Hartford Insurance v. Pennell

2 Ill. App. 609 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1878

Davis, J.

This was a bill in chancery, filed by appellants against William A. Pennell and the Chicago & Alton Bail-road company, for an injunction to restrain Pennell from compromising or settling a certain claim for damages against said railroad company, growing out of a loss by fire of the Normal Hotel, belonging to Pennell and insured by appellants, and from collecting or receiving any portion of such damages, and to restrain said railroad company from compromising, settling with, or paying to said Pennell any portion of such damages, until the further order of the court, and praying that appellants be subrogated to the rights of Pennell in and to the judgment obtained by him for such damages against said railroad company, and for other relief. A temporary injunction was granted, and on the hearing it appeared that appellants insured for Pennell the said Normal Hotel for $7,000. Of this risk the Hartford Fire Insurance Company and the NCtna Insurance Company, each took $2,500, and the Insurance Company of North America $2,000. The hotel was destroyed by fire on February 14, 1872, and shortly thereafter ap2>ellants paid to Pennell the full amount insured by them res2iectively, without any knowledge that the property insured was destroyed, or claimed by Pennell to have been destroyed, by or through the negligence of the railroad company. On Hay 8th, 1875, Pennell commenced a suit against the railroad company to recover damages for the loss of his hotel, claiming that the fire which consumed it was caused by the negligence of the railroad company. In that suit Pennell recovered a judgment for $13,625, from which judgment the railroad company took an appeal to the Supreme Court, where the case is now pending. Appellants, prior to the rendition of the judgment, filed their motion for leave to interplead, and to be made beneficial plaintiffs, and offering to assist in the prosecution of the suit, and to bear their fair share of the burthens of the same. The court overruled this motion, and in this cause appellants renew such offer in their bill, filed below. Pennell is notoriously insolvent, and executions cannot be collected from him. On the hearing of this cause, the court below rendered a decree dismissing the bill for want of equity, dissolving the injunction, and assessing Pennell’s damages at $75. To reverse this decree appellants appeal.

We think the court erred in dissolving the injunction, and dismissing appellants’ bill. When this cause was heard, the original case of Pennell against the railroad company was still pending undetermined in the Supreme Court, and until that case should be finally disposed of, no final action should have been taken in this cause, but the hearing should have been postponed until the case was in a condition to have been tried and disposed of on all the issues arising, so as to do full and complete justice to all the parties. Should the judgment rendered in that case be affirmed by the Supreme Court, then the court in this cause could determine whether any excess would remain to be distributed among the appellants and others interested, after making Pennell’s loss good. If the amounts paid by appellants and the other insurance companies, and the judgment obtained against the railroad company, if affirmed, should exceed the loss sustained by Pennell, the excess should be held in trust for those who had advanced their means in excess of what was necessary to make good that loss. Pennell is only entitled to be fully reimbursed for his losses and necessary expenses. To the excess he is not entitled, and that excess, if any there may be, should be paid back to the insurers who by their advances, created that excess; and as it appears that Pennell is insolvent, and if he should be permitted to recover the full amount of the judgment obtained against the railroad company, appellants might be unable to obtain from him their share of said judgment, he should be enjoined from collecting the damages recovered to the extent of $7,000, until this cause can be finally disposed of; and appellees should be restrained from settling or compromising the suit instituted by Pennell against the railroad company until the further order of the court below. If the case appealed to the Supreme Court should be reversed and remanded, this cause should be retained until that case is finally determined.

The decree is reversed and the cause remanded, with instructions to the court below to modify the injunction to conform to this decision, and to require a bond from appellants to cover any and all damages and costs which Pennell may sustain by reason of the granting of the injunction.

Decree reversed.

Lacey, J., dissenting.