenses it would rely. The defendant appealed from this order on May 24, 1943. On June 11, 1943, the plaintiff attempted to file a cross-appeal from the order of February 19, 1943, overruling its motion for judgment on the pleading. We shall first deal with the defendant’s appeal. It will be noted that the position of the defendant company is, first, that the insured named in the policy had no insurable interest in the property and it actually had no contract with the plaintiff; and second, that because it paid the mortgage company
“To make actions inconsistent one action must allege what the other denies, or the allegation in one must necessarily repudiate or be repugnant to the other.” (Sybil5.)
We do not have that situation here. The defendant could prove its allegation as to the title of the property being in the plaintiff and this policy and all of its dealings being with his wife without offering any testimony that had the least bearing upon the liability of the insurance company to the mortgagee, as pleaded in the answer. The argument of plaintiff overlooks the real underlying reason for the relationship that existed between these parties. It is a very common relationship. Practically every mortgage company that loans money upon real estate requires that the buildings be insured. Everybody knows why that is. It would not do the mortgage company any good to have a mortgage upon a town lot which had been the site of a valuable building if when the time came to foreclose the mortgage the building had been consumed by fire. So the mortgage company requires that the buildings be adequately insured and that there be what is described as a loss payable clause attached to the policy, as there was in this case. This clause provided that the loss or damage, if any, under the policy should be payable to the loan company as its interest might appear and provided further that the insurance as to the interest of the mortgagee should not be invalidated by any act of the mortgagor or owner of the property or for any other of the several reasons which are enumerated. This is an ordinary provision in insurance policies as to
In Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Mennonite Mutual Fire Ins. Co., 131 Kan. 628, 293 Pac. 402, we considered a case where the mortgagee brought an action to recover from an insurer after the building upon the real estate upon which it held a mortgage and which was insured by the insurer had been destroyed by fire. There were some circumstances which if true would have prevented the insurer from being liable to the insured. We held, however, as follows:
“Under the ‘union mortgage clause’ attached to the policy issued by the defendant in this case, which is set out in the opinion, it is held that the defendant insurance company is liable to the' plaintiff mortgagee notwithstanding the failure of the mortgagor to pay the premium on the policy and other acts of the mortgagor referred to in the opinion which rendered the policy void as to the mortgagor.” (Syl. (f 1.)
So in this case had the insurance company, the defendant here, refused to pay the mortgagee the amount of this mortgage the mortgagee could have brought an action and recovered on the policy. Instead of that the insurance company, defendant here, as was proper, recognized its liability to the mortgagee under the loss-payable clause and complied with its contract. Under the subrogation clause it had a right to bring an action to recover the amount that it was compelled to expend on account of the loss'. That is what this counterclaim is. It does not, however, depend on the validity of the policy as between the insurer and insured. If the rule were not as has been stated it might happen that the plaintiff could recover the full amount of the policy in an action against the insurer. The insurer would be compelled to pay the judgment and then would be relegated to another action against the insured to collect the amount that it had paid the mortgagee. This would only make for a multiplicity of suits and would give no one a right which he does not now have. This conclusion requires that the order of the trial court sustaining the motion of plaintiff that the defendant be required to elect upon which of the defenses it would rely was wrong and should be reversed.
This takes us to the cross-appeal, wherein the plaintiff seeks to appeal from the order of the .trial court overruling his motion for judgment on the pleadings. In this connection it should be noted that the plaintiff demurred to the counterclaim which was a part of the supplemental answer and this was overruled on February 12,
“Appeal may not be taken from an order overruling a motion for judgment on the pleadings where a demurrer which raised the same question of law had previously been overruled and no appeal therefrom had been perfected in time.” (Syl. Tf 2.)
See, also, Miller v. Sunflower Recreation Society, 151 Kan. 930, 101 P. 2d 891, and Sowers v. Wells, 152 Kan. 122, 102 P. 2d 980. Following the rule laid down in those cases, we hold that the order overruling the motion for judgment on the pleadings in this case was not an appealable order and as to it the appeal should be dismissed.
The judgment of the trial court sustaining the motion of the plaintiff that the defendant be required to elect is reversed; the appeal from the order denying the plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the pleadings is dismissed.