Cox v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co.

160 So. 741, 172 Miss. 841, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 164
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1935
DocketNo. 31659.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 160 So. 741 (Cox v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cox v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 160 So. 741, 172 Miss. 841, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 164 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

McG-owen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Hartford Fire Insurance Company filed a bill of interpleader in the chancery court of Copiah county, paid into court seven hundred fifty dollars, the proceeds of a policy on a certain house which had been destroyed by fire, alleged that it had no interest in the contest between the claimants, and had O'. A. Cox and J. W. Heap, receiver, summoned into court as defendants. Answers were filed by both defendants making claim to the fund. A trial was had and a decree of the court was entered in favor of J. W. Heap, receiver, and Cox appeals here.

In 1924 Cox became indebted to the People’s Bank of Crystal Springs, Mississippi, in the sum of about one . thousand two hundred dollars, and to secure the *847 loan, he executed a deed of trust in favor of the bank upon a described one hundred twenty acres of land owned by him, on which there were some houses. This note and deed of trust was renewed annually until 1930. Prior to 1929 Cox had carried insurance on the insurable houses located on the land with loss payable clause in favor of the bank. In 1929 he procured from the agent at Crystal Springs a five-year term farm policy of insurance not only on the houses described in the bank’s deed of trust, but also on a house described as No.-1, located on eighty acres of land owned by him, and on which land the bank had no claim or deed of trust. The house on this eighty acres of land was destroyed by fire in 1934, while the policy was in force.

The policy contained a loss payable clause in the following language: “It is agreed that any loss or damage •on buildings only that may be ascertained and proven to be due the assured under this policy shall be held payable to the People’s Bank, Crystal Springs, Mississippi, as its interest may appear, subject, nevertheless, to all •conditions of the policy.”

The answer of the insured, Cox, alleged, in substance, that he applied to Lotterhos for insurance on the dwellings on both pieces of property, and advised said agent that the bank held a mortgage on the one hundred twenty •acres of land, but did not have any claim on the eighty acres of land, and alleged “that by inadvertence or mistake the agent of said insurance company wrote said loss payable clause so as to cover all of the buildings on both of said pieces of property payable to the People’s Bank of Crystal Springs, as its interest might appear.” 'Cox charges that it was never agreed between himself •and the agent of said company, and there never was any agreement or understanding between himself and the People’s Bank of Crystal Springs to make the loss pay.•able clause on the dwelling situated on the eighty acres *848 of land payable to said bank; that the said People’s Bank never at any time owned any interest in said eighty acres of land; never held a lien against the same of any description, but as charged aforesaid, the agent in preparing said policy made the error, “which he now preacknowledges. ’ ’

The answer of Heap, who became the receiver of the bank in liquidation about two or three years before this litigation arose, denied in effect the above allegations. That was the only issue of fact submitted to the court for decision.

The only evidence was that of Cox, the insured, and McCluney, the president, officer and agent of the bank, who made the contract with Cox for the renewal of the loan and for the security therefor. Their evidence is not in dispute; they fully agree that neither the mortgagor nor the mortgagee intended to secure any insurance, so far as the bank was concerned, on any property except that which was insurable and located on the land on which the bank had a deed of trust. The insurance company had admitted its liability for the loss and paid the amount thereof into court and was discharged. Cox testified that he received the policy from the agent, took it for granted that it had been written as requested and never examined it until the loss occurred. McCluney, the president of the bank, did examine the policy, was satisfied with it, and thought that it only protected the bank’s interest as to the property insurable located on the land on which it had a deed of trust.

The opinion of the chancellor indicates that the proposition seriously argued in the lower court was that the language of the loss payable clause above set forth should be construed to mean that the bank’s interest was only that shown by its deed of trust, and, under the language— “as its interest may appear” — could not be extended to include property not embraced in the deed. The lower *849 court’s construction of this clause in the fire insurance policy is aptly stated in the case of Sun Insurance Office v. J. M. Scott, 284 U. S. 177, 52 S. Ct. 72, 73, 76 L. Ed. 229, in the following language: ‘ ‘ The loss payable clause above quoted is not informative to the insurer of the existence of a chattel mortgage, but performs the office of protecting a creditor of the insured who has no interest in the insured property by mortgage or otherwise against the eventuality of fire loss.”

In the case of Colby v. Parkersburg Ins. Co., 37 W. Va. 789, 17 S. E. 303, the court held that where a policy of fire insurance insures A in a given sum, part of it on one property, part on another, loss payable to B “mortgagee, as his interest may appear; ” B’s mortgage covers only one of the properties insured; B may sue on the policy in his own name, and recover total loss on both properties, not exceeding his debt, notwithstanding his mortgage covers only one of the properties insured. The court also held that the words “as his interest may appear” do not refer to the mortgagee’s interest in the property but to the amount of his mortgage debt; if, at the loss, his debt had been paid, he would have had no interest; if still unpaid, he would get all the compensation for all the loss, not exceeding, however, his debt. In the case at bar the word “mortgagee” does not appear after the name of the bank, and we are not here compelled to approve in full that opinion until a case shall arise in which the word “mortgagee” follows the name of the individual with the accompanying language “as his interest may appear.”

We have reached the conclusion that the proper construction of the clause here under consideration is tljat by the language thereof the insured assigned to his named creditor, the bank, all the insurance therein contracted for as its interest may appear, which included its debt without regard to the fact that it had partial security by *850 a deed of trust on other land, but we are of opinion that the language of the pleading filed by Cox in this case alleged a mutual mistake on the part of the insurance agent, himself, and the bank, although he did not, by his pleading, seek affirmative relief by asking that the contract of insurance be reformed. Such a proceeding would have been entirely unnecessary; the insurance company was not affected or interested in the distribution by the court of the proceeds of this insurance policy, and the court was authorized to, and in our judgment should have, under the facts of this case, treated the insurance policy as though it had been reformed to conform to the agreement and contract of the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
160 So. 741, 172 Miss. 841, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-hartford-fire-ins-co-miss-1935.