Fire & Marine Insurance v. Morrison

11 Va. 367
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedAugust 15, 1840
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Va. 367 (Fire & Marine Insurance v. Morrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fire & Marine Insurance v. Morrison, 11 Va. 367 (Va. 1840).

Opinion

Stanard, J.

In this case certain facts have been .•agreed by the parties, and the law on those facts submitted to the court; the parties agreeing that if it be for the plaintiff, judgment shall be entered for a specified amount. .The only question presented then is, has the plaintiff, on the facts agreed, a right of action against the defendants ? the agreement of the parties as to the amount of damage precluding an enquiry by ■the court into that matter.

The original insurance is free from all exception, .and the property embraced by it having been destroyed by the risk insured against, the right to the action is clear, unless the interest of the insured in the pro[376]*376perty had been extinguished at the time of the loss.. It is said to be extinguished by the executory contract of sale made before the loss. That contract, if it had been carried into full execution according to its provisions, would have left the insured a mortgagee, lhe existence of that interest, of sufficient stability to sustain an original policy, is surely sufficient to repel the pretension that the interest was extinguished.. If the contract executed would not extinguish the insurable interest, the contract executory surely would not. The interest so abiding in the insured would have entitled him to recover the full amount of the insurance on the loss, without subjecting him to a delay of his claim on the insurers, until he had shewn, by the pursuit of the claim on the mortgagor, that it could not be recovered from him. Stetson v. Massachusetts Fire Ins. Co. 4 Mass. Rep. 330.

The mortgagee confessedly has an insurable interest, and yet is nowhere intimated in any treatise oir adjudication on the subject, that, in the event of destruction of the property, his claim on the policy must await the pursuit of his claim on the mortgagor.

A commission merchant, in the habit of making-advances on consignment, has an insurable interest in the consigned property to the extent of his advances. Though I have not found a judicial decision on the precise point, yet in the case of Parks v. General Interest Assurance Co. 5 Pickering 34, the immediate right to demand of the insurer the amount of advances on the property destroyed, without a previous pursuit of the claim on the consignors for the advances, was not questioned by the insurers.

Where the hundred is responsible tor the loss by fire, it would seem that the insured is entitled on the policy to the full amount, though he might recover full indemnity from the hundred.

But, independent of the foregoing considerations, [377]*377I think that on the facts agreed, the insured was entitled to recover the full insurance; those facts ascertaining that he was interested in the loss to that extent. There is no ground on which his claim is sisted, hut that furnished by the ascription to the Court of Law, of power to look at the executory contract of sale in the manner a Court of Equity might, and to consider the interest in the property to have passed by the sale, if a Court of Equity would, at the instance of the insured, decree its specific performance. Without giving a judicial approbation to this proposition, but for this case conceding its correctness unquestionable, the enquiry is, on what terms-would this contract be enforced at the instance of the vendor ? To the solution of this question it is material to ascertain the effect of the parol agreement, stated in the agreed case to have been made before and after the execution of the written contract of sale, for-the transfer by the vendor to the vendee of the policy of insurance. Ho one can reasonably suppose that the contract to transfer the policy was separate from and independent of the contract of sale. In the nature-of things it is not to be surmised that such a separate- and independent contract could precede that for the-sale of the property. We must understand that it constituted a part of the parol treaty for the sale, and formed one of the considerations of that parol agreement which must precede the reduction of it to writing,—was omitted by accident or design in reducing-it to writing,—and was subsequently recognized. By it, the vendor was to assure to the vendee the benefit of the insurance, and was bound to obtain the assent of the insurers to the assignment. This, in a court of equity, could have been set up by the vendee in resistance of the specific performance which would deny him the benefit of the insurance; and a court of equity would not have compelled performance without an [378]*378abatement for tbe loss. The assured was therefore interested at the time of the loss, to the full amount; and in every view of the case, I think the judgment _ _ * ought to be affirmed.

Tucker, P.

Without impugning the doctrines of insurance as laid down in the cases cited for the plaintiffs in error, I am of opinion that the judgment in this case was right.

In the formation of this opinion, I have béen mainly infleneed by the agreed fact, that both before and after the contract between Peay and Morrison, there was a parol agreement that Morrison should transfer to Peay the policy of insurance. It is objected however that that agreement cannot be admitted, either as a distinct, independent contract, or for the purpose of affecting the written contract. And this question is reserved. It must, I think, be decided against the plaintiffs in error.

By whom was the evidence of this parol contract introduced, and on whose behalf was it designed to operate,? Was it introduced by the plaintiffs in error ? If so, how is it competent for them now to deny the validity and effect of their own evidence? It is impossible.; and it is accordingly intimated at the bar that it was introduced by and on the part of Morrison. How Morrison was the party to be bound by it, and if he chooses to recognize it as a binding and valid agreement, notwithstanding it was by parol and not introduced into the body of the agreement, who can gainsay it ? A parol contract is not void by the statute • of frauds, though its obligation may be repelled by the party sought to be bound by it. The protection - is introduced for his benefit by the statute, and may • of course be renounced by him. If he is willing to -abide by it; if, disdaining the mala jides of breaking Ais plighted faith, merely because the ceremonies of [379]*379the law have been neglected, he recognizes the contract and confesses its obligation, shall it not be enforced? Let the unvarying course of equity cases .answer the question. Ilow then can it be objected by •a third person, that the contract which the party himself acknowledges and claims to be valid and binding upon him, is not to be so considered? The pretension I conceive to be utterly without foundation.

I take the agreement, then, to assign the policy, as a substantive and most material part of this case; and I will now proceed to shew how (taking that fact into consideration) Morrison, at the time of the fire, was damnified by the destruction of the premises.

It cannot be denied that according to the spirit of the agreement to assign the policy, Morrison was bound to give to Peay the benefit of it when the house was burnt. By that occurrence, however, the policy became fundus officio. An assignment after that would have been futile. But as, by the agreement, Peay was to have the benefit of the indemnity, so it is clear that he would have been entitled to demand from Morrison any benefit which he might derive from the insurance.

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Related

Stetson v. Massachusetts Mutual Fire Insurance
4 Mass. 330 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1808)

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Bluebook (online)
11 Va. 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fire-marine-insurance-v-morrison-va-1840.