Lyons v. Boston & Lowell Railroad

64 N.E. 404, 181 Mass. 551, 1902 Mass. LEXIS 922
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 17, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 64 N.E. 404 (Lyons v. Boston & Lowell Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyons v. Boston & Lowell Railroad, 64 N.E. 404, 181 Mass. 551, 1902 Mass. LEXIS 922 (Mass. 1902).

Opinion

Knowlton, J.

This action was brought under the Pub. Sts. c. 112, § 214, as amended by the St. 1895, c. 293 (R. L. c. 111, § 270), to recover for an injury to the plaintiff’s property by fire communicated by one of the defendant’s locomotive engines. The Public Statutes create a liability in such cases, and the amendment provides as follows: “ In case such railroad corporation is held responsible in damages it shall be entitled to the benefit of any insurance effected upon such property by the owner thereof, less the cost of premium and expense of recovery. The money received as insurance shall be deducted from the damages, if recovered before the damages are assessed; if not so recovered the policy of insurance shall be assigned to the corporation held responsible in damages, and such corporation may maintain an action thereon.” This statute, as amended, determines the rights and liabilities of property owners and railroad corporations. It is applicable as well when a policy is made payable in case of loss to a mortgagee as when the in[554]*554surance is for the owner alone. It is unnecessary to consider how the rights of different parties would be enforced in every possible case, as no question of that kind is before us.

In this case the plaintiff had been paid a large sum under a policy of insurance, and the only question is whether the judge should have ruled as requested “ that the railroad corporation was entitled to the benefit of any insurance upon such property, less the cost of premium and expense of recovery, and that such amount should be deducted from the amount found as damages for such burning of the house and barn.” The case is plainly within the language of the amendment above quoted, for it is clear that this language refers to the conditions at the time of the fire. It is admitted that the ruling should have been given, except for the.fact that the insurance policy was issued before the statute was amended. The statute does not in terms recognize any distinction between cases in which a policy existing at the time of a fire was issued only a short time before the fire and after the enactment of the amendment, and cases in which the policy was issued before the change in the law. If there is a difference, it must be for some reason not referred to in the statute.

The enactment is for the purpose of fixing the rights and liabilities of railroad corporations and"property owners. ' Formerly there was an absolute primary liability of the railroad company for all damages, and an insurance company compelled to pay a loss would be entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the property owner against the railroad corporation on equitable grounds, even if there were no provision for it in the policy. It is not questioned that the Legislature could at any time terminate the liability of railroad corporations for future fires, or limit it, or modify it in any way. The Legislature has seen fit to limit it to such amounts as are not covered by insurance, and in cases where there is insurance to leave the primary liability on the insurance company, where it would be if there were no statute imposing a burden on railroad companies. There is no good reason why the law should not be changed as between landowners and railroad corporations, as well in cases where there are outstanding policies of insurance as in cases where there is no insurance, unless such a change would impair the obligation of the contract between the plaintiff and the insurance company. [555]*555The only part of their contract that is material is found in the Massachusetts standard form of policy, and reads as follows: “And whenever the company shall pay any loss, the insured shall assign to it, to the extent of the amount so paid, all rights to recover satisfaction for the loss or damage from any person, town or other corporation, excepting other insurers; or the insured, if requested, shall prosecute therefor at the charge and for the account of the company.” St. 1894, c. 522, § 60.

The assured agrees to give the insurance company such rights to reimbursement as he may have at the time of the fire against any party. He does not agree to have any such rights. So far as the existence of such possible rights depends on present or future legislation, both parties to the contract take their chances as to what the law may be when a fire occurs. If, when a policy is issued other parties are in such relations to the property described that if the property should be burned there would be a valuable right of subrogation in favor of the insurer, it may well be that under such a provision in the policy the insured impliedly agrees to do nothing to terminate or modify the right. If in this case the law had remained unchanged, and the plaintiff, before the fire, had released the railroad corporation from its liability under the statute, it might be held that his contract with the insurance company was broken and that he was precluded from recovery under his policy. See Jackson Co. v. Boylston Ins. Co. 139 Mass. 508, 512; Attleborough Savings Bank v. Security Ins. Co. 168 Mass. 147. But no such effect can be given to a change of the law in reference to the liability of railroad companies for fires. Both the insurance company and the plaintiff knew that such a change was liable to be made at any time, and that it might materially affect the value to the company of the general right of subrogation which was expressly given by the policy. There is no good reason for holding that such an amendment, which is applicable in terms to all fires that occur after it takes effect, is not applicable as well to those fires against which insurance was effected before the passage of the statute, as to those where policies were issued after the passage of the statute. The questions that arise as to the method of applying and enforcing the statute are precisely the same in cases where the insurance was effected after the amendment [556]*556was enacted as in those where it was in existence at the time of the amendment.

A like decision was made unanimously under a similar statute, in Leavitt v. Canadian Pacific Railway, 90 Maine, 153.

.Exceptions sustained.

Loring, J.

I regret that I am unable to agree with the judgment of the court.

This action is brought by the Middlesex Mutual Fire Insurance Company, in the name of the plaintiff, to recover for damage done to the plaintiff’s house and barn by a fire set by one of the defendant’s locomotives. The action is also brought to recover for damage to personal property not insured, and the judge found that the damage done to the house and barn exceeded the insurance; to that extent the action is also for the benefit of the plaintiff; but there is no dispute as to the action, so far as it is an action for the plaintiff’s benefit; it is only so far as it is for the benefit of the insurance company that the railroad has set up a defence, and for that reason it must be treated as an action brought by the insurance company for its own benefit, in the name of the plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 N.E. 404, 181 Mass. 551, 1902 Mass. LEXIS 922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyons-v-boston-lowell-railroad-mass-1902.