32 S.E. 716 | N.C. | 1899
One McCullers, having given to the plaintiff a mortgage on realty for $110 as collateral security, took out a policy in the defendant company for $150, expressed to be paid to the plaintiff and insurer "as their interests may appear." A fire occurred and the loss of $150 has been sustained. McCullers has departed the State or keeps his whereabouts unknown, and this action is brought by the mortgagee alone, and (267) the question is, Can it be sustained or is McCullers a necessary party?
We are of the opinion that he is. As to the mortgaged property, the mortgagee, being made trustee, can upon proper advertisement sell and receive the proceeds by virtue of the trust expressed in the mortgage, i.e., to pay the debt and to pay the surplus to the mortgagor. But that is not the contract as to the policy of insurance. It is not made payable to the mortgagor, or a trustee. It is made payable to two persons "as their interests may appear." The defendant would not be released by a payment to either one from its obligation to the other. Suppose the mortgagee could not be found, would a payment of the whole to the mortgagor discharge the defendant? It is simply a case of an obligation, irrespective of the relation between the payees, to A and B "as their respective interests may appear," and until that is ascertained, the defendant would not be acquitted if he pay one too much, nor can a judgment ascertaining the amount due to one be a bar upon the other unless *197 made a party, with opportunity to contest as to the amount of his interest. It may be that a part or the whole of the mortgage debt has been paid.
These principles are so elementary that we presume the question now raised would never have entered the mind of any one but for the practical difficulty in getting service upon McCullers.
There is an historical illustration of the principle in the incident which first brought Thomas Egerton, afterwards the famous Lord ChancellorEllesmere, into notice and which is thus given by Lord Campbell in his "Lives of the Lord Chancellors": "Three graziers had deposited a sum of money with a worthy old lady who kept an inn in Smithfield, to be returned on their joint application. One of them, pretending he had authority to receive it, induced her to give him the whole sum and absconded with it. The other two brought their action against (268) her and (as the story goes) were about to recover, when young Egerton, then a law student, asked as amicus curiae to point out a fatal objection which had escaped her counsel as well as the judge. Said he, `This money, by the contract, was to be returned to three, but two only sue; where is the third? Let him appear with the others; till then the money cannot be demanded of her.' The result was the plaintiffs were nonsuited" and the young student had taken his first step towards success in a profession in which fame never comes by chance, though accident may furnish opportunities.
Naturally, McCullers should be a party plaintiff, but if he does not come in and make himself coplaintiff, The Code (sec. 185) provides that he may be made a defendant, the reason thereof being stated in the complaint. If the policy has been made payable to the mortgagee alone, then he could have maintained the action, the amount of the loss when paid over to him being held on the same trust as the mortgaged property, i. e., to pay his debt and the surplus, if any, to be paid by him to the mortgagor. But, here, the contract is that the defendant is to pay A and B; neither A nor B is made agent or trustee for the other; and not only that, but the amount made payable to each is left to be determined, if not by agreement, then by an action in which both payees and the defendant must be parties, and The Code [sec. 424 (1)] provides that the judgment in such cases shall be framed "to determine the ultimate rights of the parties on each side as between themselves."
It was error to refuse to sustain the demurrer for failure to make a necessary party. It was not waived by the subsequent agreement as to the facts, presenting the question of the necessity of making McCullers a party, as a question of law to the Court. When the case goes back, it will be in the discretion of the court below to permit (269) *198
an amendment making McCullers a party. Code, sec. 273; Plemmons v.Improvement Co.,
REVERSED.
Cited: Woodcock v. Bostic,