B. L. Assn. v. Ins. Co.

166 S.E. 841, 113 W. Va. 62, 97 A.L.R. 1158, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 272
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1932
DocketNo. 7372
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 166 S.E. 841 (B. L. Assn. v. Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B. L. Assn. v. Ins. Co., 166 S.E. 841, 113 W. Va. 62, 97 A.L.R. 1158, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 272 (W. Va. 1932).

Opinions

The defendant protests a judgment against it based on the standard mortgagee clause, upon the ground of "no insurable interest."

Mrs. Joanne Melton was the owner of a town lot No. 7. Her husband erected a house for her on the adjoining lot, No. 6, to which she had no title, under the impression that the structure was on lot No. 7. The building was completed about April, 1926, and was insured for her with the defendant on April 3rd, for $2,000.00, against loss by fire. She executed a deed of trust on lot No. 7, dated July 1, 1926, to secure payment *Page 63 of $1,000.00 borrowed from plaintiff upon an application dated June 16th. Sometime later in July, the defendant attached the mortgagee clause to the policy, in favor of plaintiff. The house was destroyed by fire during the term of the policy.

Mrs. Melton brought an action against defendant, which failed because of a provision in the policy that it should be void "if the subject of insurance be a building on ground not owned by the insured in fee simple." See Melton v. Ins. Co.,110 W. Va., 73, 157 S.E. 33, 34. The plaintiff takes the position, however, that the mortgagee clause conferred on it an independent and absolute right of recovery in case of loss by fire.

The parts of the clause which are pertinent here, follow:

"Loss or damage, if any, under this policy, shall be payable to Imperial Bldg. Loan Association of Charleston, W. Va., as mortgagee (or trustee) as interest may appear, and this insurance as to the interest of the mortgagee (or trustee) only therein, shall not be invalidated by any act or neglect of the mortgagor or owner of the within described property * * *.

"Whenever this Company shall pay the mortgagee (or trustee) any sum for loss or damage under this policy and shall claim that, as to the mortgagor or owner, no liability therefor existed, this Company shall, to the extent of such payment, be thereupon legally subrogated to all the rights of the party to whom such payment shall be made, under all securities held as collateral to the mortgage debt, or may at its option, pay to the mortgagee (or trustee) the whole principal due or to grow due on the mortgage with interest, and shall thereupon receive a full assignment and transfer of the mortgage and of all such other securities; but no subrogation shall impair the right of the mortgagee (or trustee) to recover the full amount of their claim.

"Attached to and forming a part of Policy No. __________"

The plaintiff relies on the following statement of law made in the opinion of Fayetteville Ass'n. v. Fire Ins. Co., 105 W. Va. 147,150, 141 S.E. 634, 635: "Although there are decisions to the contrary, the great weight of authority in this country supports the view that when there is attached to a *Page 64 policy of fire insurance the so-called 'standard' or 'union' mortgage clause providing that the insurance shall not be invalidated by any act or neglect of the mortgagor or owner of the insured property, an independent contract between the insurance company and the mortgagee is created, and no act or omission of the mortgagor, of which the mortgagee is ignorant, will invalidate the policy, whether it occurs before, at the time of, or subsequent to the issuance thereof."

That statement is the one generally made by annotators and textwriters. It is questionable, though, whether "the great weight of authority" supports every section of the statement either separately or jointly. The statement is the sum of several leading decisions, each of which was moulded by the particular clause involved and the particular facts presented, and was never designed to be applied to all cases indiscriminately. To do so in cases where the mortgagor had no insurable interest in the insured property would be to open wide the door for collusion and fraud between policy holder and mortgagee. In a thoughtful discussion of some of the very decisions referred to in the Fayetteville Ass'n. case, the supreme court of New York said in Lyceum v. Ins. Co.,163 N.Y.S. 226, 231: "When an insurance company contracts with a mortgagor and with a mortgagee, and makes the contract with the latter a part of the policy, it cannot be the intention to nullify the essential stipulation upon which its validity depends, leaving a mere provision to pay absolutely in case of loss." Lest the bar accept the statement quoted from theFayetteville Ass'n. case as a rule-of-thumb to which we have become committed, it is necessary to consider decisions of which the statement is the composite. Research has found nothing supporting the statement except repetitions of the reasons propounded in the following three groups of leading cases: (1) Ins. Co. v. Bohn, 65 F. 165, 177-8, and Ins. Co. v. Bally, 19 Arizona, 580, 585; (2) Hastings v.Ins. Co., 73 N.Y. 141, 148, and Reed v. Ins. Co., 81 N.J.L. 523,526; (3) Hastings v. Ins. Co., supra, 154, and Bacot v.Ins. Co., 96 Miss. 223, 241.

(1) In the Bohn case the scope of the words "shall not be invalidated by any act or neglect of the mortgagor" was extended to apply to acts prior to the attachment of the mortgagee *Page 65 clause, on the ground of estoppel. The opinion states that the insurance companies "tendered" to the mortgagee their own policies running to third parties, with the agreement that the policies should not be invalidated by any act or neglect of those parties; that the policies could not be invalidated "unless they were then valid"; and that the tender of them to the mortgagee "was a clear representation to the latter that those policies were then valid" and the insurers "are estopped to deny the truth of their statement to the manifest injury of the mortgagee." That opinion has little, if any, bearing on the instant case. Here there was no tender by the defendant in any fair sense of the word. It initiated no proposal of any kind, and did nothing to induce the loan to Mrs. Melton. The loan preceded instead of followed defendant's recognition of the mortgagee. The plaintiff had changed its position to itsprejudice, before whatever representation the mortgagee clause implied, was made. So estoppel does not properly arise in this situation.

The Bally decision, in making the same extension of the clause as the Bohn case, supplemented the latter as follows: "As is well known, many insurance policies are issued primarily to protect mortgagees. * * * We think the mortgagee, when a policy is presented to him with a standard mortgage clause attached thereto in his favor, is justified in assuming that the insurance company has satisfied itself that the policy is valid and free from impeachment for any conduct or act of the assured at its inception or prior to the attachment of the mortgage clause." That decision is equally inapropos here because (a) the policy was not issued primarily to protect the plaintiff but to protect Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.E. 841, 113 W. Va. 62, 97 A.L.R. 1158, 1932 W. Va. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-l-assn-v-ins-co-wva-1932.