116 Ga. 703 | Ga. | 1902
Suit was instituted by T. W. Powell & Company upon a policy of fire-insurance issued by the Macon Fire Insurance Company. It set up the defense that, at the time of the fire referred to in the plaintiffs’ petition, they held policies issued by other insurance companies which covered the property destroyed, and that it had already paid to the plaintiffs its proportionate part of the loss sustained, agreeably to the terms of the policy it had issued to them. The case was, by consent of the parties, submitted to the trial judge without the intervention of a jury, and he entered up judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for a specified amount, as representing the difference between the sum the company had voluntarily paid and that for which it was liable under the policy. At the time of loss, the “ plaintiffs were insured by specific insurance” aggregating in amount $10,000, under policies issued by the defendant and other companies. The policy of the Macon Fire Insurance Company contained the following stipulation: “ In case of any other insurance upon the property hereby insured, whether made prior or subsequent to the date of this policy, the assured shall be entitled to recover of this company no greater proportion of the loss sustained than the sum hereby insured bears to the whole amount insured thereon, whether by specific or floating policies.” The plaintiffs “were also insured, under policies known as and called ‘floating policies,’ in the Liverpool, London & Globe” and other companies, to the amount of $10,000. Each of the policies last referred to stipulated that the plaintiffs were to be indemni
The question upon which we are called upon to pass was definitely settled by the decision rendered by this court in the case of United Underwriters Ins. Co. v. Powell & Co., 94 Ga. 359, wherein it was held that: “ A floating policy of insurance which declares that it does not cover cotton on which there is any more specific insurance, does not embrace or apply to any cotton which is specifically insured in another company, and therefore is not subject to share with the other company the burden of loss sustained by the latter or by the insured in respect to the cotton covered by the more specific insurance; and for this reason, the company issuing the floating policy can not be called upon to contribute to a loss resulting from destruction of the cotton covered by the more specific insurance, although the policy touching the latter contain a clause declaring that ‘in case of any other insurance upon the property hereby insured, whether made prior or subsequent to the date of this, policy, the assured shall be entitled to recover of this company no greater proportion of the loss sustained than the sum hereby-insured bears to the whole amount insured thereon, whether by specific or floating policies.’ ” This court had under consideration in that case the very policy issued by the Macon Fire Insurance Company which is sued on in the present case, and also the “float
Judgment affirmed.