Farmers & Merchants Insurance v. Newman

78 N.W. 933, 58 Neb. 504, 1899 Neb. LEXIS 214
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1899
DocketNo. 8849
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 78 N.W. 933 (Farmers & Merchants Insurance v. Newman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers & Merchants Insurance v. Newman, 78 N.W. 933, 58 Neb. 504, 1899 Neb. LEXIS 214 (Neb. 1899).

Opinion

Sullivan, J.

Rebecca N. Newman brought this action against the Farmers & Merchants Insurance Company to recover on a policy of fire insurance covering a dwelling-house owned by John M. and Angeline Crain. The court directed the jury to find for the plaintiff, and from a judgment rendered on the verdict the defendant prosecutes error.

Mrs. Newman had a mortgage on the insured property to secure an indebtedness of $750, and for her benefit the company had attached to the policy a slip in the usual form, malting the loss, if any, payable to the mortgagee as her interest might appear. The action was defended mainly on the ground that the property, before its destruction, ' had become involved in litigation, and that the right to indemnity had been thereby lost under the operation of the following condition of the contract: “If the assured shall have, or shall hereafter take, any other insurance on the property hereby insured, or any part thereof, without the consent of the company, written hereon; or if the property above mentioned, or any part thereof, be, or hereafter become, mortgaged or otherwise incumbered, or if the same be, or shall hereafter become, involved 'in litigation without notice to and consent of this company indorsed hereon, * * * then and in every such case this policy shall be void.” It appears from the record that Mrs. Newman’s mortgage was a second lien on the property in question; that she had been made a party defendant in an action brought to foreclose the first mortgage; that she had answered therein asserting her lien; that a decree of foreclosure had been rendered on both mortgages, and that a stay had been taken and was effective at the time of the fire.

[507]*507In view of these conceded facts was the property in* volved in litigation within the meaning of the condition above quoted? We do not think it was. In actions on policies providing that the rights of the mortgagee shall not be invalidated by any breach of condition by the mortgagee or owner it has been generally held that the mortgagee has a distinct interest embraced in a separate contract, and that his right to indemnity, is not affected by any act or omission for which he is not responsible. (Phenix Ins. Co. of Brooklyn v. Omaha Loan & Trust Co., 41 Neb. 834; Oakland Home Ins. Co. v. Bank of Commerce, 47 Neb. 717; Hanover Fire Ins. Co. v. Bohn, 48 Neb. 743.) In State Ins. Co. of Des Moines v. New Hampshire Trust Co., 47 Neb. 62, the doctrine of these cases was applied, although the contract in suit did not exempt the mortgagee from the consequences of a breach of the conditions imposed on the assured. On rehearing, however, the court receded from this position to the extent of leaving the question open and undetermined. We are now convinced, as the result of a pretty thorough examination of the authorities, that under a clause like the one here in question the mortgagee claims through the mortgagor and can recover only to the extent that the insurer is indebted to the insured in consequence of the loss. The ordinary “mortgage slip” is, in effect, an agreement by the company to pay the mortgagee all, or a part, of any money which may become due to the insured under the contract for indemnity. The cases bearing upon this question are collected in an elaborate note to Oakland Home Ins. Co. v. Bank of Commerce, 58 Am. St. Rep. 663. (47 Neb. 717.) This action, then, was in substance one brought by the plaintiff to recover of the company a sum of money due from it to the Crains. Her rights are neither greater nor less than theirs. Recurring now to the language of the policy, it Avill be noticed that the condition under which the forfeiture is claimed is not an absolute condition. It has an important qualification. It declares that litigation concerning the property shall invalidate the in,[508]*508surance unless the company’s consent shall be indorsed on the contract. This suggests the idea quite naturally that a forfeiture may be prevented by a seasonable application to the insurer for its consent while the litigation is yet in posse. It does not imply that action under it may cure an existing forfeiture. It contemplates prevention, and not remedy. The construction contended for by counsel for defendant is, in effect, that any action involving the property, by whomsoever commenced, would avoid the policy. We cannot agree to this proposition. So far as the meaning is doubtful, the doubt Must be resolved against the insurer, because forfeitures are not favored, and also because contracts of this kind are prepared by the insurer without consultation with the insured, and are thronged with conditions, stipulations, provisos, and exceptions which have not been the subject of previous deliberation. In Oakland Home Ins. Co. v. Bank of Commerce, supra, it was said: “The policy is proposed and tendered by the insurer on its own form. If it seeks to protect itself by a condition, it should clearly express that condition by the policy. If it resorts to ambiguous language, under familiar rules of construction, such language must be taken most strongly against the party proposing it and in favor of the other party.” The meaning to be extracted from the clause in question is the meaning which it was, under the circumstances, fairly calculated to convey. From the language employed it is hardly possible that the insured would understand that the indemnity for which they had paid was absolutely at the mercy of any stranger who might make an unprovoked or wanton attack upon their title. They doubtless acted on the assumption that there was some substance in the qualifying clause referred to, and that they were contracting against their own acts and omissions and not against the conduct of strangers. Of what value is a provision giving the right to involve the property in litigation, after obtaining the company’s consent, if it cannot be known when, or by whom, or for what [509]*509cause, an action is to be instituted? A mortgagee, a creditor, an adverse claimant may bring an action without notice and without cause; and if the defendant’s theory is right the insurance is thus sacrificed without fault of the insured. A policy having this obvious import would, it seems to us, be generally considered too precarious a shelter to be worth the premium. Actions aided by attachment are nearly always commenced without warning; and it often happens that the affidavit, which is the basis for the ancillary proceeding, is a mere tissue of falsehoods, made with absolutely criminal recklessness. To put into a policy a clause providing that a forfeiture of indemnity might in such cases be prevented by obtaining in advance the company’s consent to the suit would be the veriest nonsense. It may be said, however, that in this case the action was commenced, in consequence of the failure of the Crains to redeem their promise to the owner of the first mortgage. That, of course, is true, but it does not affect the question of interpretation. The condition embraces actions by whomsoever commenced, or it refers only to suits instituted by the assured. In Niagara Fire Ins. Co. v. Scammon, 144 Ill. 490, 28 N. E. Rep. 919, 82 N. E. Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.W. 933, 58 Neb. 504, 1899 Neb. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-merchants-insurance-v-newman-neb-1899.