Judgment was rendered requiring the defendant United States Fire Insurance Company to convey certain real property to plaintiff C. W. Carey upon payment by the latter of the indebtedness found to be due the company from Carey.
The company issued its policy to Carey insuring the dwelling-house on the property against loss by fire in the sum of $2,000. At that time the property was encumbered by a trust deed securing the payment to Charlotte E. Miot of an indebtedness due her from Carey of $2,500. The policy made the loss, if any, payable to Mrs. Miot as her interest might appear and provided that, as to her, the insurance should not be invalidated by any act or neglect of Carey. After the issuance of the policy Carey and his wife deeded the property to plaintiff J. F. Lee. Thereafter the dwelling-house was totally destroyed by fire. Mrs. Miot made proof of loss and the company paid her the full amount of the insurance and, took an assignment from her of the trust deed and the indebtedness secured thereby to the extent of $2,000, and later paid her the remainder due her from Carey and took an assignment of the whole indebtedness. The company then demanded of Carey the payment of the whole indebtedness which the trust deed was given to secure and, on his failure to make payment thereof, caused the trustee to give notice of sale of the property. Thereupon the plaintiffs commenced this action and caused summons to be duly served upon defendants. After such service the trustee sold the property to the- company for the sum of $3,220.50, the whole amount of the original indebtedness, with interest, costs, and attorney fees. The court gave judgment requiring the company to convey the property to Carey upon his payment of the amount due *393 under the trust deed, after crediting him with the $2,000 for which the dwelling-house was insured. The court found that Carey did not offer to pay the company the amount so found due prior to suit, but that such an offer would have been unavailing.
Appellants urge that, even if the deed was intended as a mortgage, Carey had parted with all dominion over the property by his authorization to Lee to sell and deliver the net proceeds to Mrs. Carey. Such authorization, however, was not irrevocable and Carey retained the right, on payment of the indebtedness to Lee before a sale by the latter— and no such sale was in fact made or attempted—to a reconveyance of the property.
“The clause of the policy providing that it shall be void if the insured’s interest is other than sole’ and unconditional ownership, ... is designed to remove from him the temptation to profit by the wilful destruction of property not entirely owned by him. ... ‘It therefore follows that the clause is in most cases held to refer to the character and quality of the title—to the actual and substantial ownership, rather than to the strictly legal title.’ . . . An equitable title in the insured is a sufficient compliance with the condition in question.”
(McCullough
v.
Home Ins. Co.,
The statement of Reddling, together with the subsequent acts of the company, was a denial of all liability on other grounds than failure to furnish such proofs. Before the expiration of the sixty days allowed Carey in which to furnish such proof, the company took an assignment from Mrs. Miot, subrogating it to her rights under the trust deed to the extent of $2,000. The instrument recited that the policy of insurance provides that it “shall be void ... if the interest of the insured be other than unconditional and sole ownership”; that Carey had conveyed the property to Lee, and that the company claimed that, by reason of such conveyance, “as to the said C. W. Carey and/or J. F. Lee no liability therefor exists.” The company had no right to subrogation under the policy except upon its “claim that, as to the mortgagor or owner, no liability therefor existed.” Its act in taking the assignment of the trust deed was in itself a denial of liability to Carey. At the trial and on
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this appeal the company has continued to deny all liability to Carey because of his deed to Lee. The denial of such liability prior to the expiration of the time to make proof of loss is a waiver of the condition of the policy requiring such proof.
(Farnum
v.
Phoenix Ins. Co.,
The court admitted evidence to the effect that after the fire Carey made an agreement to sell the property. The testimony was apparently offered for the purpose of showing acts of ownership by Carey. Whether properly admitted or not, the evidence was of slight importance. The uncontradicted evidence, independent of that to which ohjeetion is made, shows that, at all times after the execution of the deed to Lee, Carey had the full possession, use, and control of the property. The evidence in dispute could show no more.
There is no suggestion of bad faith or wrongful conduct on the part of the plaintiffs and the defense interposed is purely technical and wholly without support in natural justice.
The judgment is affirmed.
Burnett, J., and Hart, J., concurred.
