20 Or. 569 | Or. | 1891
— The question presented by the contention for the plaintiff is, that if a loss under a policy of fire insurance is caused by the wrongful act of a third person, the insurer, upon making payment to the insured pro tanto, is subrogated to the rights and remedies of the insured, and may maintain against the wrongdoer an action in his own name, and need not prosecute it in the name of the insured.
This action is brought by the plaintiff in its own right, upon the assumption that the effect of the insurance was to create in the plaintiff a pecuniary interest in the property insured, and that when it was destroyed by the wrongful act of the defendant whereby it became liable and was required to pay for the loss to the extent of the insurance to the insured, it became entitled to a legal remedy against the defendant in its own independent right to the extent which it was compelled to pay for such loss occasioned by the defendant’s wrongful act. This involves an inquiry into the nature of the rights which the insurer acquires upon the payment of the insurance for a loss caused by the wrongful act of a third person. The right of the insurance company that has paid a loss to recover of the wrongdoer, after payment of
The owner and insurer, in respect to the ownership of the property and the risk incident thereto, are considered but one person, having together the beneficial right to an indemnity against the wrongdoer whose negligent act occasioned the loss or destruction of the property. The liability of such wrongdoer to the owner is first and principal, and that of the insurer secondary —not in order of time, but of ultimate liability. (Hart v. Western R. R. Co. 13 Met. 99, 46 Am. Dec. 719; Hall v. R. R.
Where the insurance company has paid the owner for the destruction of his property by fire, occasioned by the fault of a railroad company, and afterwards the owner receives the amount from the company in satisfaction of his damages, he holds it in trust for the insurance company, and it may recover it from him by a suit in equity. So, too, if the railroad company has not paid the owner his damages for the loss, or has paid it to him, knowing that he had received the amount of the insurance from the insurance company, the railroad company is liable to the insurance company in an action at law, which it has a right to bring in the name of the owner, without his consent, to repay it the damages to the amount of the sum paid by it,
It results then that the right resting on the doctrine of subrogation, and not depending upon contract or privity, must be worked out through the right of the insured, or the owner of the property destroyed; that the remedy must be prosecuted in his name, unless the code of procedure which permits an action to be brought in the name of the real party in interest has changed this rule. The case oí Ins. Co. v. Erie Ry. Co. 73 N. Y. 399, 29 Am. Rep. 171, is relied upon to support this position. But in that case, the owner had fully settled his claim against the railroad company, but the contract showed that the amount of the policy was deducted from the amount of the loss in the settlement, so that the insurance company was the only remaining party in interest. The action being under the code of that state, which requires the action to be brought in the name of the real party in interest, by this settlement the owner having no interest, it was held that the insurance company might properly bring the action. In Ætna Ins. Co. v. Hannibal Ry. Co. 3 Dillon, 1, it was held by Dillon, J., that, in a case where the property destroyed exceeded in value the amount insured, the rule of law had long been settled that the insurance company, on payment of the loss, cannot sue the wrongdoer in its own name, saying: “ The suit, though for the use of the insurer, must be in the name of the person whose property was destroyed. The wrongful act was single and indivisible, and gave rise to but one liability. If one insurer may sue, then, if there are a dozen, each may sue, and if the aggre
In Marine Ins. Co. v. R. R. Co. 41 Fed. Rep. 645, it was held under the Arkansas statute providing that “every action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest,” that an insurance company which has paid the insured the full value of the property destroyed may maintain an action in its own name against the wrongdoer causing the loss. Caldwell, J., said: “ Under the reformed codes of procedure, the action of the insurance company in cases of this sort may be brought in the name of the insurer;” citing Swarthout v. R. R. Co. 49 Wis. 625; Conn. Ins. Co. v. R. R. Co. 73 N. Y. 399, 29 Am. Rep. 171. “But as it is alleged in the complaint that the plaintiff has paid the insured the full value of the property destroyed, it is plain that the latter have no interest in the present controversy, and hence they are not necessary parties.” The opinion is however expressed in that case, if the value of the property destroyed exceeds the insurance money paid, that the insurer might join or be joined with the owner in the action to recover for its loss, and would not be required, as held by Judge Dillon, supra, in such case, to prosecute the action in the name of the insured. A like view was sustained in Crandall v. Goodrich Trans. Co. 16 Fed. Rep. 75, where Dyer, J., held that in an action to recover the value of a building destroyed
It would appear then from these last cases that where the property is insured for less than its value, and is destroyed by the negligence of a third party, the insurance companies who have paid the owner the insurance money must be joined with him in an action to recover damages for the destruction of such property, and that upon a refusal of such parties to join as plaintiffs they must be made defendants. The action, though, would be brought in their own name, joining the insured as plaintiff, or making him defendant, according as he stood related to the facts. From all this, the conclusion results that where the wrongful act is single and indivisible, there can be but one liability or cause of action. Since the code, the cause of action remains as before, single and indivisible, and the insurer acquires only a right or interest with the owner of the property in the
The judgment must be affirmed.