30 Pa. Super. 579 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1906
The-policy in question contained this condition: “This entire policy .... shall be void .... if the interest of the insured be other than unconditional and sole ownership ; or if the subject'of insurance be a building on ground not owned by the insured in fee simple.” The question for decision is, whether there can be a recovery upon the policy, notwithstanding the fact that the insured had conveyed the real estate to a third party by a deed absolute on its face, under a parol agreement that the same should be held as .collateral security for the payment of a debt and constitute a mortgage, and the title and ownership stood in that condition at the date of the delivery of the policy and of the fire. The defendant’s counsel contend that an insuperable obstacle to recovery is that by reason of the provisions of the Act of June 8, 1881, P. L. 84, the policy holder had no interest in the property which he could enforce at law or in equity. That he had no such interest, or, to say the least, that the evidence would have been insufficient and incompetent to show that the deed was in fact a mortgage in a suit between him and the grantee, is conclusively settled by the decisions construing the act of 1881: Sankey v. Hawley, 118 Pa. 30; Molly v. Ulrich, 133 Pa. 41; Grove v. Kase, 195 Pa. 325; Crotzer v. Bittenbender, 199 Pa.
Judgment affirmed.