delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff in error filed a bill in chancery in the circuit court of Cook county to reform a fire insurance policy on the ground of mutual mistake and to- enforce the payment of a loss under said policy as reformed. A decree was entered by the circuit court in accordance with the prayer of the bill, and the defendant prosecuted an appeal to the Appellate Court for the First District. That court reversed the decree of the circuit court and remanded the cause, with directions to dismiss the bill for want of equity, and the record has been brought to this court for review by writ of certiorari.
Plaintiff in error resided and was engaged in business in LaGrang-e, Illinois, and owned a farm near that place, upon which there were several buildings, including a large residence for the tenant and two smaller residence buildings, which were not at the time of the loss, nor had been for some time previous, used for residence purposes but were used for storage and other purposes. The policy sought to be reformed was issued on October 30, 1905, by the Indemnity Fire Insurance Company of New York, covering a term of three years, for the amount of $1700 on a frame dwelling house on the farm, described in the policy. In August, 1908, a number of buildings on the farm were destroyed by fire but the frame residence was not destroyed. When proofs of loss were made payment was refused on the ground that the buildings destroyed were not covered by the policy. Plaintiff in error claimed his instructions" to and agreement with the parties who secured the policy for him were that it was to cover all the buildings on the farm. There was a mortgage of $2200 on the farm, and the old policy, which expired at the time the policy sought ü> be reformed was issued, was in the hands of the party who held the mortgage, as collateral to. said mortgage. When the policy sought to be reformed was issued plaintiff in error claims it was delivered by the agents who procured it to the same party, and that he never saw it until after the loss occurred. The bill alleged that the failure to include all the buildings on the farm in the policy was a mutual mistake, and the master in chancery to whom the cause was referred to take the testimony and report his conclusions found that the proofs sustained the allegations of the bill and recommended a decree as prayed, and a decree was accordingly so entered.
In the view we take of this case it will be unnecessary to pass upon the merits of the controversy as to whether there was a mutual mistake in the description of the property covered by the policy.
Under date of May 1, 1907, defendant in error, the Norwich Union Pire Insurance Society of Norwich, England, entered into a re-insurance contract with the Indemnity Company, by which contract, in consideration of an amount agreed upon, defendant in error re-insured to the Indemnity Company its risks, covered by outstanding policies, and the Indemnity Company thereafter ceased doing business in the State of Illinois. The Norwich Union Company was made the sole defendant to the bill.
The first question presented for our determination then is whether a policyholder in the Indemnity Company can maintain an action, by virtue of the re-insurance agreement, against defendant in error. The decision of this question involves a construction of the re-insurance agreement and a determination whether it is strictly a re-insurance contract.
Re-insurance is defined to be a contract that one insurer malees with another to protect the first insurer from a risk he has already assumed. It is not denied such contracts are lawful and valid. “The ordinary contract of re-insurance operates solely between the insurer and the re-insurer, and creates no privity whatever between the re-insurer and the person originally insured. The contract of insurance and that of re-insurance remain totally distinct and unconnected, and the re-insurer is in no respect liable, either as surety or otherwise, to the person originally insured.” (24 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law,—2d ed.—p. 249.) In a note to this text will be found cited numerous decisions of courts of last resort sustaining it, and we do not understand it to be disputed by plaintiff in error that this is the rule where the re-insurance contract is strictly one of reinsurance. In Barnes v. Hekla Fire Ins. Co.
A number of cases are to be found where it has been held that a policyholder may maintain an action against the re-insuring company, but' in all of such cases the contract between the re-insuring company and the re-insured was more than a mere contract of re-insurance and the re-insurer assumed the liabilities of the re-insured and agreed to pay them.
In Johannes v. Phenix Ins. Co.
In Glenn v. Hope Mutual Life Ins. Co.
Another case where the right of a policyholder to maintain an action against the re-insuring company is considered is Shoaf v. Palatine Ins. Co.
In Whitney v. American Ins. Co.
In Ruohs v. Traders Fire Ins. Co.
The foregoing are the principal cases relied upon by plaintiff in error to sustain his action in this case against the re-insuring company. By the contract of re-insurance here involved defendant in error did not agree to assume any of the obligations of the Indemnity Company to its policyholders. The contract is one strictly of re-insurance for the sole benefit of the Indemnity Company. The material part of the contract is as follows: “Witnesseth, that the Norwich Union agrees to re-insure from 12 o’clock M., standard time, on above date, at the place where the property insured is located, all unexpired fire and lightning risks located in the United States, for the amounts not heretofore re-insured, now covered by policies and contracts issued by the Indemnity, according to their terms and conditions, and to pay all losses thereon occurring after the last mentioned hour, and to pay all adjusting and other expenses arising from such risks and all return premiums upon the cancellation of policies enumerated in the schedules.”
We can give this contract no other interpretation than an agreement of defendant in error to re-insure all unexpired fire and lightning risks covered by policies issued by the Indemnity Company and to pay to said Indemnity Company all losses thereafter occurring upon such risks of the Indemnity Company. In consideration of this re-insurance contract the Indemnity Company agreed to pay defendant in error “a sum equal to the net amount of the pro rata unearned premium on all the risks thus re-insured, less a deduction of fifteen per cent (15%) from such pro rata premium, which is in lieu of any and all charges and allowances, including taxes, assessments of all kinds, and other charges of a similar nature for which the Indemnity is liable.” There is no assumption of any liability of the Indemnity Company to the policyholders, nor any agreement on the part of defendant in error to pay any loss sustained by the policyholders. It is strictly a contract to indemnify the Indemnity Company against any losses it might sustain, but defendant in error assumed none of the liabilities -of that company to its policyholders. The Indemnity Company continued liable, as before, to settle with its policyholders, and there is,nothing in the contract to indicate that it was made for the benefit of the Indemnity Company’s policyholders. It created no privity whatever between the Indemnity Company’s policyholders and defendant in error, and therefore no pght exists in plaintiff in error to maintain an action against defendant in error.
In our opinion the judgment of the Appellate Court is right, and it is affirmed.
T , , , Judgment affirmed.
