Lane v. Maine Mutual Fire Insurance

12 Me. 44
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 12 Me. 44 (Lane v. Maine Mutual Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane v. Maine Mutual Fire Insurance, 12 Me. 44 (Me. 1835).

Opinion

Parris J. —

The first question presented for our decision is, whether the hiring and occupation of the store by Dunn, from May to November, was such an alienation of the property insured as rendered the policy void under the 9th section of the act of incorporation therein referred to.

In the construction of this language we should have regard to the circumstances under which it was used, and the situation and object of the parties using it. The insured was the owner of the store, and for the purpose of securing his interest against the [47]*47peril of fire, became a member of the company, assuming the obligations of membership by the payment of money and depositing his note, thereby giving the company a lien, for the payment of such note, on the building insured.

The insurers, in assuming the risk, provide for the continuance of the interest of the assured in the property covered, so long as their liability continues. Tu other words, they guard against its becoming a gaming or wager policy in any event. Accordingly so long as the property covered belongs to the insured, whether it be in his possession, or that of his agent, servant or lessee, the company’s lien continues, and an insurable interest remains. But when the property is alienated, that is, when the insured is divested of title by sale or in any other manner, the lien of the company ceases, and the insured is no longer a member of the company. If a loss then happen it is not his loss, for as he had no property he could sustain no loss, and consequently could be entitled to no satisfaction. The party insured must, in all cases of fire insurance, have an interest or property at the time of insuring and at the time the fire happens. But he need not have an absolute and unqualified or even immediate interest in the property insured. A trastee, mortgagee, reversioner, a factor or agent of goods to be sold on commission may legally insure their respective interests, subject to the rules of the office in which the insurance is effected. Upon general principles applicable to fire insurance, the person insured cannot convey the estate insured and assign the policy, so as to render it valid in favor of the grantee and assignee, unless by consent of the insurer. Mutual offices should have the power of exercising a discretion in the selection of persons whom they may admit to membership, and whose property they may insure. The character of the person insured may be a subject of importance.

If by conveyance of the estate and assignment of the policy, the purchaser would stand in the place of the insured and be entitled to indemnity under the policy, the office might be defeated of this right of selection.

Under these views of the law relating to fire insurance, we think the occupation of the store by Dunn, who, having no lease in writing, was at most only tenant at will, was not an alienation [48]*48of the property insured within the true meaning and intent of the act of incorporation. The language is, when the property insured shall be alienated by sale or otherwise,” &ic. The word alien or alienate extends not only to alienations of land in deed but also to alienations in law. A transfer of title by devise, descent, or by levy would be as technically an alienation as a transfer by deed. BlacJcstone, speaking of title by alienation, Book 2, ch. 19, says. " The most usual and universal method of acquiring a title to real estate is that of alienation, conveyance or purchase in its limited sense ; under which may be comprised any method by which estates are voluntarily resigned by one man, and accepted by another ; whether that be affected by sale, gift, marriage, settlement, devise, or other transmission of property by the mutual consent of the parties.” Alienation is defined in Jacob’s Law Dictionary to be a transferring the property of a thing to another.

The object of the statute was, without doubt, to render certain by positive enactment what would otherwise have depended upon common law principles and judicial decisions, viz. that the policies of the company should not be obligatory any longer than the property insured continued in the individual named in the policy, as the owner; and that by a transfer of his interest the policy should be void. This construction is believed to be in accordance with general usage, and the intention and understanding of the parties.

As to the goods, we are clear that the policy was intended to cover and did cover whatever goods the plaintiff might have in his store, at any time during the continuance of the risk, not beyond the amount actually insured.

A construction limiting the policy to the goods actually in the store at the time the insurance was effected would defeat the very object of the insured, and so it must have been understood by the insurer. The plaintiff’s business was trade, the vending of goods from his store. According to the construction put upon this policy by the company, the plaintiff has no security except upon the goods actually in the store when the policy was issued, and when those were disposed of, their liability was at an end. We cannot listen, for a moment, to such a suggestion. A policy-[49]*49of insurance being a contract of indemnity, must receive such a construction of the words employed in it as will make the protection it affords coextensive, if possible, with the risks of the assured. Dow v. The Hope Ins. Co. 1 Hall, 66. The risk of the assured was to continue six years, and the assurers assumed that risk to the amount of two hundred dollars on the goods in the store. Both parties must have understood this to mean on goods which may be in the store at any time during the continuance of the policy. If the assured had goods to an amount exceeding two hundred dollars, the undertaking of the company was limited by that amount. If, by sale, the quantity was reduced below that sum in value, the insurers were so far benefited, as their risk was diminished below that paid for by the premium, and if the whole were sold, the insurers were benefited to a still greater degree by a suspension of the risk. And it was a mere suspension, for upon filling up again the risk revivedand we see no difference in principle between the case where the quantity is diminished by a partial sale and then replenished, and where the whole Is sold and an entire new stock purchased. In either case there is a risk, limited in amount by the contract, which has been assumed by the insurer, and for which the insured has paid the stipulated premium.

We are clear that it is a continuing risk, to the amount specified, upon such goods as the insured may have in the store within the term covered by the policy, and not confined to such as were there at the time of assuming the risk.

The defendants have filed a motion in arrest of judgment on two grounds; 1st, because the plaintiff has not alleged in his declaration that he was the owner of the store and goods at the time they were burned; and 2d, because he has not alleged or set forth the value of the store and goods at that time.

The plaintiff alleges that his store was consumed by fire; and although this is not a technical averment that he was the owner, yet we think it is sufficient after verdict. The authorities all concur that where there is any defect, imperfection or omission in pleading, whether in substance or form, which would have been a fatal objection upon demurrer, yet if the issue joined be [50]

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Bluebook (online)
12 Me. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-maine-mutual-fire-insurance-me-1835.