136 Va. 402 | Va. | 1923
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in error, hereafter called the company, insured an automobile for C. B. Toler. The policy (for $2,000) contained this clause: “Loss, if any, payable to
It appeared upon the trial that among the conditions in the policy was one that it should be null and void, “If at the time a loss occurs there be any other insurance covering against the risks assumed by this policy which would attach if this insurance had not been effected;” and another that the policy should be void, “If the assured or his agent shall make any attempt to defraud this company either before or after the loss.” It also appeared that, without the knowledge either of the plaintiff or of the company, Toler had thereafter taken out an additional policy of insurance upon the automobile for $2,000.00, with a company known as the National Union, which would have been valid at the time of the loss but for the existence of the policy sued on. That policy also had a similar clause, making it void “If at the time a loss occurs there be any other insurance covering against the risks assumed by this policy which would attach if this insurance had not been effected:”
The company claimed exemption from liability upon two grounds: (a) That its policy had been avoided by reason of the other insurance in the National Union; and (b) because the assured, Toler, in making his proof of loss under the policy sued on, swore that there was no other insurance upon the automobile; and is here assigning as error the refusal of the court to enter judgment in its favor.
In Sugg v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co. (1887), 98 N. C. 143, 3 S. E. 732, we And this clear statement of the argument in support of the effectiveness of such a clause: “The very purpose was to exclude and guard against, not only
In Phoenix Ins. Co. v. Copeland (1890), 90 Ala. 386, 8 So. 48, we find this view well supported as effectuating' the intention of the parties and furthering the object off such a condition, where it is said: “One manifest purpose is, by compelling the assured to bear a part of the-risk to remove temptation to destroy his own property, and to afford a stimulus to exercise care and diligence in its protection, which purpose is defeated, though the other insurance may be invalid, if the insured believes-it to be valid, as he must do, otherwise he would not expend money in procuring it. Another purpose is to relieve the company of the burden of proving the validity of such insurance, by having to show the consent of the-company, or a waiver of the forfeiture or otherwise. Again, it is sufficient reason that the parties, competent to fix the terms of their contract, have so contracted. Such condition is not violative of any rule of law or public policy. A construction that only valid and en
The language of the clause here involved is unequivocal. To disregard it would be to ignore the contract which the parties have entered into and expressed by language which can bear but one construction. The second policy taken out by Toler here would certainly have been valid but for the existence of the policy sued on, and that being true the policy sued on is thereby invalidated, for it expressly so provides. A sound public policy requires the enforcement of such a condition. The over-insurance of property increases the moral hazard, and its inevitable tendency is to increase the rates imposed for insurance upon those who do not over-insure their property. This is an evil against which the companies have a right to protect themselves, and in which the insuring public has a very substantial interest. This ease illustrates the evil: An automobile costing new $2,525.00, worth at the time of its destruction $1,600.00, is insured by its owner for $4,000.00. If both companies had remained in ignorance of this double insurance, there is no reason to doubt that the assured would have recovered twice the appraised value of the automobile.
There is no practical difficulty in protecting the insurable interests of mortgagees so that no independent action of the mortgagors can injuriously affect them. Instead of having the “loss payable” clause, which is the clause here involved, the mortgagee may either insure in his own name, or he may have the benefit of what .has come to be known as the “union mortgage” clause,
In Warbasse v. Sussex County Mut. Ins. Co., 42 N. J. L. 203, it is said that the rule of law is well settled that-a direction in a policy of insurance that the money, if it became due, was to be paid to a mortgagee of the insured’s premises, did not alter the agreement of insurance’ in any respect, except in the one particular of appointing a certain person to receive such payment. It is still the mortgagor, as the owner of the property, who is insured and the continued validity of the policy is dependent upon the performance by him of the conditions imposed by the policy; and it was there held that the procuring by the assured mortgagor of additional insurance,, contrary to the terms of the policy, avoided it as to the;
The right of the plaintiff here is entirely derived from the assured, Toler, and it is clear to us that the contract has been avoided by his action, because of the additional insurance which he took out in the National Union.
For the reasons indicated, we are of opinion that the trial court erred in giving judgment for the plaintiff, and this court will, therefore, reverse the judgment of the trial court and enter final judgment here in favor of the • defendant company.
Reversed.