47 Neb. 717 | Neb. | 1896
This was an action on a policy of fire insurance written in favor of J. Nelson Jones, and having attached an instrument signed by the agents issu
The contentions of the insurance company, based on proper assignments of error, are as follows:
First — That the conveyance to Brownfield was prior to the issuance of the policy, and that therefore Jones had no insurable interest, and the policy never took effect.
Second — That under the conditions of the policy it was avoided by the attempted assignment thereof before loss without the consent of the company.
Third — That what is styled the “loss payable clause” attached to the policy was merely a direction as to who should receive the proceeds in case of loss; that it was subject to all the conditions of the policy, and the policy not being*721 available to Jones because of a want of insurable interest by his conveyance of the property and assignment of the policy to Brownfield, the bank, deriving its rights entirely through Jones, cannot recover.
We shall, consider these several propositions without special reference to the assignments of error on which they are based.
As to the first point, it is enough to say that there was evidence sufficient to sustain a finding that while negotiations had been carried on before the policy was issued, looking toward a sale of the property by Jones to Brownfield, and while a deed of 'conveyance had actually been executed, the deed had not been delivered and the contract of sale had not assumed an obligatory form until some time after the issuance of the policy. This issue was submitted to the jury under instructions, part of which were not excepted to by the company. It was properly a question for the jury. (Rochester Loan & Banking Co. v. Liberty Ins. Co., 44 Neb., 537.) The verdict on this issue cannot be disturbed, and it must therefore be taken as settled that Jones was the owner when the policy was issued.
We may pass over the second contention and assume, for the purposes of this case, that the subsequent transfer of the property and assignment of the policy by Jones to Brownfield would be sufficient to prevent a recovery by Jones and would vest no right in Brownfield. We do not think the soundness of this contention is necessarily involved in the decision of the case.
We therefore go directly to the claim of the plaintiff. The “loss payable clause” has already been quoted. In the body of the policy appears
Judgment affirmed.