99 Tenn. 729 | Tenn. | 1897
This bill is filed by Yiola Hocking and her husband, who sue in their own right, and for the use of J. E. Hancock, to recover on a,policy of fire insurance, issued by the defendant company to, and upon the application of, Viola Hocking, upon
While a mortgagee to whom the loss under an insurance policy issued to the mortgagor, and covering the property of the latter, is made payable “as his interest may appear, ’ ’ is, in a large sense, an assignee to the extent of his interest (Donaldson v. Insurance Co., 95 Tenn., 280), yet he does not acquire a full and absolute right, and, in case of loss, recovers in the right of the party assured, and not in his own. In the present case, it was the property of Viola Hocking that was insured and destroyed by fire, and it was she who took out this policy for his benefit. If, at any time after its issuance, the mortgage in question had been discharged, the interest of the mortgagee in this policy would have terminated, and Mrs. Hocking alone would have been entitled to its proceeds. Claiming through the assured, Hancock had no higher or
We agree with the Court of Chancery Appeals that the forfeiture of all right under the policy, resulting from the conduct of the assured, the mortgagor, extends to and extinguishes the right of the mortgagee. And the decree of that Court is, therefore, affirmed.