Plaintiff Waynesville Security Bank, mortgagee of a “mobile home” owned by one Roy Randolph, brought this action for breach of contract as loss payee in a fire insurance policy issued by defendant Stuyvesant Insurance Company. The loss occurred after the policy had expired; the breach of contract alleged was failure to give the loss payee notice of the expiration of the policy and an opportunity to renew it. The cause was tried to the court on stipulated facts. The court found for the plaintiff and the defendant appeals. Our duty is to determine whether the trial court’s judgment represents the proper legal conclusion on the facts stipulated. Jewel Tea Co. v. City of Carthage,
From the stipulation of fact, it appears that the policy sued on is a fire insurance policy issued to Mr. Randolph on December 9, 1969. It covers loss or damage to' a trailer, or “mobile home”, by fire and other specified perils. The policy was endorsed to cover a different trailer in September 1970, but that endorsement is not material to the issues here presented. The term of the policy is typed clearly
on
its face. The policy contains no provision requiring notice of expiration on the expiration date. The loss payable clause, added by endorsement when the policy was amended, is a “standard” or “union” clause. It provides that the plaintiff’s interest “shall not be invalidated by any act or neglect of the . Mortgagor or Owner”, and further states that “in case the
It is stipulated that the policy expired on December 9, 1970, and that it was not thereafter renewed or reinstated. It is further stipulated that no notice of the expiration of the policy was given to the insured or to the plaintiff. The trailer was completely destroyed by fire on December 13, 1970, after the policy had expired. In this court, the defendant claims it was under no obligation to notify the loss payee of the expiration of the policy or afford it an opportunity to renew. The plaintiff claims that the loss payable clause is an independent contract binding the defendant to give notice of the expiration or cancellation of the policy for nonpayment of the premium. Plaintiff emphasizes that the loss payable clause insulates it from the consequences of “any act or neglect of the Mortgagor or Owner”, and further maintains that the provision giving it the right to pay any premium due is ambiguous to the extent that it could reasonably he interpreted to require notice of expiration or the insurer’s intention not to renew the policy.
Plaintiff’s arguments are cleverly contrived but unsound. True, a standard or union mortgage clause operates as an independent contract of insurance between the mortgagee and the insurer which cannot be defeated by a breach of the conditions of the policy on the part of the mortgagor or solely by his act, General Motors Accept. Corp. v. Western Fire Ins. Co.,
Plaintiff tacitly concedes as much, but asserts that by the terms of the endorsement, it was entitled to notice of cancellation of the policy for nonpayment of the premium. The difficulty with this argument is, in the first place, that the policy was not cancelled during its term. This policy was not a continuing policy, contingent upon payment of premiums as they became due periodically, as were the policies construed in Mitchell v. Farmers Ins. Exchange,
This brings us to the meritorious question presented: Was plaintiff, as an insured under an independent contract incorporating the policy provisions, entitled to notice of the expiration of the policy and an opportunity to renew it, even though no policy provision required such notice? We think not.
We are aware that in some jurisdictions, statutes have been enacted which contemplate special consideration of the interests of property owners who are exposed to a high degree of risk but are unable to obtain fire insurance through ordinary channels. Thus, it may be that fire insurance policies issued under the so-called FAIR plans require notice of nonrenewal, so the insured may have the opportunity to obtain protection elsewhere. See 12 U.S.C.A. § 1749bbb-3 (b)(9), and § 379.845, para. 2, RSMo 1969 V.A.M.S. Other statutes contemplate continuous coverage of particular hazards as a matter of public protection, and therefore require some affirmative indication of the insurer’s intention not to renew. See, for example, the statute requiring notice of intention not to renew automobile liability policies construed in Shore v. Coronet Ins. Co.,
Counsel frankly admit that they have found no controlling precedent in the decisions of our courts. Neither have we. In Zeiger v. Farmers’ & Laborers’ Coop. Ins. Ass’n,
In Kimball v. Clinton County New Patrons Fire Relief Ass’n, 23 App.Div.2d 519,
In Kapahua v. Hawaiian Ins. & Guar. Co.,
Perhaps the most convincing reason why the insurer has no such inherent obligation apart from a policy provision or statute requiring notice of the expiration of the policy is stated in Norkin v. United States Fire Ins. Co.,
“[PJlaintiff cites no authority, and we know of none, which requires that an insurance company, a private business, must continue to contract with an insured after the original policy has, by its terms, expired. There being no such obligation, the insurance company here was under no duty to disclose its intentions to plaintiff, assuming that they existed.”
These decisions are but illustrative, of course, but they do demonstrate the general principle applicable to this case. No duty rests upon an insurer to notify the insured of the expiration date of his policy, or of its intention not to renew the policy, unless such notice is required by agreement of the parties or by statute, or unless the insurer has by custom or course of dealing with the particular insured led him to believe such notice would be given. Because in this case the duty owed to the plaintiff was no greater than the duty owed to the insured, so far as notice of the expiration of the policy is concerned, defendant was not required to notify the plaintiff that the policy would expire by lapse of the policy period on December 9,
Accordingly, the judgment is reversed, with directions to enter a judgment for the defendant.
