Bennett v. Mutual Fire Insurance

60 A. 99, 100 Md. 337, 1905 Md. LEXIS 32
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 18, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 60 A. 99 (Bennett v. Mutual Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett v. Mutual Fire Insurance, 60 A. 99, 100 Md. 337, 1905 Md. LEXIS 32 (Md. 1905).

Opinion

Jones, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant, as administrator of Mary E. Cochran, sued the appellee in the Court below in an action of' assumpsit to recover the amount of the insurance of a dwelling-house which had been insured by the appellees in a policy of insurance against loss, by fire issued to the appellant’s intestate by the appellee on the 25th of March, 1890. In the policy the dwelling-house in question was insured to the amount of three-hundred dollars and the contents thereof to the amount of one hundred dollars. On the 7th day of February, 1901, the-dwelling-house and contents were totally destroyed by fire. Upon proof of loss made to the appellant it paid the amount *338 (§ ioo) of the insurance upon the contents of the dwelling-house, but refused to pay the amount for which the building had been insured. As a defense against the claim of the appellant for the loss upon the dwelling the appellee pleaded “that before the date of the alleged fire, towit; on or. about the 27th day of December, 1899, Mary E. Cochran (appellant’s intestate) sold and conveyed the land' upon which the building insured” under- the policy sued on “stood and the building itself to one, John E. Bennett, by deed with warranty and she suffered no loss by the burning thereof for which the defendant (appellant) is liable. ” This plea was demurred to and the demurrer was overruled, and after further questions raised upon the pleadings and rulings thereon, not essential to be more particularly noticed now, issue was joined thereon.

At the trial of the case the appellant offered in evidence a deed dated the 6th day of December, 1875, from Henry W. Archer and others to Mary E. Cochran, his intestate, which conveyed to said Mary E. Cochran-in fee-simple a lot of five acre ; of land particularly described in said deed; and proved that this was the same property mentioned in the policy of insurance sued on, and in the application for insurance and upon which were the dwelling-house insured and the contents thereof. He also offered in evidence the policy of insurance issued to his intestate, Mary E. Cochran, with the conditions and stipulations annexed thereto among which was the following “The party applying for insurance shall give the name of the land on which the buildings sought to be insured are erected, or such other description whereby the land may be identified and located, and shall state by what title the same is held, if any other than a fee; and if any liens thereon, the amount and character thereof.” He further offered in evidence a receipt for interest on the premium note given by his intestate to the Insurance Company for the year ending the first Monday of January, 1900, reciting that it had been paid by Mary E. Cochran; and one for the interest on said premium note to the first Monday of January, 1901, reciting that it was paid by “Mary E. Cochran per ck. of J. E. Bennett.” *339 Then offered evidence that Mary E. Cochran formerly occupied the property insured; that she had removed therefrom several years before the fire but had continued, up to the time of the fire, to collect the rent therefrom, and to pay the taxes and insurance thereon and to pay to John E. Bennett the interest on $400.

The appellee, defendant below, then offered in evidence a deed dated the 27th of December, 1899, from Mary E. Cochran (appellant’s intestate) to John E. Bennett which conveyed to him in fee-simple and unconditionally the property, land and premises which had been conveyed to her by the deed heretofore mentioned from Henry W. Archer and others and upon which was the house insured under the insurance policy here in question. The deed recites the consideration therefor as follows “in consideration of the sum of four hundred dollars which the said Mary E. Cochran owes John E. Bennett on a mortgage, which mortgage is recorded, &c., * * * and for divers other good and valuable consideration; ” and contains a covenant of special warranty of the property conveyed “except as to the mortgage above-mentioned,” and a covenant for further assurances. The appellant then offered to prove “for the purpose of rebutting the deed” which has just been mentioned as having been put in evidence by the appellee “a supplemental agreement made subsequent to the execution of said deed and at the same time — that is on the same day” to the effect that the grantee therein, Bennett, “resold for the sum of $400 the said property which is worth $700 * * * to Mary E. Cochran; and that the said Bennett never exercised any acts of ownership over said property after the deed to him * * * except to resell the same as aforesaid, and that the said Mary E. Cochran from said time exercised acts of ownership over, managed and controlled said property, calling the same her own * * * until the time of her death;” and further that after the death of Bennett, the grantee in the deed, his executrix told Mary E. Cochran, upon being asked in regard to the agreement of the said Bennett, if she would carry out the same if the said Mary E. Cochran paid the four hundred *340 dollars, that she, the said executrix, knew that the agreement was made and that she, as executrix, would carry it out. This offer of proof was objected to and the objection having been sustained by the Court the appellant excepted. The Court then granted a prayer offered by the appellee that there was no evidence in the case legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff (appellant) to recover and the verdict of the jury must be for the defendant (appellee). This action of the Court is the subject of the appellant’s second exception.

The question that is made by the state of the record which has been indicated is this. Had the appellant’s intestate at the time of the occurrence of the fire which destroyed the property insured by the policy of insurance here in suit, an interest in the property described in the policy that was covered by the contract between her and the Insurance Company? It is urged on behalf of the appellant that the evidence set out in the appellant’s first exception ought to have been admitted to show that, notwithstanding the deed of the 27th of December, 1899, the appellant’s intestate, Mary E. Cochran, had, at the time of the loss here the subject suit, an insurable interest in the property destroyed other than the personal effects for which payment was made. But it is one thing to have an insurable interest and quite another to have that interest insured. It is said in case of Washington Fire Ins. Co. v. Kelly, 32 Md. 421 (see p. 436), that, “there is no doubt that an insurance against fire without an interest in the subject-matter insured is a wagering contract which the law does not sanction; and it is therefore necessary that the insured should have an interest in the property insured, not only at the time of the insurance, but when the loss by fire occurs. If the insured sell the property and transfer all his interest therein, or assign all interest in the policy before the loss happens, he cannot recover by the principle of the common law.” This same doctrine is expressed as follows in Angell on Life and Fire Insurance, sec. 193, p. 230, “An insurance against fire without an interest is a wagering contract and therefore void. It is requisite, likewise, that the assured, though he had an *341

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 A. 99, 100 Md. 337, 1905 Md. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-mutual-fire-insurance-md-1905.