We entertain no doubt that the defendants are liable for the full amount insured by the policy. This liability rests upon two grounds, either of which is sufficient to sustain the plaintiff’s claim.
In the first place, on the facts stated, the alleged sale by the assured of thirteen sixteenths of the vessel covered by the policy was incomplete, and never took effect so as to extinguish his insurable interest therein. One of the essential stipulations of the agreement of sale was not complied with. The vendor expressly agreed to pay the amount due on the mortgage of his share of the vessel, and to procure a release from the mortgagee. This, the case finds, he did not and could not do. Until this part of the contract was complied with, the vendee had a right to avoid the sale and rescind the whole bargain. The delivery of the bill of sale passed a title only at the election of the vendee. He might, within a reasonable time after the failure of the assured to fulfil his contract of sale by procuring a release of the mortgage on the vessel, elect to restore the legal title and
But if it were otherwise, and it had appeared that the sale of the vessel was complete and absolute, so that for a time the insured had parted with his insurable interest, his right to recover on the policy was not gone forever. It was only suspended during the time that the title to the vessel was vested in the vendee, and was revived again on the reconveyance to the insured during the term specified in the policy. The insurance was for one year. There was no stipulation or condition in the policy that the insured should not convey or assign his interest in the vessel during this period. The contract of insurance was absolute to insure the interest of a person named in a particular subject for a specific time; for this entire risk an adequate premium was paid, and the policy duly attached because the assured at the inception of the risk had an insurable interest in the policy. So, too, at the time of the loss, all the facts necessary to establish a valid claim under the policy existed. The execution of the policy, the interest of the assured in the vessel, the due inception of the risk, a compliance with all warranties, expressed and implied, and the loss by a peril insured against, are all either admitted or proved. Upon what legal ground, then, can it be maintained that the policy has become extinct 1 No fact is shown from which any inference can be made that by
This doctrine is not osly consistent with sound reason, but
