18 A.2d 683 | Conn. | 1941
The finding states the following facts: In 1922 Joseph Kligerman made written application *623 to the defendant for a loan to be secured by a mortgage on certain premises owned by him in New Haven, agreeing, if the defendant made the loan, to carry fire insurance in a certain amount upon the buildings upon the property, the policies to be assigned to the defendant as collateral security. The defendant made the loan and took a mortgage on the property to secure it. Kligerman took out policies of insurance on the buildings and delivered them to the defendant. The loan was continued and renewal policies were issued from time to time and delivered to the defendant until Kligerman died, about January, 1936. After his death the plaintiffs, executors upon his estate, took out two further renewal policies and delivered them to the defendant. These policies contained a mortgagee clause making them payable to the defendant as its interest might appear. Subsequently the property was distributed to his widow as life tenant. Prior to May 26, 1938, the defendant threatened to foreclose the mortgage. In accordance with an agreement made with it Mrs. Kligerman conveyed the property to it by warranty deed which contained a provision that it assumed and agreed to pay the mortgage debt and save her harmless from liability on account of it. The defendant still holds the note made to it by Joseph Kligerman. After the conveyance to it, the defendant, without any authority from the plaintiffs, caused the policies to be changed so that it became the named insured. The policies had at the time of the conveyance a cash surrender value, and the plaintiff brought this action to recover that value from the defendant.
The finding might well have been more specific in certain respects, but we have before us the exhibits offered in court, and while they are not made a part of the finding, we have consulted them in so far as necessary to explain statements in it which are of doubtful *624
meaning. The policies in question contain the so-called "union" or "standard" mortgagee clause, providing, among other things, that as to the interest of the mortgagee, they would not be invalidated by any change in title or ownership of the property. The provisions of the mortgagee clause in these policies gave the defendant rights of its own amounting to an independent and distinct protection, of which it would ordinarily continue to have the advantage even though the mortgagor conveyed the property to a third person. Savings Bank of Ansonia v. Schancupp,
No claim for the payment of the mortgage debt was apparently made upon the estate of Joseph Kligerman and it is difficult to see how the defendant can now hold the estate liable for the debt; but that would not affect its right to avail itself of any security for the debt it might hold. Markham v. Smith,
While the conveyance by Mrs. Kligerman to the defendant did not in terms state that it was the intention of the parties that the estates in the defendant should not merge, that was the fair import of the provision *626
by which the defendant assumed the debt. Where a mortgagee who acquires the equity of redemption intends that the two estates shall not merge, the law will regard them as distinct. Goodwin v. Keney,
It follows that the mortgage debt had not been satisfied and that the defendant had a right to the continued benefit of the policies to protect its interest, despite the conveyance of the property to it by Mrs; Kligerman. The trial court properly decided the case in its favor.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.