Bilson v. Manufacturers Insurance Co.

1 E.D. Pa. 264
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1859
StatusPublished

This text of 1 E.D. Pa. 264 (Bilson v. Manufacturers Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bilson v. Manufacturers Insurance Co., 1 E.D. Pa. 264 (uscirct 1859).

Opinions

[265]*265The facts fully appear in the opinion of the Court, delivered by

CADWALADER, J.

The defendants insured the plaintiff in $1,500, against loss by fire, on a building in Baltimore, for one year from the 14th of March, 1856. The policy provided that the defendants’ liability should cease in case of a total or partial assignment of the policy, without their consent in writing endorsed upon it; and also declared that the policy should become void in case of any transfer, or termination of the interest of the insured, (meaning interest in the building, or subject of insurance), either by sale or otherwise. It contained a provision that, the risk not being changed, the insurance might be continued for such further time as might be agreed upon; the premium for the renewal being paid, and its payment endorsed, or a receipt for it given.

The plaintiff, on the 12th of September, 1856, subscribed, on the back of the policy, an assignment of all his title and interest in it to William C. Conine. This party’s interest was under a mortgage of the premises insured, executed by the plaintiff, to secure the payment of a debt greater in amount than the sum insured. This assignment was made by filling up, in a fair hand, and subscribing, a blank form, printed in large type. Conine and the plaintiff resided in Baltimore, where the defendants had a resident agent, through whom the above-mentioned insurance, and the renewal mentioned below, were effected.

On the 14th March, 1857, the defendants renewed the insurance for another year. Their agent’s receipt for the premium for this renewal was endorsed upon the policy directly under the above-mentioned assignment. This assignment was in such visual juxtaposition that the agent could not have failed to see the whole of it, when he subscribed the' receipt, without an extraordinary want of attention to what was before him for inspection. It was proved that Conine had paid this premium for the renewal of the insurance; and there seemed to be no reason to doubt that he was the person for whose-[266]*266benefit the insurance was intended by the parties in Baltimore to continue in force.

After this renewal, the plaintiff, by a deed, of which the existence was not made known to the defendants, for a pecuniary consideration, in addition to the mortgage debt, conveyed the equity of redemption of the premises insured to the mortgagee, Conine, absolutely in fee.

After the plaintiff’s interest had been thus entirely divested, the building was, before the end of the second year, consumed by fire. The loss thus incurred was of an amount greater than the sum insured.

The defendants, at the trial, objected -to the plaintiff’s recovery, on the ground that his assignment of the policy to Conine, having been made without the written consent required by the policy, had annulled the insurance. On this point the Court instructed the jury that the evidence would justify them in finding that the defendants’ agent, when he renewed the insurance, was aware of the existence and contents of the assignment, which was then, in effect, exhibited to him; adding that, if the jury should so find, the act of renewal included, sufficiently, the consent required by the policy.

The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff. The Court is of opinion that, upon the point on which the instruction was given, the verdict was right, and that the instruction, as to this point, was not erroneous. But, the Court is also of opinion that this is not the point on which the decision of the case properly depends. The question of interest in the insurance, as distinguished from that of interest in the subject of insurance, was alone considered at the trial. The difficulty in sustaining the verdict arises from the fact that the conveyance of the equity of redemption, by the plaintiff to Conine, changed entirely the interest on the subject of insurance. As the previous mortgage debt had, in amount, exceeded the sum insured,, Conine’s acceptance of this conveyance might, possibly, not have modified, substantially, his interest in the insurance, as it would have been retained by him if the defendants had approved of the conveyance. But, be this as it may, the convey-[267]*267anee converted his interest in the subject of insurance, from that of a mere security for a debt, into an absolute exclusive ownership; and, at the same time, determined entirely the plaintiff’s interest ill the subject. Though attention may not have been particularly, directed at the trial to the effect of this change of interest, the defendants, if it entirely discharged them from liability, ought not to be deprived of the benefit of it on a motion for a new trial.

Another point which has been taken, on behalf of the defendants, is that, though an action of assumpsit, at the suit of Conine, had been sustainable, upon the act of renewal, as a contract with him, the present action of assumpsit by the party originally insured, who, on the renewal, was neither the prom-isee nor the party to whom the loss was to be paid, cannot be sustained.

If the decision in Tillou v. The Kingston Mutual Insurance Company, 1 Seldon, 405, were law, there could, upon the facts of the present case, have been a recovery in an action at the suit of Conine. That case was adjudged by the Court of Appeals of New York, in 1851. Three partners, owning a mill, in which they conducted their joint business, held a policy of insurance on it against fire, which, like the policy now in question, contained a provision that it should become void if the property insured were alienated by sale or otherwise. The policy was assigned by the parties insured, with the assent of the insurers, to secure a mortgage of the mill for a debt of less amount than the sum insured. One of the partners insured, on afterwards retiring from the business, conveyed his interest in the mill to the other two owners. It was destroyed, subsequently, by fire. Two points were decided: the first, that this conveyance, by one partner to the others, had, except as to the mortgage, annulled the insurance; the second, that the mortgagee was, nevertheless, to the amount of the mortgage debt, entitled to the benefit of the insurance.

The decision of the first point, that, where partners are insured, an assignment by one of them to the others annuls the contract of insurance as between them and the insurer, has [268]*268been questioned in a subsequent extrajudicial dictum of the same Court. (3 Smith, 412.) But the decision, on this point, has been followed in a direct adjudication, by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in the recent case of The Lycoming County Mutual Insurance Company v. Finley. In this case, the Court said, “that a sale by one partner to the other is within the prohibition, cannot be doubted. There is no exception in its favor in the instrument; and the terms used give no reason to imply any.” These terms were the same as in the New York case. The partner who, without the consent of the insurer, conveys his interest in the subject of insurance to his copartners gives them, from thenceforth, an exclusive dominion and control where he had, previously, the right of participating in any control or dominion that could have been exercised. He thereby ceases to be a protector of the property insured against fire from fraud, or from any other cause for which the personal identity of a party insured can be material to an insurer. The decision on this point, therefore, appears to have been founded in sound legal reason.

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1 E.D. Pa. 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bilson-v-manufacturers-insurance-co-uscirct-1859.