Grosvenor v. . the Atlantic Fire Insurance Co. of Brooklyn

17 N.Y. 391
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 17 N.Y. 391 (Grosvenor v. . the Atlantic Fire Insurance Co. of Brooklyn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grosvenor v. . the Atlantic Fire Insurance Co. of Brooklyn, 17 N.Y. 391 (N.Y. 1858).

Opinion

Habéis, J.

The contract of insurance is a contract of indemnity. To sustain an action upon such a contract, it must appear that the party insured has sustained a loss. This involves the necessity of an insurable interest at the time of the alleged loss. Without such interest, the party insured cannot be damnified.

*393 In this case, the contract was between the defendants and McCarty. The agreement was to insure Eugene W. McCarty against loss or damage by fire, to the amount of $7,000, on his three story brick dwelling-house. But after the contract was made, and before the alleged loss, McCarty had sold and conveyed the property insured. At the time of the fire he had no insurable interest; of course, he has no claim for indemnity. No action, therefore, could be maintained upon the policy by McCarty.

But at the túne the insurance was effected, the plaintiff in this action, G-rosvenor, was the holder of a mortgage upon the premises insured. As such mortgagee, he, too, had an insurable interest. The extent of that interest was the amount of his debt. To that extent he might have contracted with the defendants to indemnify him against loss by fire. The payment of his debt would as completely terminate the contract to insure as would the alienation of the property, when the contract is made with the owner.

The important inquiry in this case is, to which of these classes does the contract in question belong ? The action is brought by the plaintiff as mortgagee. The contract was made with McCarty, the mortgagor. But the policy provides that in case of loss, such loss should be payable to the plaintiff. What is the legal effect of this provision ? Without it the plaintiff could have had no claim against the defendants for indemnity. Is this provision to be regarded as an appointment of the plaintiff to receive any money which might become due from the insurers by reason of any loss sustained by the mortgagor, or has it the effect to render the policy, which would otherwise be a contract to indemnify the mortgagor against a loss, a contract to indemnify the mortgagee? A determination of this question will also determine the rights of the parties to this action.

Were it not for one or two decisions in this state bearing upon the question, I should have little difficulty in pronouncing in favor of the former of these propositions. It seems to *394 ‘¡- me to be very clear that it was the intention of all the parties that the interest of the "mortgagor, and not that of f the mortgagee, should be insured. It is stated in the policy that the property insured is the property of McCarty, and that he is the person insured. McCarty paid the premium. He made the contract. His interest as owner, and not that of the.plaintiff as mortgagee, was the subject of the insurance. The plaintiff was merely the appointee of the party insured to receive the money which might become due him from the insurers upon the contract. The provision in the policy in this respect had no more effect upon the contract itself than it would if it had been provided that the loss for which the insurers should become liable should be deposited in a specified bank to the credit of the party insured.

Suppose that the plaintiff, although described in the policy as a mortgagee, had, in fact, held no mortgage, could it be pretended that the defendants might have avoided the policy on the ground that the plaintiff had no insurable interest ? Or, suppose again, that after the contract had been made, the mortgage had been paid, could it be claimed that the contract to insure had also ceased ? I presume none will deny that, in either case, the contract would have continued in force for the benefit of the owner of the property insured. If so, it must have been because the interest of the mortgagor, and not that of the mortgagee, was the thing insured. I agree with the court below that “there is nothing in the language of the policy on which the court can adjudge that in legal effect it is a contract insuring the interest of the mortgagee as such, except in the provision which declares that the loss, if any, which occurs under the contract insuring the mortgagor’s interest, shall be payable to the mortgagee. That provision merely designates a person to whom such loss is to be paid, and shows that he is a person who may have an interest in its being so paid.”

The undertaking to pay the plaintiff was an undertaking collateral to and dependent upon the principal undertaking *395 to insure the mortgagor. The effect of it was, that the defendants agreed that whenever any money should become , due to the mortgagor upon the contract of insurance, they ; would, instead of paying it to the mortgagor himself, pay it to the plaintiff. The mortgagor must sustain a loss for which the insurers were liable, before the party appointed to receive the money would have a right to claim it. It is the damage sustained by the party insured, and not by the party appointed to receive payment, that is recoverable from the insurers. (Macomber v. The Cambridge Mutual Fire Ins. Co., 8 Cush., 133.) The insurance being upon the interest of the mortgagor, and he having parted with that interest before the fire, no loss was sustained by him, and, of course, none was recoverable by his assignee or appointee. The right of such a party being wholly derivative, cannot exceed the right of the party under whom he claims. ( Carpenter v. The Providence Washington Ins. Co., 16 Peters, 495; Foster v. The Equitable Fire Ins. Co., 2 Cray, 216).

I agree with the learned judges who delivered opinions upon the decision of this case in the court below, that there is no just ground for discrimination between this case and that of an assignment of the policy to a mortgagee to be held by him as collateral security for his debt, with the consent of the insurer. In either case the insurance is upon the interest of the mortgagor. The terms and conditions upon which indemnity may be claimed are agreed upon, and then the original parties further agree that when, by the terms and conditions of the contract, the insurers shall become liable by reason of a loss sustained by the party insured, the money shall be paid, not to the party who has sustained the loss, but to his appointee or assignee for his benefit. Such an appointment or assignment ought not to be construed so as to vary, in any respect, the liabilities of the insurers upon their original contract. It is certainly true, as was said by Mr. Justice Woodruff, that “ when applied to other agreements for the payment of money, an assignment does no *396 more than direct to whom it shall be paid when it shall become due.”

|The case of The Traders’ Ins. Co. v. Robert (9 Wend,., 404), 1was, in my judgment, erroneously decided,' and unless by subsequent recognition or acquiescence, if has become so securely imbedded in the law of this state that it may not be disturbed, it ought not to be followed.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.Y. 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grosvenor-v-the-atlantic-fire-insurance-co-of-brooklyn-ny-1858.