Mutual Assurance Society v. Watts

14 U.S. 279, 4 L. Ed. 91, 1 Wheat. 279, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 329
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 13, 1816
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 14 U.S. 279 (Mutual Assurance Society v. Watts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Assurance Society v. Watts, 14 U.S. 279, 4 L. Ed. 91, 1 Wheat. 279, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 329 (1816).

Opinion

Johnson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the . court, as follows:

*280 This is a bill in chancery, filed by the complain* ants, to charge certain premises, in the possession of the defendant, situate in the town of Alexandria, with the payment of a sum of money, assessed in pursuance of the laws establishing the Mutual, Assurance Society, for quotas becoming- due after his testator acquired possession. The executor has, in fact, sold the premises, under a powér given him by the testator, but the money remains in his hands; and it is conceded that the sole object now contended for is, to charge the money arising from the sale of the land in question with the -assessment tó which it is contended that the land was liable. The insuránce was made in 1799, and the property sold to the defendant’s testator in 1807, long after the town of Alexandria ceased to be.subject to the laws of Virginia. It is.admitted that the sale was made without notice of this incumbrance, (if it was .one,) and the quota demanded was assessed on the premises for a loss which happened ■ subsequent to the transfer. The points made.in the case arise .out of the,construction of the 6th and 8th sections of the act of Virginia, passed the 22d of December, 1794. The 6th. section is these words.:if the funds should not be sufficient, a repartition among the whole, of the persons insured shall be made', and each shall pay, on ’emand of the, cashier, his, her, or their share, according to the sum insured, and rate of hazard at which the building • stands, agreeably to the rate of premium, for .which purpose it is hereby declared that the. subscribers, as soon as they shall insure their property- in the - Assurance Society aforesaid, do mutually, for them *281 selves, their heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, engage their property insured as security, and subject the same to be sold, if necessary, for the payrnent of such quotas.” And the 8th section is in these words; “To the end that purchasers or morígagees of any property insured, by virtue of this act, may not becomé losers thereby, the subscriber selling, mortgaging, or otherwise transferring such property, shall, at the time, apprise the purchaser or mortgagee of such assurance; and . endorse to him or them the policy thereof. And in every case of such change the purchaser or mortgagee shall be considered as a subscriber in the room of the original, and the property so sold, mortgaged, or otherwise transferred, shall still remain liable for the payment of the quotas, in the same manner as if the right thereof had remained in the original owner.”

In the argument two points were made, 1st. That property pledged to the society remained liable for the quotas to a purchaser without notice. 2d. That the purchaser, by' the purchase of such property, although without notice, became, by virtue of the 8th section, a member of the society, and liable, in all respects, as such.

The second of these questions is now withdrawn from the consideration of this court by an agreement entered on record. And it must be admitted, that whatever may be the strict construction of the 8th section and its operation in the state of Virginia, so tar as it is intended to force on "the purchaser, a personal character or liability, it could have no operation in the town of Alexandria, at the date of this trans *282 fer. The laws of Virginia had then ceased to be the laws of’ Alexandria, and it could only be under an actually existing law,; operating at the; time of the transfer, tliat the character of membership in the Virginia company would be forced upon the pur-» chaser. This is not one of those cases in which tenure attaches to an individual a particular characteristic or obligation; such cases arise exclusively between the occupant of the soil and the sovereignty which presides immediately over the territory. The transfer, therefore, of the district of Alexandria to the national government, put an end to the operation of the 3th section, so far as it operated by mere force of law, independent of his own consent, to fasten on the purchaser toe .characteristics of a member. But it is otherwise with regard to thé soil.. The idea is now exploded that a mere change of sovereignty produced any change in the state of rights existing in the soil. In this respect every thing remains in the actual- state, whether the. interest was acquired by law, ünder a grant, or by individual contract. a

.We consider the question, then, as reduced to this: Does property, pledged to the society, continue liable for assessments in the hands.of a bona fide purchaser without notice, notwithstanding that he does not become a member by the transfer ?

Here we give no opinion on the extent or meaning of the words “ property insured,” how far they will operate to. charge the lands bn'which buildings stand. The question was not made in the argument,, and is *283 probably of no consequence in .this or any Other case. We only notice it, ih ordér that such a construction may not be súpppsed admitted, as is too often concluded, because a court passes over, a question sub sikntid.

Whatever be theproperty thus pledged, it is very clear that the words of the ..6th section are abundantly sufficient tp create in it a common law lien, not only in the hands of the original subscriber, but by eipress Words in those of "his assignee... If the case rested here, there would be tio doubt or difficulty ; but every law, and every contract, must be construed 'with a reference to the subject of that law qr contract, and which it is designed to answer. In this view we readily concede, that the duration of the lien could not extend beyond the. duration of the liability of the subscriber to pay the premium; nor could the liability of the subscriber extend beyond the liability of the company to indemnify him. On the other hand, it would seem that as long as the company could exact of the subscriber the premium, they ought. to be held liable to indemnify him. It will, then, be conceded that the liability of the subscriber, and of the company, are mutual, correlative, and co-extensivé, and it remains to be examined how this concession affects the case.

It is very clear that there are but three ways by which a subscriber can cease to be a member s 1st. By the consumption of the buildings insured, which results from the nature of the contract. 2d.. By complying with the stipulations of the 9th article of the rules and regulations of the society. *284 3d. By substituting a vendee in his place, in conformity with the 8th section of the act of the 22d De» cember, 1794. If, then, a subscriber has not become discharged in one of these three ways, what is to* prevent the society from pursuing their summary remedy against him? They are not bound to search for his vendee, or to raise the money by a sale of the property pledged; much less are they bound to prosecute their remedy against a purchaser whose name is unknown to them, or who may be absent from the state, or from the United States, or insolvent, or protected, at the time, by some legal privilege.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 U.S. 279, 4 L. Ed. 91, 1 Wheat. 279, 1816 U.S. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-assurance-society-v-watts-scotus-1816.