91 Cal. 323 | Cal. | 1891
In March, 1890, we made a decision in this case reversing the judgment of the superior court, with directions to enter judgment on the' findings in
The action is upon a fire insurance policy. Plaintiffs had judgment in the lower court, and defendant appealed from the judgment alone, claiming that upon the facts found, the judgment should have been in its favor.
The policy in suit was issued in August, 1887, and the property insured consisted of a frame building designed for a hotel or boarding-house. The defendant was advised by the papers accompanying the application for insurance — which, by the terms of the policy, are made a part of the contract — that the building was occupied, or to be occupied, by a tenant (no particular tenant being named) for hotel purposes, and it is found by the court, as alleged in the complaint, “ that before said insurance was effected, defendant had full knowledge that said building was built by plaintiffs for the purpose of renting the same for a boarding and lodging house, and was to be occupied by the tenant of the plaintiffs; the said building not being at that time fully completed and furnished.”
After the insurance was effected and the building completed, the plaintiffs, on December 24, 1887, by a written lease demised the insured premises to one J. D. Stewart for a term of five years, at a fixed rent, payable monthly. The lease also contained stipulations binding the plaintiffs to put in certain furniture, consisting of carpets, cooking-range, gas-fixtures, etc., and binding Stewart to put in other necessary furniture. It was agreed that the building and furniture should be properly insured for the benefit of the parties as their interest might appear, and that Stewart, the lessee, should pay one half of the expense of insuring the building and the entire expense of insuring the furniture.
It was further agreed as follows: “ Said party of the second part (Stewart) may at any time during said term
The defendant had no notice of these stipulations for purchase and sale of the property. Under this lease and agreement, Stewart entered into possession of the insured premises, and so continued until the destruction of the hotel by fire, in April, 1888.
The plaintiffs thereafter, upon due notice and proofs of loss, demanded payment of the policy, which was refused by the defendant. Hence this action, which is defended on the ground of an alleged violation by plaintiffs of the following conditions of the policy: “If the property be sold or transferred (in whole or in part), or upon the commencement of foreclosure proceedings against, or a sale under a deed of trust, or the existence of a judgment lien, or the issue or levy of an execution against, any kind of property herein described; or if the property be assigned under any bankrupt or insolvent law, or any change takes place in the title or possession (except in case of succession by reason of the death of the assured), whether by legal process or judicial decree, or voluntary transfer, assignment, or conveyance; or if the title or possession shall be changed from any cause whatsoever; or if this policy shall be assigned before a loss, without the consent of the company indorsed hereon,— this policy shall in each and every instance be void.”
The passages which we have Italicized are those to which attention is particularly directed, the claim of appellant being that the lease and agreement of sale, and Stewart’s possession thereunder, wrought a change both in the title and possession of the property insured, involving a forfeiture by plaintiffs of all rights under the policy.
The real and only question in the case is, whether the contract of sale embraced in the lease, or superadded to it, wrought a change in the title to the insured premises within the meaning of the policy, or imparted to the possession of Stewart a character materially different from the possession of a tenant. Upon this question we held in our former decision, in accordance with the contention of appellant, that Stewart, by taking possession of the insured premises under the lease and agreement of December 24,1887, not only acquired the right, but became absolutely bound to complete the purchase; that henceforth the buildings were at his risk; that if they were destroyed the loss would be his alone, because he was obliged at the expiration of his term as tenant, upon tender of a deed for the land without the buildings, to pay the full contract price of twenty-five thousand dollars." From- this it necessarily followed that Stewart, from the time of taking possession, acquired an insurable interest equivalent to the value of the build
But on a fuller consideration of the case, we are sa'isfied that the authorities cited in our opinion and in the briefs of counsel did not warrant us in holding that, under the circumstances of this case, Stewart, by taking possession under the lease and contract of December 24, 1887, became absolutely bound to complete the purchase of the premises at the expiration of his term, notwithstanding the previous destruction of the buildings.
There can be no question that under such a contract the equitable title to the land, as between the vendor and vendee, is in the latter. This is a familiar doctrine of equity, based upon the principle that, for the prevention of fraud and the enforcement of the just rights of the parties, equity will deem that to be done which ought to be done. The maxim is applied most frequently in actions by the vendee for specific performance of the contract, or in aid of his defense when the vendor is seeking to recover possession of the land upon his legal title. (Laffan v. Naglee, 9 Cal. 663; 70 Am. Dec. 678; De Rutte v. Muldrow, 16 Cal. 505; Hall v. Center, 40 Cal. 63; Dowd v. Clarke, 54 Cal. 48; King v. Buckman, 21 N. J. Eq. 599.)
Decisions almost innumerable to the same effect might be cited from the reports of this and other states, but they do not decide the question involved in this case.
There is a wide distinction between the proposition that the vendee in possession under an executory contract of sale may maintain the possession against the vendor as long as he performs his part of the agreement, and upon full compliance may enforce specific perform
When we come to make a critical examination of the cases cited to this point, and especially the cases in which the precise question we are considering is directly involved, we find that they lend a very slight support to the appellant’s contention.
In the case of McKetchine v. Sterling, 48 Barb. 330, the doctrine is, it is true, carried to an extreme degree; but the authorities cited in support of that decision are not in point, and the reasoning by which they are made to support the decision is very unsatisfactory.
In Richter v. Selin, 8 Serg. & R. 439, the supreme court of Pennsylvania use this language: “Where a contract is made for the sale of land, equity considers the vendee as the OAvner of the estate sold, and the purchaser as a trustee for the vendor for the purchase-money. So much is the vendee considered, in contemplation of equity, as actually seised of the estate, that he must bear any loss that may happen to the estate between the agreement and the conveyance, and he will be entitled to any benefit which may accrue to it in the interval, because by the contract he is the owner of the premises to every intent and purpose in equity.” But this was said arguendo, in deciding a case where the point was not directly involved, and the proposition, true enough in general, and in its application to the circumstances of that ease, was stated in its most unqualified form, and Avithout regard to the special circumstances which in many cases render it inapplicable.
Similar statements of the same doctrine are to be found in some of the insurance cases hereinafter referred
But we shall also see that the doctrine has its reasonable limitations, and that this is one of the cases to which it cannot be applied without doing the wrong and injustice which it was designed to prevent.
In the case of Wells v. Calnan, 107 Mass. 514, 9 Am. Rep. 65, the facts were, that the plaintiff agreed to sell the defendant a farm, and the defendant agreed to buy. On the day previous to that fixed for the payment and conveyance the buildings on the farm were destroyed by fire. The plaintiff tendered a conveyance in pursuance of the contract, and demanded payment of the purchase price, which being refused, he sued for damages. It was held that he could not recover, because by reason of the destruction of the buildings, he was unable to comply with the contract on his part. It is true, the vendee had not taken possession, and the court found it necessary to distinguish the cases in which lessees in possession had been held liable on their covenant to pay rent or make repairs notwithstanding the destruction of tenements by fire during the term. In those cases it was said the liability of the defendant resulted from the fact that the lessors had fully complied with their contracts, while in the case under consideration, the plaintiff was unable to do so.
There can be no doubt of the soundness of this" distinction, and no difficulty, we think, in showing that it applies to the present- case.
In the earlier Massachusetts case (Thompson v. Gould, 20 Pick. 124) it was applied, where the defendant was in possession and had paid the purchase price for the purpose of sustaining his right to recover back the money paid.
In that case the agreement of purchase and sale was by parol, but the plaintiff paid at different dates the whole purchase price and got receipts in writing specifying the purpose of the payments, and he had entered into possession of the house. Clearly, under the circum
It was conceded that the contract of the vendor, though by parol, could, under the circumstances, have been specifically enforced, but it was denied that it could have been enforced against the vendee after destruction of the house.
It may be said that in this decision the mere legal rights of the parties were regarded, and that the court could not act upon the equitable doctrine for want of jurisdiction; but it will be seen that the equitable doctrine was discussed in the opinion, and its reasonable limitations pointed out.
What those limitations are it is not necessary that we should consider exhaustively. For the purpose of this decision, it is sufficient to say that no case has been cited, and we have discovered none in which the vendee has been held bound to pay the purchase price where a valuable part of the property has been destroyed before the day fixed for payment and conveyance, unless he has take ' possession under the contract of sale, or has the right tt such possession under the contract before the occurrence * the loss.
Now, in ti., 'age, it is to be remembered that the agreement between plaintiffs and Stewart consisted of a lease for a term of five years, reserving a rent, payable monthly in money, a stipulation giving Stewart the privilege of purchasing at twenty-five thousand dollars at any time during the term, and the contract binding him to purchase at twenty-five thousand dollars at the end of the term.
In considering the question before us, we may lay out of view the stipulation giving Stewart the privilege of
And we think that, for the purpose of determining his liability under his agreement to purchase, in case of destruction of a material part of the property sold prior to the time for payment and conveyance, this distinction between the lease and agreement ought to be made. It is reasonable and equitable, and not opposed to any authority cited, unless the case in 48 Barbour, above referred to; should be deemed an authority against it. If so, we can only say that we think that case goes to an unreasonable length, and that it ought not to be followed. On the contrary, we think the best-considered cases warrant us in holding that the liability of Stewart upon his agreement to purchase ended with the destruction of the hotel; that it was never at his risk, but was always at the sole risk of the plaintiffs.
But appellant contends that even on this view there was a change of title and possession within the meaning of the policy, and he cites a number of cases to sustain the proposition that the equitable ownership of a vendee under a contract of purchase constitutes a sole, absolute, and unconditional ownership, and consequently that the
In the case of Hough v. City Fire Insurance Co., 29 Conn. 10, 76 Am. Dec. 581, the legal title to the property insured was in a trustee, who held it as security for about sixteen hundred dollars, subject to which encumbrance the plaintiff and two others owned the equitable title in equal shares. The plaintiff bought out his co-owners, agreeing to pay each the sum of one thousand dollars for his interest, and he had paid on his purchase five hundred dollars to one and seven hundred dollars to the other. He had also taken possession of the land, and erected a dwelling thereon at a cost of two thousand seven hundred dollars, and was to receive a conveyance from the trustee upon the payment of the sum secured to him on the property. Under these circumstances the court held that it was not a misrepresentation on the part of plaintiff in applying for insurance to state that the property was his. And it was also held that his interest in the property was, within the meaning of the policy, an absolute interest, because he could by no contingency be deprived of it except by his own consent. No doubt this case was correctly decided.
The plaintiff, by reason of his original interest in the property, his payment to his co-owners upon the purchase of their interests, and the money he had expended in improvements on the property, independent of his agreement to purchase, had bound himself to do so, and he was the only person who could suffer loss by destruction of the property. It was his, therefore, absolutely, in every sense of the word material to the risk. And the decision was in line with hundreds of others in which the courts everywhere have refused to defeat recovery upon insurance policies by giving effect to the literal terms of clauses of forfeitures. Such clauses are always, and justly, construed with the utmost strictness against the insurer, and always with reference to their
The case of Davidson v. Hawkeye Ins. Co., 71 Iowa, 532, 60 Am. Rep. 818, upon the authority of which, principally, our former decisión herein was based, was another of the same sort. There the vendee had entered into possession of a small farm under a contract to purchase it for four hundred dollars, upon which fifty dollars was to be paid in cash. Prior to the sale, the vendor had, as in this case, procured insurance on a building on the farm. After the sale, the building was destroyed by fire, and the vendor sued on the policy. The defense was breach of a condition of the policy' against any sale or conveyance of the property by the insured. The defense was sustained on the ground that there was a sale of the property. This ruling was clearly opposed to the decision of the supreme court of Maryland in Washington Ins. Co. v. Kelly, 32 Md. 421, 3 Am. Rep. 149, and to other decisions cited in the dissenting opinion.
It was rested also upon the false assumption that if the plaintiff could collect the insurance he could also collect the full purchase price of the building from his vendee, which would be holding, in effect, that the defendant remained bound by the policy after it became the interest of the assured to destroy the property.
We do not, therefore, rest our decision in any degree upon the ground that the plaintiffs could not possibly have derived an advantage from the destruction of the hotel, and have only alluded to the matter for the purpose of calling attention to the false quantity in the reasoning of the Iowa supreme court in the case cited in support of our former decision.
The cases of Imperial Fire Ins. Co. v. Dunham, 117 Pa. St. 460, 2 Am. St. Rep. 686, and Elliott v. Ashland Mutual Fire Ins. Co., 117 Pa. St. 548, 2 Am. St. Rep. 703, cited on the rehearing, are essentially like the other cases cited to the same point, which we have already considered. '
We conclude that there was in this case no change of title or possession material to the risk, and that the judgment of the superior court on the facts found was correct.
In reaching this conclusion, we have not overlooked the argument based upon the fact that Stewart agreed to pay one half of the premium on the insurance of the hotel. That agreement is evidently one of the terms of
The judgment is affirmed.
Paterson, J., Harrison, J., De Haven, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.
McFarland, J., concurred in the order of affirmance.
Rehearing denied.