Certain of the grounds of demurrer raise the issue as to whether the plaintiff has “made a complete assignment of the cause of action sued upon and of all benefits due to him under the policy” so as to vest the right of recovery thereon solely in the assignee, the Macon Hospital. To decide this question it is necessary to analyze of what this cause of action consists. Code § 3-108 provides as follows: “As a general rule, the action on a contract, whether express or implied, or whether by parol or under seal, or of record, shall be brought in the name of the party in whom the legal interest in such contract is vested, and against the party who made it in person or by agent.” The contract of insurance contemplates that the plaintiff alone is the legal owner thereof, although others than himself are thereby insured, and provides that “every transaction relating to this policy shall be between the company and the insured.” The petition alleges that there has been a breach of the contract between plaintiff and defendant. The measure of damages for this breach is alleged as the amounts which defendant by its contract binds itself to pay upon the happening of a certain event—an illness within the terms of the policy—plus other damages sought to be recovered for bad faith. That which was assigned by the plaintiff to the hospital was the same thing which the defendant agreed, when otherwise liable, and when authorized by the plaintiff, to pay direct to the hospital—that is, reimbursement of plaintiff’s debt
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to the hospital to the extent of its liability under the contract. The insurance contract is, so far as appears, still of force and effect. It is still a contract between the plaintiff and the defendant, and it has not been assigned by the plaintiff to anyone. The
cause of action,
if one exists, is an action for damages under the contract, title to which is in the plaintiff. The proceeds of the policy, which are the equivalent of the measure of damages, have been allocated or assigned to the hospital for the purpose of being applied against the plaintiff’s debt to it. In 6 C. J. S. 1143, § 85, it is stated: "An assignment of property carries with it the right to the proceeds thereof, although an assignment of the expected proceeds of property gives no right to the property itself.” Here the “property” is the contract of insurance, title to which remains in the plaintiff. The proceeds the plaintiff has set aside for the use of his creditor, the hospital. Accordingly, when under the terms of the policy he authorized the defendant, as he was entitled to do, to pay the proceeds direct to the hospital, the fact that this instrument “assigns” all benefits under the policy does not make it such an assignment of legal title as to authorize the hospital to sue on the policy in its own name, and accordingly such a suit could not be maintained.
Wheeler
v.
Stapleton,
99
Ga.
731 (
The plaintiff in error cites
Sullivan v. Curling,
149
Ga.
96 (
The remaining issue raised by the demurrers is whether the affirmative allegations of the petition bring it within the policy provision extending coverage only to “sickness, the cause of which originates while this policy is in force and more than 15 days after the date hereof.” The petition does allege that “on the date said policy was issued and for 15 days thereafter, plaintiff was in good health and free of disease.” Unless one allegation is the equivalent of the other, the plaintiff has failed to bring himself within the terms of the policy and cannot recover.
Hulsey
v.
Interstate Life
&
Accident Ins. Co.,
207
Ga.
167, 169 (
The trial court did not err in overruling the general and special demurrers to the petition.
Judgment affirmed.
