Godfrey v. Alcorn

284 S.W. 1094, 215 Ky. 465, 51 A.L.R. 925, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 716
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 25, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 284 S.W. 1094 (Godfrey v. Alcorn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Godfrey v. Alcorn, 284 S.W. 1094, 215 Ky. 465, 51 A.L.R. 925, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 716 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Turner, Commissioner—

Reversing.

On the 26th of March, 1921, appellees, Ethel Alcorn and her husband, executed to the appellants Godfrey and Chase their bond for a title to a certain house and lot in Beattyville. The consideration was fixed at $1,000.00-, of which $350.00 was then paid, and notes executed for $150.-00 payable 60 days thereafter, and $500.00 payable one year thereafter, each bearing interest. It was -stipulated in the bond that no deed was to be made until1 the full purchase price and interest was paid, but that upon -such payment the first parties bound themselves to make a good and sufficient conveyance of title. A few day-s thereafter the purchasers were placed in possession of the property and so remained in possession during all the times., hereinafter mentioned.

On the 13th of March, 1922, the vendor, Ethel Al-corn, -caused to be issued to her by an insurance company a policy of insurance on her interest in the property for $500.00, for a period of three years, and on the 22nd day of May, 1923, the house on the lot was destroyed by fire during the life of that policy, the house at the time representing at least two-thirds of the value of the property so sold and agreed to- be conveyed.

During the period, however, from the date of the bond in March, 1921, to the date of the fire in May, 1923, the purchasers had paid $650.00 of the purchase price, together with the interest on the same, so that when the fire occurred the unpaid purchase money was only $350.00 and a small amount of accrued interest thereon, amounting to $359.i3l3. Thereafter the insurance company paid to Ethel Alcorn, the vendor injhe bond, under the contract of indemnity, exactly $359.33 in full settlement of her $500.00 policy on the property. At the time *467 of such, payment the insurance company required her to assign to it the unpaid purchase money note on the house and lot then amounting to that precise sum, under what is termed in the record an “article of subrogation.”

Thereafter the insurance company (by assignment transferred that note to the appellee, W. H. Beatty, a resident of Beattyville, who owned and occupied a house upon a lot immediately adjoining the one sold by Alcorn to appellants. The insurance policy so issued to Alcorn is not in the transcript, and there is no claim and nothing to show that there was any contract or agreement between the company and Alcorn by which in the event of loss her claim against the purchasers for unpaid purchase money should be assigned to the company.

In this equitable action by the purchasers: wherein the facts stated above are admitted, and in which the Alcorns and Beatty are parties, Beatty has asserted his purchase money lien under the note assigned by Alcorn to the insurance company and by the latter to- him. The court dismissed the plaintiff’s petition and entered a judgment enforcing the lien asserted by Beatty, and the plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.

The initial question is, what was the effect in equity of the collection by Alcorn of the insurance money? Did that payment by the company to her cancel the remaining part of the unpaid purchase money represented by the note she assigned to the company? And if so was there anything to assign which created a beneficial interest in the company? And incidental to these questions is the further one whether upon the payment by the company to Alcorn there was any such state- of case as authorized the application of the equitable doctrine of -subrogation so as to affect the rights of the purchasers ?

It is apparent that the insurance company when it paid the loss to Alcorn and took the assignment of the purchase money note was in full possession of all the facts, and it is equally clear that Beatty when he took the •assignment of the note from the insurance company als'o was. They each, therefore, occupy the same- status as Alcorn,' so that the matter must be determined just as if the. note was still held by Alcorn, and there was an effort by her to subject the property to its payment.

Clearly the purchasers were the beneficial owners of the property; they had an enforceable contract upon the payment of the full purchase price, and at the time of the *468 fire they had paid approximately two-thirds of the consideration. They had been placed in possession by the-vendor when the bond was executed and have so remained since, and there can be no doubt that whatever loss was occasioned by the fire was their loss, and whatever insurance was collected by Alcorn was collected because of the-destruction of their'property,- in which Alcorn had an equity.

In the absence of an agreement therefor, the only right of subrogation the insurance company could have-had must grow out of some equity arising for its benefit from the nature of the transaction. Subrogation is essentially a creature of equity, and is -called in play by the’ chancellor only when it is; necessary to bring about an equitable adjustment between the parties. We fail fosee, therefore, what equity there existed in favor of the insurance company to justify it being indemnified by Alcorn for the loss, when it had for a stipulated compensation insured her to the extent of her interest. It -had merely done for compensation that which its contract required it to do, and in pursuance of the business it was created to engage in.

.We have in this state two cases holding1 that in substantially similar circumstances there is no right of -subrogation. In the case of the American Bonding Company v. First National Bank, 85 S. W. 190, the bonding company in a contract of indemnity with an ice manufacturing company had insured the latter against loss by reason of fraud or dishonesty of one of its employees; and, having been compelled as such insurer to make good a loss to that company, it brought its action against the ice company and the bank jointly, alleging, in substance, that the employee had raised certain checks of the ice company upon the bank,-and had thereby procured a given amount of money. It sought because of the payment of su-eh checks by the bank to be subrogated to the rights of the ice company as against the bank, and to make the- bank liable, by subrogation, to the bonding company for the loss it had been required to pay..

In response to this Contention this court said:

“It appears that the appellant, for a valuable consideration, had guaranteed the fidelity and honesty of the agent Weitkamp — in other words, it became his surety — and had agreed,' for this consideration, to pay any losses’ -sustained by reason of *469 ■the dishonesty of Weitkamp. In view of these facts, we cannot understand upon what principle of equity the appellant here is entitled to be subrogated.”

The court in that case then referred to the case of Stewart v. Com., 104 Ky. 489. In that ‘case- the accommodation sureties on a circuit clerk’s bond had been compelled to refund to the state money fraudulently collected from it because of the fraudulent acts and forged witness certificates issued by one of his deputies and sold to and collected by an innocent purchaser.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 S.W. 1094, 215 Ky. 465, 51 A.L.R. 925, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/godfrey-v-alcorn-kyctapphigh-1926.