Grosvenor v. Atlantic Fire Insurance

5 Duer 517
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedApril 15, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 5 Duer 517 (Grosvenor v. Atlantic Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grosvenor v. Atlantic Fire Insurance, 5 Duer 517 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1856).

Opinion

Woodruff, J.

In my opinion, we ought to consider ourselves bound by the decision in Robert v. The Traders' Insurance Co., (9 Wend. 404,) S. C. in Error, (17 Wend. 631.).

In that case, it is held,'that when a policy of insurance is effected by a mortgagor, and the policy, with the assent of the insurer, is assigned to the mortgagee, a subsequent violation of the conditions of the policy, by the mortgagor, will not deprive the mortgagee of a recovery, for a loss thereafter occurring. And see the same point, in Tillou v. Kingston Mutual Ins. Co., (1 Selden, 405.)

The present case involves no new principle, nor furnishes any just ground for a discrimination.

An assignment of a policy to a mortgagee, is, in effect, nothing more than an irrevocable power of attorney, to collect the amount of loss, if any shall happen, coupled with an interest in the assignee, greater or less, according to the extent of his interest in the subject of the insurance. Under the form of words of assignment, it is a direction, to the insurer, to pay such loss to the mortgagee.

When the assignment is made by the express consent of the insurer, the entire transaction amounts to this: the insurer insures the interest of the mortgagor in his premises, and agrees, upon certain conditions, to pay the amount of loss, if any happen, and then, by mutual consent, the benefit of this engagement (which is nothing more, nor less, than the right to claim whatever money may become payable, by reason of a loss,) is assigned to the mortgagee of the premises. In form, here is no relaxation of the conditions of the insurance, and it would be impossible to say, that, by the mere terms of the assignment, or the assent of the insurer thereto, the insurer thereby waived any qualification which was annexed to his liability before the assignment, or that the assignment, and the assent of the insurer thereto, were other than a consent, that if, according to the terms and conditions of the original contract, any sum of money should become payable, the right to receive the same should belong to the mortgagee. They do not, in terms, convert the policy into an insurance upon the interest of the mortgagee, nor modify the express terms of the contract, which states, by name, the person insured, and that the subject of the-insurance is his property. And yet, in the cases above referred to, it is held, that such an assignment should be treated as, according [522]*522to the plain, intent of the transaction, a protection to the mortgagee, not liable to be affected, and defeated, by the subsequent acts of the mortgagor—not upon the ground that the transaction converts the policy into a mere insurance of the interest of the mortgagee, for, if that were so, then, according to the uniform course of decision in this state, the insurers, upon paying the loss, would be entitled to claim a subrogation to his position, and to collect the mortgage debt from the mortgagor, but, on the ground that the mortgagee has acquired such an interest, in the contract, as that, although it is an insurance, in the mortgagor’s name, and upon his interest, and upon express conditions, which form an essential part of the contract, yet, after such assignment, it shall not be in the power of the mortgagor to destroy the contract itself, or defeat it. • The Supreme Court, it is true, in 9 Wend., (475,) appear to regard the assignment, as producing the effect, to convert the contract into an insurance upon the interest of the mortgagee exclusively, but that is expressly disaffirmed, on the review, in the Court of Errors, (17 Wend. 687,) where it is said that the assignment gave the assignee the right to recover the damage sustained, if it accrued while he was the assignee; but such recovery, and the payment thereof, would have been applied to the benefit of the assignor, in discharge of his indebtedness, pro tanto: and the fact, that the assignor (mortgagor) paid the mortgage, did not enure to the benefit of the insurer, nor have any other effect, than to bring back to him that interest, in the policies, which he had assigned—that the assignment could not alter, nor vary the extent of the liability of the insurer, but the policies remained good, for their original purpose, to wit, “ to pay the loss and damage, on the buildings, occasioned by fire,” not to the mortgagor, if it happened while the mortgagee held the policy, for the latter had an interest, and that interest, to the amount of the damage, the insurer had become liable to pay.

Nor does the doctrine proceed upon the idea that it is, in legal effect, a new contract of insurance in favor of the mortgagee, for, if that were so, then the mortgagee, in case of loss, might, upon common law principles, have maintained his action and recovered in his own name, whereas, it has often been held, that he can only sue in the name of the mortgagor, the assignor. (5 Wend. 200; 3 Denio, 254; 4 Hill, 187; 3 Id. 88.)

And it is proper to notice, that the arguments of the counsel [523]*523for the defendants in the case referred to, (9 Wend. 406,) proceed upon the same grounds which are now urged against the claim of the plaintiff herein, and, upon the same view of the nature and effect of an assignment of a policy as is taken, of a policy containing a clause, malting the loss payable to the mortgagee, by Chief Justice Shaw, in the case which will be presently referred to.

Whatever doubts might be suggested of the correctness of the' decision in Robert v. The Traders' Ins. Co., it has been since so distinctly affirmed in the court of last resort, that it is not open to question here. See 2 Comst. 218; 1 Id. 293, and Tillou v. The Kingston Mutual Ins Co., 1 Sel. 403; in which last case, the principle stated is, that after an assignment of the policy with the assent of the insurer, no act of the assured shall impair the rights of the assignee. In the case of Neve v. The Charleston Ins. Co., (2 McMullen, 237,) the same rule was sanctioned, to wit, that after an assignment of a policy, with -the assent of the insurer, the assignee is entitled to recover to the amount of his interest in the policy, notwithstanding the assured had deprived himself of the right to recover by acts of fraud.

Although the cases above referred to, have not been called in question by counsel on the argument herein, it seems proper to give them some prominence in the consideration of the subject, for two purposes: viz., to show that the courts in this state have manifested' a disposition to give effect to the transaction according to the plain intent of the parties: i. e., to secure to the assignee, (mortgagee,) the protection which it was the obvious intent of the parties, (insurers as well as insured,) that he should have, and that beyond the power of the assured to impair. And also, for the purpose of instituting a comparison between the principles said to be applicable to the present case, and those urged to defeat the recovery in those' cited, which, it will be seen, are alike applicable to either.

In each case, the contract is with the mortgagor.- He is the party insured, and the subject of insurance is his property, and the premium is paid by him. In neither case is there any express agreement by the insurer to pay any thing, unless events shall so happen, that the amount of the loss would, (according to the very terms of the policy, and under all the conditions and qualifications annexed thereto), become payable to the insured himself.

[524]

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Bluebook (online)
5 Duer 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grosvenor-v-atlantic-fire-insurance-nysuperctnyc-1856.