162 Mo. App. 316 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
Plaintiff Walton, then the owner of a house and lot in Frankclay, St. Francois county, sold and conveyed it to one Wheeling, and for all or part of the purchase money took back a deed of trust on the same property, the deed being evidenced by thirty-three notes executed by Wheeling. Walton desired to raise $500 on these notes and submitted the proposed loan to the Irondale Bank, of which one Adams was cashier. Adams was also, at that time and place, agent of the Phoenix Insurance Company, the defendant and appellant here. When Walton applied for the loan Adams, after consultation with the president of the bank, agreed to make it with the deed of trust and notes as collateral security, provided insurance was taken out on the house. To this Walton
The conditions in the policy involved were that of ownership of the property in Wheeling, and that the policy shall be void “if a building herein described, whether intended for occupancy by owner or tenant, be or become vacant or unoccupied and so remain for ten days.” This policy seems to have been signed by Adams, as agent for the company defendant. Thereupon the Irondale Bank made the loan of $500', Walton putting up the deed of trust and notes as collateral and executing the ordinary bank collateral note, and apparently retaining the policy until after the fire, when he sent it in to the bank or to Adams, as agent of the defendant company. It appears that afterwards Wheeling, having paid only about twenty dollars on the debt and having told Walton that he could not pay any more, offered to deed back the property to Walton if the latter would surrender to him his notes which were secured by the deed of trust. This was agreed to, the agreement further providing that all moneys arising from the sale of the house, over and above $804.60, the balance owed by Wheeling on the notes should be paid over by Walton to Wheeling, but that if on a sale of the property Walton was unable to obtain more than the amount of the debt, nothing was
The petition contained two counts. The first averred that there was an agreement on consideration of which Wheeling was to assign to plaintiff the insurance policy, but that he had neglected and refused to do so, and Walton claiming to be owner, sued for the total insurance. The second count claims $1000’ as the amount of loss on the building, it being averred in this count that Wheeling was the unconditional and sole owner and that plaintiff was the owner and holder at the time of the issuing of the policy and still is the owner and holder of the thirty-three promissory notes, aggregating $805 secured by the deed of trust and tfbat under the terms of the policy the loss was made ■payable to Walton as mortgagee to the extent and .■.■amount of the promissory notes held by Walton, and {.averring that the amount due on the notes with interest is $1000, plaintiff prays judgment for that amount, raverring that the fire occurred on the 8th of October, "1907. The first count was dismissed at the close of the evidence by plaintiff, defendant at the commencement
The answer, apparently to the first count, by way of defense avers that the property was vacant and had' been vacant for more than fifteen days prior to the burning thereof and that the destruction of the property was surrounded with suspicious circumstances for the reason that a load or two of old worthless household plunder had been stored in the property under the direction of plaintiff for the purpose of technically avoiding the provision in the insurance policy, that the vacancy of the house for more than ten days would work an absolute forfeiture of the policy and of the' rights and advantages accruing thereunder to the insured or his assignee thereof. It is further averred that the property was vacant and unoccupied within the meaning and spirit of the policy at the time of the fire, and had been so for more than fifteen days theretofore. While this is distinctly pleaded as an answer to the first count, it seems to have been treated in the instructions, given after that count had been dismissed,, as still in the case. As to whether this should have been done, we express no opinion, no point being made upon it. That part of the answer purporting to be levelled at the second count avers that neither Wheeling nor Walton had any interest in the property and that the policy was null and void; that it had never been transferred or assigned to Walton and that as a matter of fact Walton had no interest in it; that the title to the property insured had completely and fully passed out of Wheeling to Walton by the deed made to Walton? on-or about the 25th of April and that no arrangement,, verbal or otherwise, had been made whereby Wheeling was to make an assignment in writing as required by the policy, to Walton and, clearly referring to the
At the trial before the court and a jury there was evidence tending to establish the facts as set out by us, with the additional fact that it appeared that up to the time of the destruction of the property Walton had not taken up the notes from the bank held by. the bank as collateral and had not returned them to Wheeling and had not taken the deed out of escrow nor had it ever been delivered to him. There was no evidence as to the origin of the fire and no facts in evidence even tending to connect plaintiff with the fire.
At the instance of plaintiff the court gave five instructions. As no error is assigned to them except generally that they should all have been refused and an instruction given for defendant, it is not necessary to set them out.
At the instance of defendant the court gave two instructions. The first told the jury that under the terms of the policy sued on, “if, before the fire complained of, the building insured became vacant or unoccupied and so remainded for ten days, said policy thereupon became void and plaintiff cannot recover in this action.” The second instruction told the jury that occupancy of a dwelling-house means that some person is living in it, and if they found that for a period of ten days before the fire complained of, no person was living in the dwelling-house in question, then for such length of time the same was unoccupied.
Defendant asked two other instructions which were refused. The first, that under the pleadings and evidence plaintiff could not recover; the second, numbered four, “that if, after the policy sued on was is
Exception was duly saved to tbe refusal of these two instructions and to tbe giving of tbe instructions on behalf of plaintiff. Tbe jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in tbe sum of $976.57, being tbe amount of tbe principal and interest added to tbe date of tbe trial, tbe notes calling for interest at tbe rate of eight per cent per annum. Judgment followed from which defendant has duly perfected appeal to this court, having filed its motion for a new trial as well as in arrest and saved exception to these being overruled.
Defendant makes three points: First, that tbe evidence is undisputed that tbe bouse was vacant and unoccupied for ten days before tbe fire; that tbe court by its instructions bad recognized this provision of tbe policy as valid and tbe law of tbe case and upon that theory should have sustained the demurrer to tbe evidence. Second* that tbe policy became void when tbe insured, Wheeling, delivered tbe possession of tbe property insured to Walton. Third, plaintiff sued as mortgagee but bis mortgage was cancelled by tbe transfer of tbe property to him to satisfy, and in payment of, tbe debt, and no interest as mortgagee remained to sustain a claim in bis favor as mortgagee under tbe policy. We cannot bold any of these assignments well taken.
Tbe court by its second instruction given at tbe instance of defendant properly instructed the jury as to what was meant by tbe term “unoccupied.” With this instruction and tbe evidence before it, tbe jury . must be held to have found as a matter of fact that
The second proposition, that the policy became void when W-heeling deeded and delivered possession of the property insured to Walton and that the change of title and possession made it so, is not sound for two reasons. First, as mortgagee, after condition broken, as was the ease here, Walton undoubtedly had the right of entry and of collecting and retaining the rents. If he entered and did not rent he was bound to account to the legal owner, the mortgagor, for the rental value of the premises. The question as to his liability for the rental value of the premises, is one which could only arise between the mortgagor and mortgagee, but the right of possession in the mortgagee, after condition broken, is undoubted, unless contrary to the covenants in the mortgage, so that his possession was not conclusive of title, nor inconsistent with his position as mortgagee. Secondly, there is ample evidence on which the jury might find that there was never a delivery of the deed from Wheeling to Walton, that deed being placed and left in escrow by both of them in the hands of a third party. This court, in Hubbard v. North British & Mercantile Ins. Co., 57 Mo. App. 1, determined that a party in possession with an equitable claim to title and without the absolute legal investiture of title, is not the absolute owner and that an insurance policy which has been issued to that party on covenants of absolute ownership and investiture of title is not enforceable and the policy becomes void when it appears that the title was equitable merely, and that the legal title had not passed to the insured. This ease is referred to approvingly by the Kansas City Court of Appeals in Harness v. National Fire Inssurance Co., 62 Mo. App. 245. As long as the deed from Wheeling to Walton was in escrow in the hands of a third party, only to be delivered upon the performance of certain conditions by Walton, and inas
The third proposition made by learned counsel is also untenable. By this second count of the petition upon which the case went to the jury, plaintiff sued as mortgagee, and he was such beyond all question as appears by the evidence in the case. It cannot be contended on the evidence in this case that the mortgage was cancelled. There was an agreement that it should be cancelled, and a deed transferring the title to the property from Wheeling to Walton was to be delivered when and upon the payment of the mortgage debt by satisfaction thereof on the part of Walton. The agreement is specific that he was to surrender or cause to be surrendered to Wheeling the remaining of the thirty-three notes held by the bank. There is no pretense that he had done this; on the contrary, there is affirmative and uncontradicted testimony that he has never done this and that those notes are still in the hands of the bank as collateral to Walton’s unpaid $500 note. The deed was not to be and in'fact never had been delivered to Walton by Wheeling or by the third party who held it, or by anyone else, and could not be delivered until the notes of Wheeling were released from control of the holder and delivered to Wheeling.
This action of its agent estops this defendant from now claiming as against payment of this loss that the policy should have been assigned to the plaintiff as owner (see Millis v. Scottish Union & National Ins. Co., 95 Mo. App. 211, l. c. 215 and following; 68 S. W. 1066; O’Brien v. Greenwich Ins. Co., 95 Mo. App. 301, 68 S. W. 976; Fields v. German American Ins. Co., 140 Mo. App. 158, l. c. 166, 120 S. W. 697), provided ■the defendant was aware of the fact that Adams was also acting for the bank, as well as for Wheeling and Walton in the transaction. Beyond the fact in proof that the defendant knew that Adams was also cashier of the bank, there is no direct proof of this. But it is mot necessary to determine this matter of dual agency. Over and above that is the fact that the interest of Walton was that of mortgagee and not of owner. So that whether the act of Adams in advising against any assignment was the cause of failure to make an assignment of the policy from Wheeling to Walton as owner of the premises and so estops defendant is immaterial, for such an assignment under the facts in the case would not change the situation. Hence we
We hold that the assignments of error relied upon, by learned counsel for appellant are not well taken and that the judgment of the circuit court should be and it is affirmed.