64 Mo. App. 290 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1896
This is a suit in equity. The case presented by the record may be briefly stated in this way:
The plaintiff was the owner o'f a certain unimproved lot in the city of Lexington and being desirous of erecting certain buildings thereon, requested the defendant to loan him a sum of money sufficient to erect the same. The defendant having consented to make the loan so requested, the plaintiff thereupon, for the purpose of securing the same, conveyed said lot to defendant by a deed of general warranty. The defendant accordingly, from time to time, advanced to the plaintiff the sum of $905, which was applied by him to the construction of buildings on the said lot. Later on the defendant executed and delivered to the plaintiff a written agreement, in the nature of a defeasance to said warranty deed just mentioned, which, in effect, provided that
It was further provided in said policy: “The assured under this policy sustaining loss or damage by fire shall forthwith give notice in writing of said loss to the company, and within thirty days thereafter render a particular account by separate items and proof thereof, signed and sworn to. by the said assured, setting forth, among other things, the following, namely: A copy of the written portion of this policy and all indorsements thereon; the actual cash value of the subject described at the time immediately preceding the fire; the ownership of the property described, and the interest of the assured in same; the date of the loss and the amount thereof.” “And the assured shall, if required, submit to an examination or examinations under oath,
The plaintiff repaid to the defendant the premium advanced by the latter on the renewal policy. A few months after the issue of such renewal policy, the plaintiff and defendant entered into a further written contract, which recited that there was then due defendant the sum of $561.50, and provided the time in which said sum should be payable. It also provided that the plaintiff should keep the buildings on said lot insured against loss by fire, for not less than $600; with the condition stated in the policy that loss, if any, be paid to defendant,'“as his interest may appear under this agreement.” It was therein further provided that after the plaintiff had paid said sum of $561.50, defendant should reconvey said property to plaintiff, and that all former articles of agreement between plaintiff and defendant relating to the said property be canceled.
The plaintiff made some further payments on the indebtedness to defendant, so that, at the time the fire occurred, which was September' 15, 1891, there was only due the defendant the sum of $386.80. After the fire, the defendant endeavored to collect the full amount of the policy, but the insurance company, ascertaining the interest which the defendant had in the property, declined to pay any amount thereon in excess of such interest. The .defendant, it seems, acted in perfect good faith in his endeavors to induce the insurance company to pay the whole amount named in the policy. He consulted several reputable lawyers as to the extent
There was a hearing in the court below which resulted in a decree dismissing plaintiff’s petition. The plaintiff has appealed.
The theory upon which the plaintiff bases his claim for equitable relief is that the defendant, being the trustee of an implied trust and accepting from the insurance company a less sum than that named in the policy, was thereby guilty of a breach of trust, for which he became liable to plaintiff for the difference between the amount so received and that of the policy.
The transaction between the plaintiff and defendant, as previously stated, constituted a mortgage. The relation of the plaintiff and defendant was that of mortgagor and mortgagee. Wilson v. Drumrite, 21 Mo. 325; Tibeau v. Tibeau, 22 Mo. 77; Copeland v. Yoakum, 38 Mo. 350; Brant v. Robinson, 16 Mo. 129; Hack v. Hill, 106 Mo. 18; Parks v. Insurance Company, 100 Mo. 373. It is the well settled law that a mortgagee has a separate, insurable interest in the mortgaged premises, distinct from that of the mortgagor. Dick v. Insurance Company, 10 Mo. App. 276, 81 Mo. 103, and cases there cited. Where the mortgagor effects an insurance on the mortgaged property, he will, notwithstanding the mortgage, be entitled to recover the full amount of the loss, for the whole loss is his own and he remains personably liable to the mortgagee for the full amount of the debt secured by the mortgage.. Carpenter v. Insurance Company, 16 Peters, 495. Thus it is a mortgagor may insure the mortgaged property, to the extent of its value, and the mortgagee may insure his interest therein to the extent of the value of such interest; and this is not double insurance, for. in order to constitute double insurance, both policies must be upon the same insurable interests. Dick v. Insurance Company, ante; Guest v. Insurance Company, 66 Mich. 98; Insurance Co. v. Tyler, 16 Wend. 385; Insurance Co. v. Stinson, 103 U. S. 29. And this is upon the idea that policies of insurance against fire are not in the nature of incidents to the property insured, but that they are special agreements with the persons insuring them against
When a mortgagee insures his own interest, without any agreement between him and the mortgagor therefor, and a loss accrues, the mortgagor is not entitled to have the sum paid upon such loss applied in reducing the mortgage debt, but the mortgagee is entitled to recover the whole amount due. Dick v. Insurance Co., ante; Insurance Co. v. Woodbury, 45 Me. 447; White v. Brown, 2 Cush. 413. If the mortgagee, under an arrangement with the mortgagor, insure the mortgaged property at the charge of the mortgagor, in such case, in the event of loss, the insurance money will be paid to the mortgagee, extinguishing pro tanto the debt of the mortgagor to the mortgagee. Waring v. Loder, 53 N. Y. 581; Clinton v. Insurance Co., 45 N. Y. 467; Kernochan v. Insurance Co., 17 N. Y. 428; Holbrook v. Insurance Co., 1 Custis, 193. In such case, the mortgagor may maintain an action on the policy and to this end is entitled to sue in the name of the mortgagee. Insurance Co. v. Boomer, 52 Ill. 142.
I think it sufficiently appears from the evidence that the manifest purpose of the plaintiff in effecting the insurance on the mortgaged property, was that of indemnity. The mortgaged lot was of small value— not exceeding $40 or $50 — and was no sufficient security for the amount of money advanced. After the plaintiff had reduced the debt to $561.50, the second contract was entered into, wherein it was stipulated that the plaintiff should keep the property, so mortgaged, insured against loss by fire, for not less than $600, with a condition in the policy that the loss, if any, be paid to defendant. This tends to prove the general purpose
The policy was procured by the plaintiff and was issued in conformity to his application. It was issued in the name of the defendant, and by a clause therein, already quoted, it was expressly provided that the insurer agreed to indemnify and make good to defendant his loss, not exceeding Ms interest in the property, happening by fire. And in another paragraph of the policy, also hereinbefore quoted, it was provided that, in case of loss, the defendant, within thirty days thereafter, should render a particular account, by separate items and proof thereof, signed and sworn to by him, setting forth, amongst other things, the ownership of the property and the interest of the defendant in the same; and until the proofs so required were produced, the loss should not be payable, etc. It is thus seen that, under the limitations and conditions of the policy, the defendant was entitled to indemnity only to the extent of the value of his interest in the property. This limitation was fixed by the terms of the contract of insurance. The defendant, in his sworn .proof of loss, was obliged to disclose his interest in the property destroyed. It seems to me that the policy of insurance provided the indemnity which it was the intention of the plaintiff and defendant that the latter should have. The circumstance that the plaintiff paid the premium required to effect the insurance, can not have the effect to alter the terms, conditions, and limitations.contained in the contract of insurance. * If the plaintiff had, as he might have done, effected an insurance on the property independent of that taken out for the indemnification of defendant, he would then, according to the principles announced by the authorities heretofore referred to, have been entitled to recover the full
An examination of the evidence does not satisfy my mind that the defendant, in the discharge of the duties imposed on him, in his capacity as mortgagee or trustee, was guilty of any negligence, fraud, or other misbehavior which would justify a disturbance of the finding and decree of' the court below. I have, with much care, looked at the several cases cited by plaintiff and upon which much relianceis placed by him for a reversal of the adverse finding and decree, but I have been unable to discover that the essential facts in any of them are sufficiently analogous to those in this case to make applicable here the principles upon which they were decided.
Upon a review of the whole evidence, it is my conclusion that the decree is for the right party and, therefore, with the concurrence of the other judges, it is accordingly ordered to be affirmed.