103 Ala. 175 | Ala. | 1893
On the 7th day of March, 1891, J. F. B. Jackson and W. D. McCurdy executed to W. H. Millspaugh, George H. Glower and B. D. Burnett a bill of sale by which, for value, they “bargained, sold and delivered” to them all the furniture, fixtures, rights, contracts, stores, property and effects owned jointly by the sellers, and then connected with, or used in, the Florence Hotel, and belonging to their' Florence Hotel property ; which hotel was then being kept by the sellers, in the city of Birmingham," Ala. The title to the property sold was expressly warranted. It was stipulated that sellers should be liable to pay all the debts, liabilities and expenses chargeable to or against said hotel business, prior to March 1, 1891, and that they should be entitled to retain, have and receive all the rents, incomes, choses in action, bills receivable and receipts earned by, and belonging to said hotel business, prim1 to the said March 1, 1891. At the time of this sale, the sellers had in force, to expire February 12, 1892, six p olicies of fire insurance, in different companies, covering the goods sold. These policies, when written, were deposited in the hotel safe, and were kept therein when the safe went into possession of the purchasers, under the bill of sale. Each of them contained a clause requiring any transfer of the policy to be in writing, endorsed on the same, and forbidding its transfer by the assured, without the consent of the insurer endorsed thereon in writing ; and avoiding the policy if a transfer was made without such consent so endorsed. The insurers never gave consent to the transfer of these policies, by the assured, to any one. On the contrary, after, but as of, the first of March, 1891, they cancelled them. After the purchasers, under the bill of sale, got possession of the policies, they called upon Jackson and Mc-Curdy, the sellers, and demanded that they transfer the same to them by endorsement thereon. They refused to do so, or to obtain the consent of the several insurance
Upon due consideration, we are unable to see how this action can possibly be maintained. The very foundation principle, upon which plaintiffs seek to base the action, it seems to us, necessarily defeats it — which is, that, by the terms of the deed, the policies were transferred to, and became the property of the plaintiffs ; which act, of itself, eoinstanti, rendered the policies absolutely null and void, by reasons of the express conditions there
We might rest this opinion here, but we go further and remark that plaintiffs otherwise misapprehend the import of the bill of sale. They fall into the error of treating it, in respect of the policies, as an executory agreement to sell and transfer them : and so treating it, argue that the agreement implied an obligation on defendant’s part to procure, at all events, the consent of the companies to their transfer, to be endorsed on the policies, and in pursuance of such consent, to, themselves,
There are other counts in the complaint, upon different causes of action, under which it is not denied plaintiffs were entitled to recover $457.40 with interest thereon from March 7th, 1891. The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed and a judgment here rendered in favor of the appellees against the appellants for that sum and interest. Let the appellees pay the costs of appeal.
Reversed and rendered.