Collinsville Savings Society v. Boston Insurance

60 A. 647, 77 Conn. 676, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 30
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 20, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 60 A. 647 (Collinsville Savings Society v. Boston Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collinsville Savings Society v. Boston Insurance, 60 A. 647, 77 Conn. 676, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 30 (Colo. 1905).

Opinion

Prentice, J.

The plaintiff concedes that by the assignment from the property-owner of his claim under the policy sued upon it has not, under the facts of this case, acquired any right which it did not previously have, save the right to *679 maintain in its own name an action against the defendant. That assignment may therefore be disregarded.

If, as the defendant contends, the plaintiff is bound by the award made under the submission entered into by the defendant and the property-owner, there is error in this case. The court' ruled against this contention, and rendered judgment in favor of the contrary claim of the plaintiff — that it was not bound by said award. Two reasons are urged- in support of the plaintiff’s position, to wit: (1) that it was not a party to the submission and has never acquiesced in or ratified it; and (2) that the appraisers applied an erroneous rule of law in their determination of the sound value of the property insured.

The policy, whose provisions prescribe and define the defendant’s liability, is the Connecticut standard policy, having indorsed thereon the so-called reduced rate or eighty per cent, clause, and also the following : “ Loss, if any, payable to the Collinsville Savings Society as their mortgage interest may appear.” Said society is in no other way or place, either specifically or descriptively, mentioned in the policy or its indorsements, save as it is provided in the body of the policy that “ if, with the consent of this company, an interest under this policy shall exist in favor of a mortgagee, or of any person or corporation having an interest in the subject of insurance other than the interest of the insured as described herein, the conditions hereinbefore contained shall apply in the manner expressed in such provisions and conditions of insurance relating to such interest as shall be written upon, attached, or appended hereto.”

The indorsement above recited designating the payee of any loss, which for the purposes of distinction has been called the “ open mortgage clause,” did not bring the plaintiff and defendant into contractual relations with each other either directly or through an assignment of the policy; neither did the plaintiff thereby become a person or corporation whose property or property interests were insured under the policy. The contract fox idemnity remained one exclusively between the defendant and the property-owner. The *680 plaintiff was only a conditional appointee of the latter. As such appointee it was entitled to receive so much of any sum that might become due under the policy as did not exceed its interest as mortgagee, and nothing more. Such is the accepted rule in this State and, with few possible exceptions, elsewhere. Woodbury Savings Bank v. Charter Oak Ins. Co., 29 Conn. 374; Meriden Savings Bank v. Home Ins. Co., 50 id. 396; Franklin Savings Institution v. Central M. F. Ins. Co., 119 Mass. 240; Baldwin v. Phœnix Ins. Co., 60 N. H. 164; Biddeford Savings Bank v. Dwelling-House Ins. Co., 81 Me. 566; Magoun v. Firemans' Fund Ins. Co., 86 Minn. 486; Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. Olcott, 97 Ill. 439; Williamson v. Michigan F. & M. Ins. Co., 86 Wis. 393; Van Buren v. St. Joseph C. V. F. Ins. Co., 28 Mich. 398; Martin v. Franklin Fire Ins. Co., 38 N. J. L. 140; Grosvenor v. Atlantic Fire Ins. Co., 17 N. Y. 391; Syndicate Ins. Co. v. Bohn, 65 Fed. Rep. 165. It is universally held that a policy so indorsed may become forfeited, and the mortgagee deprived of all protection thereunder, by any act or default of the property-owner before loss. Moore v. Hanover Fire Ins. Co., 141 N. Y. 219; Baldwin v. Phœnix Ins. Co., 60 N. H. 164.

There is another stipulation appearing in or appended to policies issued to property-owners, and designed to protect the interest of mortgagees, which it is important to notice. This has been variously denominated the mortgagee clause,” and the “ union mortgage clause.” It is embodied in the standard policies in some States, and is frequently used as a rider upon policies in other States. It embraces the provision, in substance, that no act or default of any person other than such mortgagee or his agent, or those claiming under him, shall affect the mortgagee’s right of recovery. It has frequently been held that the effect of this clause, whenever it is made a part of ór indorsed upon a policy, is to bring the insurer and mortgagee into relations of privity, to convert the mortgagee into a party to the contract of insurance, to give to the mortgagee separate and distinct protection to his interest, to create in him an inter *681 est under the policy distinct from that of the property-owner, and to in fact make him an assured. Hastings v. Westchester Fire Ins. Co., 73 N. Y. 141; Magoun v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co., 86 Minn. 486; Hartford Fire Ins. Co. v. Olcott, 97 Ill. 439; Phenix Fire Ins. Co. v. Omaha L. & T. Co., 41 Neb. 834; Ormsly v. Phenix Ins. Co., 5 S. D. 72; Syndicate Ins. Co. v. Bohn, 65 Fed. Rep. 165; Clement on Insurance, 33; Elliott on Insurance, § 341. This court has never gone to the full length of these decisions, nor need we do so now. In Meriden Savings Bank v. Home Ins. Co., 50 Conn. 396, was presented a case in which the policy had attached to it the “ open mortgage clause,” but the insurer and mortgagee had entered into a collateral agreement by which, in effect, the provisions of the “Union mortgage clause ” were made applicable to.all policies issued or to be issued by the defendant (the insurer) wherein the loss had been or might be made payable to the plaintiff as mortgagee, or had been or might be assigned to it. The mortgagee brought suit against the insurance company to recover for a loss, the policy being one bearing the appointee indorsement. The first count was on the policy and indorsement alone ; the second upon the policy, indorsement and collateral agreement. The defendant demurred to each count. The court, after holding that recovery could not be had upon the first count for want of privity between the parties, decided not only that the agreement created such privity, but also that the mortgagee was thereby “ made a party to the contract of insurance.” The exigencies of the case required the court to go no further for the overruling of the demurrer to the second count, and so the court said that it would go no further at that time and in that case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 A. 647, 77 Conn. 676, 1905 Conn. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collinsville-savings-society-v-boston-insurance-conn-1905.