164 So. 65 | Ala. | 1935
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The suit is upon a fire insurance policy issued by defendant United States Fire Insurance Company to Thomas Smith, and included a reinsurance contract entered into by said company with defendant National Liberty Insurance Company of America. The plaintiff held a mortgage on the insured property, and the policy contained what is called a New York Standard or Union Standard, mortgagee clause, which is made exhibit to count 4, upon which for the plaintiff the cause was tried. This clause appears in the report of the case. It gives to this plaintiff, the mortgagee, a severable contract, and a primary right to sue for his interest in the proceeds of the policy. Girard Fire
Marine Ins. Co. v. Gunn,
There is express provision also that as to the interest of said mortgagee the insurance shall not be invalidated by the neglect of the mortgagor or owner of the property, but on failure of the owner to pay the premiums, the same is payable by the mortgagee on demand.
Defendant first insists there was error in sustaining demurrer to the plea in abatement filed upon the theory there had been no proof of loss. The question does not appear to have been previously passed upon by this court. Clearly the cases to which counsel for defendant refer (National Fire Ins. Co. v. Tennessee Land Co.,
But the weight of authority is to the contrary. 26 Corpus Juris 370; 7 Cooley's Brief on Ins. (2d Ed.) 5746-4.
The courts so holding note that, so far as the logic of the situation is concerned, the mortgagee is not likely to have any better information of the details of the loss than the insurance company. (Germania Fire Ins. Co. v. Bally,
We are persuaded the ruling of the trial court is supported by the current of authority and by sound reasoning as well. The demurrer to the pleas in abatement was properly sustained.
The reinsurance agreement between the defendant companies appears in the report of the case, and its salient features need no repetition here. Suffice it to say, it does not constitute a mere indemnity agreement with which the policyholder is not concerned. It is what it purports on its face to be, a reinsurance of the several policies issued by the original insurer company at its Gadsden agency, and the policy of this plaintiff was one of those embraced in such agreement. It was expressly stated that the National Liberty Insurance Company "is bound by the terms and conditions of the several policies of the United States Fire Insurance Company, as herein mentioned, which are entirely reinsured." But further comment in this connection is unnecessary.
The case of Empire Life Ins. Co. v. Landman,
But it is further insisted that count 4 as amended was subject to demurrer for duplicity. We have previously observed that the reinsurance contract was not merely one of indemnity to the original insurer, but that it also reinsured these policyholders, and made likewise for their benefit. And that a suit on the policy may be maintained by the beneficiary against the reinsuring company. As said in Empire Life Ins. Co. v. Landman, supra: "The beneficiary may elect to accept the benefit therein promised and secured to him, and his assent or acceptance may be manifested by resorting to an appropriate remedy, at law or in equity, for the enforcement of such provision of the contract inuring to his benefit." And upon the principle recognized in People's Savings Bank v. Jordan,
Applying the reasoning of that authority to the instant case, the holding is in effect that by assumption of the obligation imposed by the plaintiff's policy of insurance, accepted by plaintiff, the reinsuring company became the primary obligor for the payment thereof, and the original insurer remains liable as a quasi surety. The opinion in the Jordan Case, supra, concludes the discussion of that question by adopting the following from 27 Cyc. 1351: "The action may be maintained against the mortgagor, or the purchaser, who has assumed the payment of the mortgage, or against both jointly." There can be no distinction in principle in that case and the one here considered, and upon that authority (as well as subsequent decisions to like effect, Copeland v. Beard,
The argument in favor of the affirmative charge for defendant is based upon a foreclosure of the mortgage held by this plaintiff. It appears the plaintiff, through his counsel, did advertise the property for sale pursuant to the power of sale contained in the mortgage, and that on November 11, 1932, the Hecht Investment Company, a corporation, became the highest bidder therefor. The sale was for cash, but no part of the purchase money was ever paid, and it developed the house had been destroyed by fire on the day previous, of which fact all parties to the foreclosure proceedings were ignorant. No *261
deed or memorandum of sale was made, and no money paid, but the foreclosure sale was treated as abandoned. This the mortgagee had a right to do. "But it is clear that it is the right of the mortgagee either to insist upon the payment in cash of the amount of the bid, or to make the consummation of the sale dependent upon a compliance by the purchaser with the terms of credit agreed upon. He is entitled, as against any bidder at the sale, to hold the title to the mortgaged property as mortgagee until a bid is made and paid in the manner prescribed by the power, or until he becomes bound by the terms of an agreement between him and the successful bidder to execute a conveyance under the power and to become accountable to the mortgagor for the amount of the bid." Atkins v. Tutwiler,
The recent case of National Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Deas,
Here, for good cause, the purchaser declined to pay, and the foreclosure was treated as abandoned. There was therefore no foreclosure of the mortgage, but a mere futile gesture, and the plaintiff here still held the title as mortgagee.
Assignments of error relating to the question of waiver or growing out of any matter of adjustment need no consideration.
We have discussed the controlling questions presented, and are persuaded a determination of these matters, favorably to plaintiff, determines the case for him, without any detailed consideration of other assignments of error, which could, in no event, affect the result. Our conclusion is that the affirmative charge was properly given for the plaintiff.
The judgment will accordingly be here affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and BOULDIN and FOSTER, JJ., concur.