Opinion by
This аction in assumpsit was brought by plaintiff, Park Gardner, to recover money alleged to be due on two fire insurance policies, each in the sum of $3,000, issued by defendant, The Freystown Mutual Fire Insur *3 anee Comрany. The case was tried and a verdict returned for plaintiff in the sum of $6,040.20, being the amount of $5,700, with interest from the date of the fire. Its motions for judgment n. o. v. and for a new trial having been overruled, defendant took this appeal.
Plaintiff owned and operated a warehouse in the Borough of Mt. Holly Springs, Cumberland County, for the storage of grain which he accepted from various persons to whom he issued his negotiable warehouse receipts. He entered into a Uniform Grain Storage Agreement with the Secretary of Agriculture. By the terms and conditions of the warehouse receipts and this 'agreement, plaintiff obligated himself to insure for its full market value, in his own name, the wheat stored with him against loss or damage by fire. For this purpose he took out three fire insurance policies — one with Thе Insurance Company of North America and two with defendant — each of which insured “$3,000.00 On stock consisting principally of wheat . . .; also ... on insured’s legal liability for similar property held by the insured as follows, viz.: ... on storage . . .”
The warehouse and almost all of its contents were destroyed by fire on October 2, 1942. There was stored in the building at that time 7,652.54 bushels of wheat, all of which was owned by four separate bailоrs. This grain had a value of over $9,000, the total amount of the insurance carried by plaintiff. The Insurance Company of North America paid plaintiff the full amount of its insurance without contest or deduсtion; but defendant, after receipt of notice of the fire and proofs of loss failed to make payment on its policies, and this suit resulted.
Defendant argues that the learned court belоw erred in not entering judgment in its favor, notwithstanding the verdict, because (1) the bailors of the grain are the real parties in interest and either should have instituted the action or at least have been brought on the *4 record as the beneficiaries of the trust; and (2) there was no evidence adduced by plaintiff as to the amount of his liability to the bailors whose wheat was destroyed by the fire. There is no mеrit in either of these contentions.
As to the first, Rule 2002, Pa. R. C. P. states: “(a) Except as otherwise provided in clauses (b), (c) and (d) of this rule, all actions shall be prosecuted by and in the name of the real рarty in interest, without distinction between contracts under seal and parol contracts. (b) A plaintiff may sue in his own name without joining as plaintiff or use-plaintiff any person beneficially interested when such plaintiff ... (2) is á person with whom or in whose name a contract has been made for the benefit of another . . .” Here, plaintiff is the person with whom and in whose name the contract of insurance was made for the benefit of the bailors of the grain, and, therefore, plaintiff’s cause of action unquestionably falls under clause (b) (2) of this rule. A bailee may insure in his own name the property in his possеssion, and in case of loss recover the full amount of his policy, holding all beyond his own interest in trust for his bailor:
Roberts v. Firemen’s Ins. Co.,
As to defendant’s second contention, there is ample competent evidence to show the amount of plaintiff’s
legal liability
to the four bailors. At the trial, the warehоuse receipts given by plaintiff to the bailors, and the agreement with the Secretary of Agriculture, were admitted without objection by counsel for defendant. The warehouse receipt statеd: “This grain is fully insured against loss or damage by fire . . . for the full market value thereof until the grain is loaded out.” The agreement with the Secretary of Agriculture provides that plaintiff “will insure, and at all times keep insurеd, in his own name, all the eligible grain which is stored in the warehouse, for the full market value of such grain, against loss or damage by fire . . . and, in the event of any loss or damage to any grain in the warehouse, or to the warehouse ... he will immediately notify the Secretary and the holders of the warehouse receipts representing the eligible grain which is stored in the warehouse, as the holders appear on the records of the warehouseman and he will promptly take the steps necessary to collect any moneys which may be due as indemnity for such loss or damage to eligible grain, and, as soon as collected, will pay to the holders of such warehouse receipts such moneys as may be col
*6
lected for loss or damage to grain represented by such warehouse receipts; . . .” It was further admitted by defendant’s counsel that the 7,652.54 bushels of wheat in the warehouse at the time of the fire were owned by the bailors, were received from them under these cоntracts, and that their value was in excess of $9,000. Plaintiff also showed that all this grain was damaged or destroyed. Since plaintiff, by his contracts, increased his common-law liability to the bailors by agreeing to insure their goods, he became legally liable for the full value of the wheat lost. Cf.
Com. ex rel. Schwartz v. Bierly,
In support of its motion for a new trial, defendant contends that the jury, in accordance with the instruction of the court, allowed interest from the date of the fire, instead of from the time when, under the terms of the policy, it was due and payable, to-wit, sixty days after receipt of proofs of loss. The policies contained the following standard provision: “The amount of loss or damage for which the Company may be liаble shall be payable 60 days after proof of loss as herein provided is received by this Company . . .” The proofs of loss were received by defendant on November 24, 1942. It is stated in Joyce оn The Law of Insurance (2d Ed.), *7 Yol. 5, §3458, pp. 5741-2: “The insurer is liable for interest upon tbe face of tbe policy from tbe time it was payable, not from the date of tbe fire; after tbe expiration of tbe stipulated sixty days from proof of tbe notice, and not from tbe time tbe loss is adjusted. If a time is fixed for payment, from that time,.... If tbe company waives tbe right to pay witbin tbe time fixed by denying all liability under tbe policy, interest will run from tbe date of loss ... It does not run before tbe expiration of tbe sixty days after proofs of loss if tbe policy provides that payment be made witbin that time.” Here defendant did not deny liability before the proofs of loss were filed nor before tbe expiration of tbe sixty-day period. Merely because there was a denial of liability after tbe sixty-day period following receipt of proofs of loss does not warrant an inference that defendant waived its rights under tbe provisions as to payment or was estopped to assert them. We agree that tbe court bеlow erred in charging the jury to allow interest from tbe date of tbe fire.
Tbe jury placed tbe liability on these policies at tbe sum of $5,700 (plus interest from tbe date of tbe fire), deducting tbe sum of $300 from tbe face of tbe policies. This was done, no doubt, as a result of evidence adduced by defendant that plaintiff negligently failed to salvage a portion of tbe wheat after tbe fire. It is perfeсtly safe to assume, therefore, that tbe jury, by its verdict, considered tbe sum of $300 as representing two-tbirds of tbe value of such salvageable wheat, rather than its full value, as argued by plaintiff.
It would serve no useful purpose to send this case back for a new trial to correct this trivial error in allowing interest from October 2, 1942, tbe date of tbe fire, rather than from January 23, 1943, tbe date marking tbe expiration оf sixty days after tbe filing of tbe proof of loss. Tbe interest for which defendant was overcharged can be calculated with certainty and amounts *8 to the sum of $105.45. Therefore we will reduce the judgment by that amount, and affirm it, as modified.
Judgment, as modified, affirmed.
