8 F. 187 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1880
This case has been thoroughly argued, and all tho authorities which I shall refer to have been cited by counsel.
The first point taken by the plaintiff is that the construction of the
The phrase, “as his interest may appear,” does not affect this question. It means that the company will pay the mortgagee to the extent of his lien or charge upon the premises. Franklin Sav. Inst. v. Cent. Mut. Co. 119 Mass. 240; Foote v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co. Id. 259.
The fact that the mortgagee procured the poliey and paid the premium without consulting the mortgagor, appears upon Judge Shepley’s minutes. Whether the mortgagor gave authority for such action, or whether there was a subsequent ratification by the mortgagor, does not appear, and may be of importance hereafter in ascertaining the validity of the policy; but the construction of the contract clearly is that the mortgagor is the assured. Thus it is said that the house is occupied by the assured, meaning the mortgagor. This being so, a court cannot hold that the effect or construction of the policy is varied by the extrinsic circumstance that it was procured by the mortgagee. Not only is it inadmissible to change the contract by parol; but there is no reason to suppose that the parties intended to make any other contract than that which they entered into, or that the company would have agreed to assure the mortgagee. Graves v. Boston Ins. Co. 2 Cranch, 419; Woodbury Sav. Bank v. Charter Oak Ins. Co. 29 Conn. 374; Livingstone v. Western Ins. Co. 16 Grant, Ch. 9.
In the former of those cases, the court, expressing a somewhat strong dissent from a class of decisions concerning mutual companies in which it had been held that an action could not be maintained in the name of the mortgagee unless he had given a new note, decided that as against a stock company such an action might be maintained when the mortgagee had paid the premium. The decision upon the merits holds the mortgagee bound by the acts of the mortgagor, though relievable to some extent by statute.
In the second case, — the action by a mortgagee against a mutual insurance company who had assented to an assignment of a policy as security to a mortgage, and had taken from him a written agreement to pay all assessments which might be made upon the policy, — the court held that a new contract had, in effect, been made with the mortgagee, and that he would no longer be bound by the acts of the mortgagor, done without his knowlege and consent. This decision reached a very just result, by reasoning which is not fully developed; but probably something in the nature of an estoppel was thought to have arisen. That case has been often cited in Massachusetts, but has as often been held not to govern a case like the present. For instance, where the mortgagee who had originally been insured agreed to a change of the policy into the form now in question, upon the verbal assurance of the agent of the company that it would be equally safe in all respects, the general rule was followed. Fitchburg Sav. Bank v. Amazon Ins. Co. 125 Mass. 431.
The general rule is fully established, and governs courts of equity, unless there has been fraud or mistake in framing the contract. It is often harsh in its operation, and is now modified by many of the best companies. In the absence of any such modification in this policy, I must hold, as I am sure Judge Shepley would have held, that there must be a new trial.