179 Mass. 434 | Mass. | 1901
These are two actions upon policies of insurance issued to the plaintiff by the respective defendants upon a dwelling house and building materials belonging to her and situate in Marblehead. The two actions were tried and argued together.' The policies are in the Massachusetts standard form, and each provides amongst other things that it shall be void if the property insured shall be sold without the assent in writing of the company. At the trial the facts were agreed, and the defendants requested the court to direct verdicts for them. The judge refused to do so, and thereupon the defendants, not desiring to go to the jury, consented that, subject to their exception to the refusal of the court to rule as requested, verdicts should be directed for the plaintiff, which was done. The cases are here upon the report of the presiding justice which concludes as follows : “ If upon the facts there can be a recovery for the plaintiff judgments are to be entered on the verdicts; otherwise the verdicts are to be set aside and a new trial granted.”
From the facts as agreed it appears that the policy of the •Reliance Company was issued September 9, 1897, arid that' of the Delaware Company April 14, 1898, and that the loss occurred May 17,1900. Both policies were for five years and were made payable in case of loss to Benjamin L. Kimball, mortgagee, and to each there was “ a rider attached, insuring, during process of construction, materials for said building in and about the premises.” And the report states that from the time when the policies were issued to the time of the fire the plaintiff had materials on the premises and that part of the loss was on such materials. On September 20, 1898, a creditor of the plaintiff sold on execution the real property insured but not the building material, and on September 25, 1899, Kimball foreclosed his mortgage and conveyed the property to one Jackson who on October 7, 1899, conveyed it to the plaintiff. “ Jackson acted throughout this transaction as the agent and trustee of the plaintiff and the purchase money paid the mortgagee at the foreclosure sale was furnished by the plaintiff.” The conveyances from Kimball to Jackson and from Jackson to the plaintiff “ were parts of one transaction the object of which was to immediately vest the entire interest in the property in the plaintiff,” and the delay from September 25 to October 7 was caused
The defendants contend that the policies are void because the property was sold without their written assent, that the word “ property ” in the condition means the dwelling house and does not include the building material, that Newhall had no authority to waive the condition, and that if he had such authority there is no evidence of waiver by him.
There may be some question whether a sale on execution or a foreclosure sale comes within the terms of these policies. Such
, The result is that we think that there should be judgment on the verdicts.
So ordered.