67 Minn. 126 | Minn. | 1897
Two questions only are presented by this appeal, both dependent upon the construction to be placed upon language used in a title insurance policy issued by defendant company to plaintiffs as mortgagees of certain real property. The contract, as stated in the policy, was, among other things, to indemnify, keep harmless, and insure plaintiffs from all loss or damage, not to exceed a stated sum of money, sustained by reason of defects in the title of the mortgagors in the mortgaged estate, excepting such as were set forth in an attached schedule, and subject, also, to the stipulation® and conditions made a. part of the policy. In the schedule an item, stated as “Tenancy of the present occupants,” was mentioned as a defect in or objection to the title against which the company did not insure; and among the stipulations and conditions of the policy was one that:
“No right of action shall accrue under this policy unless the insured, or those claiming under him as aforesaid, shall have been actually evicted under an adverse title not mentioned or referred to in the above Schedule B, or unless there has been a final judgment upon a lien or incumbrance not mentioned or referred to in said Schedule B, under which the title of the insured will be divested by sale under judgment or foreclosure, or unless the insured has contracted to sell the estate or interest insured, and the title has been declared by a court of last resort of competent jurisdiction defective or incumbered by reason of a defect or incumbrance for which the company would be liable under this policy.”
From the complaint it appeared that, at a foreclosure sale of the mortgaged premises, the plaintiffs purchased the same for the full amount due on the debt; that no redemption had been made within the statutory period; that, at the date the mortgage was delivered, and when the policy was issued, the mortgagors were not the own
1. It is the position of defendant’s counsel that, from the allegations of this complaint, it appears that the case in hand was expressly excepted from the policy because of the words in the schedule, “Tenancy of the present occupants.”
If we are to give these words their broadest signification, and construe them without regard to the object or purpose of the contract, or the language used elsewhere, the position would be quite easily sustained; for the broad definition of a “tenant” is one who holds or possesses lands or tenements by any kind of right or title, whether in fee, for life, for years, at will, or otherwise. The persons mentioned in the complaint as having been, and as still continuing, in adverse possession, are certainly tenants, within this comprehensive definition1.
But, when we read the entire policy, and consider its object and alleged purpose, — that it purported to be a contract to indemnify plaintiffs, as mortgagees, against loss or damage sustained by reason of defects in the mortgagors’ title; that, if the construction contended for by counsel for the defendant should prevail, it would apply in1 cases where the entire premises were in the adverse possession of another, as well as those, like the present, where only a part is held adversely, leaving the policy holder remediless when he has actually bought and paid for protection; that, if the design of the defendant was to exclude from its policy all liability as to the title “of the present occupants,” it could have said so by simply changing one word of the phrase, “tenancy of the present occupants,” which, at most, is ambiguous only; that, where an expression in an insurance policy is of such a character, the ambiguity is to be construed against' the insurer, and in favor of the insured; that the word “tenant” is generally used in a popular sense, and, as mentioned in' this sense, according to Webster, “one who has the occupation or temporary possession of lands or tenements whose title is in another; correlative to landlord”; and also that, without a provision of this import, the insurer would probably incur a liability if there were outstand
2. As the complaint fails to allege the occurrence of any of the conditions precedent, hereinbefore quoted, as found in the policy, counsel for appellant urge this as another reason why the general demurrer should have been sustained.
A final judgment upon a lien or incumbrance certainly has no reference to a case like this. And counsel practically concede that the condition requiring actual eviction under adverse title has no application, for the defect upon which plaintiffs base their cause of action is inability to obtain possession, and entire want of title, and nothing else. It is really admitted by counsel that, if any of these conditions precedent stand in the way of a recovery upon the present complaint, it must be that which prohibits recovery unless the insured has contracted to sell the estate or interest insured, and the title has been declared by a court of last resort of competent jurisdiction defective or incumbered by reason of a defect or incumbrance for which the company would be liable under the policy.
If this condition was intended to apply to a case of this character, it demands of plaintiffs that, with full knowledge of a total want of title to a part of the premises, they find some one upon whom they can impose by entering into a contract to sell that which they do not own, or that they enter into a sham contract of sale, have the vendee refuse to perform, bring a suit against him, and then go through the form of an action which is fictitious from start to finish, and a fraud upon the court in which it is prosecuted. They are either compelled to perpetrate a fraud upon the innocent vendee, or a fraud upon the court in which they bring the action. We cannot believe that the defendant company ever intended the condition in question to cover a case like this, but, rather, that it was designed to guard against actions for nominal damages, instituted by persons who had ascertained that defects existed in their titles, but whose possession remained undisturbed, and who had suffered no loss. It was an adaptation of the law relating to covenants in a deed, that actual loss must
Order affirmed.