Morgan v. Cincinnati Insurance

307 N.W.2d 53, 411 Mich. 267, 1981 Mich. LEXIS 258
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1981
Docket63465, (Calendar No. 6)
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 307 N.W.2d 53 (Morgan v. Cincinnati Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan v. Cincinnati Insurance, 307 N.W.2d 53, 411 Mich. 267, 1981 Mich. LEXIS 258 (Mich. 1981).

Opinion

Kavanagh, J.

We granted leave to appeal to consider whether the intentional burning of a home by one spouse will bar recovery under a statutory fire insurance policy where the policy names both spouses as "the insured”. We hold in this case that it will not.

Plaintiff and her husband, as tenants by the entireties, owned a home which was insured by defendant. On January 20, 1974, it was extensively damaged by a fire started by plaintiffs husband, who was living apart from plaintiff as divorce proceedings between them were then pending. Plaintiff filed a claim under the insurance policy, which the defendant denied. Defendant asserted that since plaintiff and her husband were the insured and owned inseparable interests in the property as tenants by the entireties the fraud of plaintiffs husband was imputed to plaintiff. Plaintiffs suit was dismissed on defendant’s motion for summary judgment. The Court of Appeals affirmed "with extreme reluctance”. Morgan v Cincinnati Ins Co, 91 Mich App 48, 50; 282 NW2d 829 (1979). We reverse.

On appeal defendant contends that the question *274 whether an innocent insured may recover on property insurance after another insured has committed some act of fraud depends on whether the interests of the insured are considered joint or several. Defendant asserts that the property interests of parties holding as tenants by the entireties are unified and cannot be separated and therefore plaintiff cannot show an interest in the insured property separate from that interest which has been tainted by fraud.

This argument misses the point, for no interest in the insured property was tainted by fraud, nor does that bear on the question before us. Claimant’s right in this matter is determined not by interest in the insured property but by the rights under the contract of insurance.

In Monaghan v Agricultural Fire Ins Co of Watertown, NY, 53 Mich 238; 18 NW 797 (1884), this Court addressed the issue of recovery by an innocent insured notwithstanding fraud by another insured. In Monaghan three minors owned a parcel of property and a house and barn on it by deed from their father. After the father’s death their mother, who owned no interest in the real property, procured a fire insurance policy on the premises and contents, naming herself and the three minors as insured. After a fire damaged the house it was determined that the mother had committed fraud in reporting as destroyed certain items which she had removed from the house prior to the fire. The three minors instituted the action for recovery of fire insurance proceeds. The Court stated that recovery under the insurance contract was to be determined irrespective of the nature of ownership of the property insured. 1 Recovery was *275 to be determined according to the contract interests held by the respective parties. The Court in Monaghan construed the contract interests created by the insurance policy to be joint. 2 As a direct result of making the initial determination that the contract interests of the parties were joint the Court made the statement for which the case has come to be recognized, i.e., "And if the right of action has become barred as to one of the joint contractors, it has to all of them”. 53 Mich 238, 252.

Since the decision in Monaghan the law applicable to insurance contracts has undergone considerable development. Recognizing the disparity in the bargaining positions of the companies which write insurance and the consumers who buy the policies, both the statutory law and judicial decisions have aimed at making certain that the interests of every insured are protected.

The rule stated in Monaghan is a general law of contracts. Under contract law "[i]f two or more persons promise one and the same performance, there is necessarily a relation of suretyship between them”. 4 Corbin, Contracts, § 925, p 702. Thus some courts have held that " '[b]ecause the agreement not to commit fraud is joint, with each insured promising that he and the other would not commit fraud, the breach caused by intentional destruction is chargeable to both insureds and *276 precludes recovery by the innocent joint insured’ Klemens v Badger Mutual Ins Co of Milwaukee, 8 Wis 2d 565, 567; 99 NW2d 865, 866 (1959).

Without limiting the principles of law applicable to contracting parties generally, consistent with the effort to protect the interest of the insured we are moved to limit the rule of law articulated in Monaghan.

The standard fire insurance policy prescribed by statute provides:

"This entire policy shall be void if, whether before or after a loss, the insured has wilfully concealed or misrepresented any material fact or circumstance concerning this insurance or the subject thereof, or the interest of the insured therein, or in case of any fraud or false swearing by the insured relating thereto.” MCL 500.2832; MSA 24.12832.

The insurer in this case would have us read this provision as if it stated "[t]his entire policy shall be void if * * * any person insured” has committed fraud. We believe such a reading is unwarranted, and hold that the provision voiding the policy in the event of fraud by "the insured” is to be read as having application only to the insured who committed the fraud and makes claim under the policy. The provision has no application to any other person described in the policy as an insured.

To adopt the reading of the insurer would require ascribing to the Legislature an intent to impose a mutual obligation of suretyship on each of several persons insured; that each insured must not only undertake to forbear from fraud himself, but must also undertake to prevent each of the other persons insured from engaging in fraud on pain of losing all interests under the policy. Such an intent is unlikely; as this case aptly illustrates, *277 an insured often has no control over the conduct of others.

We no longer consider the application of the theory of implied suretyship appropriate in insurance law. In Michigan limitations on recovery under an insurance policy must be clearly stated in the contract. The implication of a mutual obligation of suretyship among several insured persons is in effect a limitation on recovery by implication and not to be permitted under Michigan law.

Furthermore, since the provision quoted above does not expressly create a joint obligation of suretyship, to read the fraud provision as creating one would be contrary to the reasonable expectations of an insured. An ordinary person seeing his or her name included in an insurance contract without limiting language would suppose his or her interest to be covered. It appears that the instant policy names "Robert Morgan and Helen Morgan”, without more, as the insured under the policy.

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Bluebook (online)
307 N.W.2d 53, 411 Mich. 267, 1981 Mich. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-cincinnati-insurance-mich-1981.