32 F. 646 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa | 1887
Two questions have been presented and argued; one of them of great difficulty as well as of some importance.
The first question arises upon these facts: One E. K. Ellis was the owner of property upon which he had taken out insurance policies, one of them that in suit. He sold that property to the plaintiff, William Ellis, and assigned the policy. The consent of the company was given to the assignment. At the time of the assignment there was an incumbrance upon the property in the shape of three or four mortgages. The policy provides that it shall be void if the insured is not the sole, absolute, and unconditional owner; and it is insisted that ownership is not equivalent to the mere matter of title, but goes to the interest held in the property, and that if that interest is subject to any condition the policy is vitiated. Plaintiff’s ownership is held subject to this condition, that he pays the mortgage. Therefore it is not an unconditional ownership.
We are all familiar with the fact that applications for insurance policies usually contain two series of inquiries, independent in their nature, —one as to the matter of title, and the other as to that of incumbrance. Of course, different policies have different forms of stating these two lines of inquiry, but they are entirely independent. In one there is provision as to any incumbrance, its nature and extent; in the other there is inquiry and provision as to the character of the title, fee-simple or otherwise. It is further known that the policies and the blanks for application are prepared by the insurance companies, and it is familiar law that the stipulations and provisions therein are to be construed strictly against the insurer; that if there is any fact respecting which information is desired, or any provision which it is deemed necessary to insert, it is the duty, because it is the interest, of the insurer to see that there is
The other question is more serious and difficult. The policy contains a provision to this effect: that if the insured incumbers the property the policy shall he vitiated. The original party insured did place incum-brances upon the property. They were in existence at the time he sold the property to the plaintiff, at the time the assignment of the policy was made to the plaintiff, and at the time the company gave its consent. The company was ignorant of that fact, as was also the assignee and purchaser. Now, the assignment was assented to by the company subject to all the terms and conditions of the policy. And it is insisted, on the one hand, that the universal rule in respect to transfers of all dioses in action or other contracts, with the single exception of negotiable paper transferred before maturity, is that the assignee simply steps into the slices of the assignor; that he is subjected to all his burdens and liabilities, and has no oilier or higher rights than such assignor. Hence, as it is conceded, and there can be no doubt about it, that this policy while it remained with the assignor, his property, and before the sale and assignment, was vitiated by this incumbrance, was voidable at the instance of-the insurer, the assignee has no higher right than the assignor had, and the policy is vitiated in his hands. On the other hand, it is insisted that this, which is called an assignment, has not the legal effect of a mere transfer of ail existing right, but is equivalent to the creation of a new contract, — a contract springing into being at the moment the assignment is assented to between the assignee and insurer for the insurance of the property during the unexpired term. The authorities very generally say that where an assignment goes with an absolute sale of the property there is the creation of a new contract. If it is a new contract for one purpose, it is a new contract for all purposes,
Tlie assignment is expressed to be subject to the terms and conditions of the policy. What does that mean? It is equivalent to saying that the assignee takes the contract as of present writing, containing the same terms and stipulations, binding Mm to the same duties, and subjecting him to the same liabilities, that were imposed by the contract in the first instance upon the assignor. In no other way can it fairly bo said that a new contract was made: tested by that rule the assignee agreed, as the assignor had agreed in the first instance, that he would place no "in-cumbrance upon the property, and that if he did the policy should fail. There is no pretense that ho has violated that stipulation thus construed. It may well be doubted whether the use of the technical terms, “assignment,” “assignor,” and “assignee,” are apt to describe the actual transaction. When the insured sells the property, that moment the policy
But it is said there is really no consideration for this contract on the part of the company; that the breach of the policy by the assignor forfeited all right to the unearned premium; and therefore the company received no consideration for any promise to insure for the unexpired term. The assignment of this policy is an assertion practically by the assignor of a right to an unearned premium, and the claim of such unearned premium, presented to the-assignee, is assented to by the company when it consents to the assignment. It matters not that there may have been no actual right to such unearned premium, for the recognition and compromise of a claim is consideration. Further than that, there would be the injury to the assignee as well as the benefit to the insurer to be con