McNeil v. Connecticut Fire Ins. Co. of Hartford

24 F.2d 221, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 970
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 20, 1928
DocketNo. 982
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 24 F.2d 221 (McNeil v. Connecticut Fire Ins. Co. of Hartford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNeil v. Connecticut Fire Ins. Co. of Hartford, 24 F.2d 221, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 970 (W.D. Tenn. 1928).

Opinion

ANDERSON, District Judge.

The complainant herein is Errol McNeil, a citizen and resident of Fayette county, Tennessee, and the respondent is a foreign fire insurance company incorporated under the laws of Connecticut, and a sum in excess of the jurisdictional amount is involved. The suit began in the ehaneery court of Shelby county, Tennessee, and was removed to the United States District Court by respondent. It was tried on the equity side, because the bill asks for equitable relief; i. e., the reformation of an insurance policy on the ground of mutual mistake in stating the ownership of the property insured and subsequently destroyed by fire. But in reality it turns on the purely legal question of whether “the sole and unconditional ownership in fee” clause of the standard fire insurance policy was breached, which was the sole defense raised in the trial of the ease, and the subsequent arguments, oral and written.

Facts.

The facts are as follows:

Errol McNeil is a telegraph operator, married, with a wife and one child. His wife has no property, and no separate income or source of income. In 1925 he purchased out of the savings from his salary a residence in Somerville, Tenn. He took title to this property in the name of himself and wife, Lillian McNeil, as “tenants, by the entirety.” While in the courthouse having the deed registered, he was solicited by a young woman insurance agent for the fire insurance on his new home, and he gave her the business. A few days later she sent the policy to him, made out in the name of E. McNeil, and in the policy was the following clause:

“This entire policy shall be void if the interest of the insured be other than unconditional and sole ownership, or if the subject of insurance be a building on ground not owned by the insured in fee simple.”

At the end of the first year the young woman agent called up McNeil and solicited the renewal, obtained it, and remailed the policy to him, made out, as the first one, to E. McNeil, with no reference to Lillian McNeil. McNeil paid the renewal premium; some months later the house took fire and was totally destroyed. The testimony shows that to rebuild the house as it stood would cost in the neighborhood of $10,000.

The insurance company does not contend that, if the policy had been asked for in the name of E. and Lillian McNeil as tenants by the entirety, it would have refused to write it, or that the premium would have been greater, or the risk, as a matter of fact, contradistinguished from law, any greater, but rests on two propositions: (1) That the title of McNeil as tenant with his wife by the entirety was not the sole and unconditional ownership required by the policy; and (2) •that, the title not being in McNeil as sole and unconditional owner, the policy under its plain terms and provisions is void.

Mutual Mistake.

The prayer for a reformation of the policy on the ground of “mutual mistake” can be disposed of summarily, for the reason that there was no mutual mistake. The young woman agent knew she made out the policy in the name of E. McNeil, and the complainant knew that the policy was made out in his name. McNeil presumably knew the policy contained the “sole and unconditional ownership” clause, and certainly knew that the title to the insured property was in himself and wife as tenants by the entirety. The mistake, if any, was a mistake of law, in assuming that under the law of Tennessee a husband is the sole and unconditional owner of property held by him and his wife as tenants by the entireties, for insurance purposes.

Therefore the sole question left for consideration is this: “What is the title of a husband to property held by him and his wife as tenants by the entirety, under the law of Tennessee?” This court, of course, is bound by the Tennessee decisions as to the nature and character of the title to property in Tennessee. The United States Circuit Court of Appeals for this, the Sixth, circuit, expressly so held in Sims v. American Insurance Co., 296 F. 115. This opinion, by the way, was written by the present presiding judge of this circuit, was On appeal from this District Court, and involved the same “sole and unconditional ownership” clause as is invoked in this ease, and it held in effect:

“It is also said that the existence of any liability was conditioned upon the position by the insured of the ‘sole and unconditional ownership/ and that the statute does not purport to modify or affect this condition, and a Massachusetts ease is cited (Ballard v. [223]*223Globe, 237 Mass. 34, 129 N. E. 290), apparently construing an identical statute in that state, and holding that the existence of an outstanding legal title was a good defense. Sere again we find ourselves concluded by the Tennessee decisions. Without quoting from them at length, they impliedly, if not expressly, hold,' and approve other eases which directly rule, that the purchaser under such a contract as here appears, having paid or being liable for the entire purchase price, is the equitable owner of the property and is entitled to call himself, for insurance purposes, the sole and unconditional owner. While these cases are construing insurance contracts, they are nevertheless declaring the nature and character of the title which the contract vendee has to property, real or personal, having" a situs in Tennessee. This determination of the character of this title would affect other contracts as well as those of insurance, and it is binding upon the federal courts.” Bondurant v. Watson, 103 U. S. 281, 26 L. Ed. 447, Sims v. Am., etc., Ins. Co. (C. C. A.) 296 F. 117.

This is an amplification of the rule in the above-cited case of Bondurant v. Watson, in which the Supreme Court of the United States used the following language:

“The decisions above cited, establishing as they do a rule of real property in the state of Louisiana, are binding on this court, and are conclusive of this ease.”
So let us examine the Tennessee decisions as to tenants by the entirety, for they are, if they establish the nature of the title, “binding on this court and conclusive of this ease.”

Tennessee Law as to Tenants by Entirety.

The law of Tennessee, as to tenants by the entirety is purely the old common law. In this age of the. Nineteenth Amendment, rights of women, feminism, women office holders, and general emancipation of the sex, it is almost shocking to learn that in one form of conveyancing, “the husband and wife are as one person in law,” and the husband is that one person; “the legal existence of the wife” being “incorporated into that of the husband.”

Ames v. Norman, decided in 1857, and reported in 4 Sneed (36 Tenn.) 683, 70 Am. Dec. 269, very fully sets out the Tennessee, and of course, the common law as to tenants by entirety. Judge McKinney delivered the opinion of the court and Judge McKinney is frequently referred to in later Tennessee decisions as a great common-law Judge. Says the Supreme Court of Tennessee in that case in describing this estate:

Page 691: “First. By the common law, the husband and wife are.as one person in law; the legal existence of the wife is incorporated into that of the husband; and though, in modem times, exceptions to this doctrine have been introduced, the general principle still exists.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F.2d 221, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneil-v-connecticut-fire-ins-co-of-hartford-tnwd-1928.