156 A. 577 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1930
Argued October 15, 1930. The proceeding below was attachment execution under which plaintiff sought to attach in the hands of The Pennsylvania Fire Insurance Company the sum of $204.75 alleged to be due from it to defendant, its insured, as an unearned or return premium. The question now involved is whether plaintiff was entitled to a summary judgment against the garnishee upon its answers to plaintiff's interrogatories. Deeming the answers legally insufficient to prevent judgment, plaintiff obtained a rule which the court below discharged and it thereupon appealed to this court.
We gather from the pleadings that the controversy *250
arose out of these circumstances: On March 10, 1928, Ronald J. Kinsella, the defendant, being the owner of a property in Upper Darby Township, Delaware County, occupied as a store and apartments, gave his bond, secured by a mortgage thereon, in the sum of $7,000 to the Edward G. Budd Building and Loan Association, plaintiff in the attachment and appellant herein. At the same time, The Pennsylvania Fire Insurance Company, garnishee and appellee herein, issued to Kinsella its policy upon the property insuring him against loss by fire for a term of ten years for a premium of $243.13; the policy, which contained a standard mortgagee clause (beginning: "Loss or damage, if any, under this policy, shall be payable to Edward G. Budd Building Association as mortgagee [or trustee], as interest may appear," etc.), was placed in the possession of the association as mortgagee. No assignment of the policy was ever made by the insured. Kinsella having defaulted upon his bond and mortgage, judgment was entered against him in Delaware County upon the bond on March 4, 1929, damages being assessed at $7,681.43; an execution issued with the result that the property was sold by the sheriff to plaintiff for $50 and the sheriff's deed to it was acknowledged May 2, 1929. By this change in the title to the property insured, which occurred as of the date of the acknowledgment and delivery of the sheriff's deed (Collins v. London Assurance Corp.,
The material interrogatory was whether the garnishee had in its possession when the writ was served "any return premium on cancelled insurance policy No. 107088 ...... due the defendant, and, if so, ...... the amount of the same." In its answers the garnishee admitted the issuing of the policy to defendant with a mortgagee clause in favor of plaintiff; the purchasing of the property by plaintiff at sheriff's sale; and the forwarding of the policy to the garnishee by plaintiff. The averments of the answer which raise the questions now for disposition were: "The said Edward G. Budd Building and Loan Association has no legal right, power or authority to cancel the said policy of insurance and no request for the cancellation of the said policy has been made by the assured therein named, to wit, Ronald J. Kinsella; if there had been any cancellation of the said policy, which garnishee denies, the return premium as of the date of the sheriff's sale is in the sum of $204.75. ...... The said policy of insurance by reason of the sheriff's sale of the said premises and the execution and delivery by the sheriff of Delaware County to the Edward G. Budd Building and Loan Association of a deed for the premises has become and is void, as in and by the policy of insurance ...... it is provided, inter alia, as follows: `This entire policy shall be void, unless otherwise provided by agreement in writing added hereto ...... (c) if, with the knowledge of the insured, foreclosure proceedings be commenced, or notice given of sale of any property insured hereunder, by reason of any mortgage or trust deed.'. ..... Neither at the time the writ ...... was served nor at any time since has the defendant claimed from the garnishee any money or property on any account whatsoever, and there is no debt or demand in suit. ...... It avers that by reason *252 of the circumstances hereinbefore set forth its policy of insurance No. 107088 became null and void ...... and further avers that the said Ronald J. Kinsella the defendant has never tendered the policy of insurance to the garnishee for cancellation or requested cancellation thereof, and is advised by counsel that said policy having become void no cancellation thereof could be had if requested; that it is informed that the premium for the said insurance was paid by the said Ronald J. Kinsella when the said policy of insurance was obtained and that by reason of the facts in this answer set forth it has nothing in its possession belonging to the said Ronald J. Kinsella." The general effect of the answers was that, as the risk had attached, liability for the return of a part of the premium could arise only in the event of cancellation of the policy in accordance with its provisions therefor, and that it had not been cancelled but had been rendered void through the conduct of the insured in defaulting upon the mortgage and thus bringing about the foreclosure and change in title.
Plaintiff, by its writ, has stepped into the shoes of the insured and our inquiry is whether, under the facts as set forth in its answer, the insurance company was indebted to Kinsella in the amount of the unearned premium at the time the writ was served. It is apparent that issues both of law and of fact are raised by the answers. The question of law, whether the garnishee is relieved from all liability for the unearned premium because, as it contends, the policy became void by reason of the foreclosure proceedings, has not been ruled by the cases cited on either side. Its importance is obvious when attention is directed to the large number of foreclosure proceedings in which mortgagees are obliged to buy in the mortgaged premises. Some reference to the cases relied upon by counsel may, therefore, be justifiable at this point. *253
The case of Rafsnyder's Appeal,
Appellant also quotes the following from the text of 26 Corpus Juris, section 148, page 129: "It has been held, however, that where a policy provides that it shall terminate on the commencement of mortgage foreclosure proceedings, and such proceedings are commenced, insured is entitled to the return of a ratable proportion of the premium." The case cited in support of this statement is Hayes v. U.S.F. Insurance Company,
There are decisions to the effect that there is no right *255
to a return of any part of the premium where the policy has become void "for breach of a warranty or condition subsequent." Elder v. Federal Insurance Company,
The proposition of law that the policy became void by reason of the foreclosure proceedings is not the *257 only matter set up in the answer. It is also therein averred that the mortgagee had "no legal right, power or authority to cancel the policy" and that Kinsella, who as the assured had paid the premium, had never tendered the policy for, or demanded, cancellation. Assuming, as we must for present purposes, the truth of these averments, we are of opinion that they are sufficient to prevent a summary judgment. No cancellation was attempted by the company and the provision of the policy relative to cancellation by the insured reads: "This policy shall be cancelled at any time at the request of the insured; in which case the company shall, upon demand and surrender of this policy, refund the excess of paid premium above the customary short rates for the expired time." No right of cancellation is given to a mortgagee and its admitted surrender of the policy to the garnishee would seem to have little, if any, bearing upon the question now involved. Appellant is seeking to recover, not upon any direct liability of the insurance company to it, arising out of the surrender by it of the policy, but upon the theory that the company is indebted to appellant's judgment debtor. We, however, express no opinion upon the ultimate effect of the surrender by appellant of the policy as the facts developed at the trial may place a different aspect upon this matter.
In attachment execution the general rule is that judgment cannot be entered on the answers to interrogatories unless they contain, either expressly or by necessary implication, a clear and unequivocal admission of indebtedness or of possession of assets belonging to the debtor, and in doubtful cases the parties should be sent to a jury. Under the settled rule, we do not reverse in an appeal of this nature unless the right of the plaintiff is clear, assuming the facts set forth in the answer to be true: Smith v. Brockway *258
Motor Truck Corp.,
We think this is a case in which all the facts relative to the action or non-action of the assured and all the circumstances of the surrender of the policy should be fully developed by a trial and we, accordingly, refrain from further discussion of the legal principles apparently involved.
The appeal is dismissed and the record remitted for further proceedings.