Niagara Fire Insurance v. Scammon

144 Ill. 490
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 144 Ill. 490 (Niagara Fire Insurance v. Scammon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Niagara Fire Insurance v. Scammon, 144 Ill. 490 (Ill. 1891).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This suit was upon a policy of insurance for $5000, issued by appellant to the testator of appellee, insuring a building in the city of Chicago against loss or damage by fire. At the time the policy was issued the insured premises, with other contiguous property and the buildings thereon, were encumbered by a mortgage for $220,000 to the United States Mortgage Company; for default in the payment of an interest coupon, the mortgage company in February, 1874, declared the whole amount secured by the mortgage due, and assumed to advertise and sell the whole of the mortgaged premises under a power contained in the mortgage. The sale took place on March 31, 1874, between two and three months after the above mentioned insurance policy was issued, and the mortgaged premises were struck off to one James H. Bees, and a deed therefor executed to him. On April 20, 1874, Bees made a deed for all of the property to Samuel D. Babcock, the president of the mortgage company. J. Young Scammon, the testator of appellee, remained in actual possession of all the mortgaged premises, and claimed to be owner, and refused to acquiesce in the alleged mortgage sale, and insisted that the sale was illegal and did not amount to anything and that he would disregard it, and .notified Babcock and his attorneys that he would proceed to set said sale aside. While this was the condition of affairs, and on July 14, 1874, the insured property was destroyed by tire. Thereafter, said Scammon filed his bill to set aside the alleged foreclosure sale, and such proceedings were had in that suit, that in March, 1886, a decree was entered therein setting aside said sale and permitting him to redeem from the mortgage. It was also ordered by the decree that Babcock should account to Scammon for any insurance moneys he had collected on account of the mortgaged buildings.

The principal contention of the appellant is that the sale and conveyance to Bees, and the subsequent deed of Rees to Babcock, constituted a change of title within the meaning of the clause in the policy of insurance relating thereto, and that consequently the policy was not in force at the time of the loss.

The building covered by the policy in this case was contiguous to the building insured by the policy in litigation in the case of The Commercial Union Assurance Company v. Scammon, 126 Ill. 355, and both buildings were destroyed by the same fire. Both buildings and the lots on which they stood were portions of the premises .covered by the mortgage at issue in that case. The chancery proceeding and decree that were considered in that case also embraced the premises that are in question here. It is urged, however, that the decision of the court in that case is not applicable to the case now in hand, because the language in respect to alienation of the policy involved in that case is different from the language used in the clause of the policy respecting alienation here in question.

In the Commercial Union Assurance Company policy the language in which the condition was expressed was as follows: “ If the property be sold or transferred, or any change takes place in title or possession, whether by legal process or judicial decree, or voluntary transfer or conveyance, * * * in every such case this policy shall be void. When property has been sold and delivered, or otherwise disposed of, so that all interest or liability on the part of the assured herein named lias ceased, this insurance on said property shall immediately terminate. ” The policy upon which this action is brought contains the following provision: “In case of any sale or transfer, or change of title in the property insured by this company, or of any undivided interest thereof, or the entering or foreclosure of a mortgage, * * * this insurance shall immediately cease.”

Excluding from consideration said second clause, contained in the policy issued by the Commercial Union Assurance Company, it is manifest that the provisions in the two policies in regard to a sale or transfer of the property or change in the title thereto, are substantially the same. The existence of said second clause was one of the circumstances in that particular case, and was taken into consideration in its decision. It was held that the two clauses should be considered together, that the second clause was intended to explain and qualify the meaning of the word.s of the first clause, and define what sort or nature of transfer or conveyance of the property and change of title was contemplated and provided against. We there said.: “ Reading the two clauses together, the conclusion is inevitable, that it was intended that an alienation of the property, to avoid the policy, must be such that all interest or liability on the part of the assured therein named, has ceased.” The decision was, to some extent, based on the phraseology of said second clause, but we do not understand that said clause was of controlling importance and essential to the judgment that was rendered.

The contention of the then appellant was, that a sale that is merely voidable is an alienation or change of title that defeats a recovery for a loss occurring before the sale has been set aside. It was conceded by the court, that where a party has himself made a deed which he may avoid or not, as he shall elect, and a loss has occurred after he has made such deed and, before he has elected to avoid it, there is strong reason in favor of holding that such an alienation, and especially under some circumstances, will avoid a policy under a clause against a sale, transfer or change of title. But the cases relied upon by said appellant as establishing its contention were critically examined, and we there said: “ In none of them (the cases) is it held that a voidable deed, made by direction of a court or by a master in chancery, where the assured still has possession and the same interest in the property that he had before such deed was made, constituted an alienation of the property, within the meaning of the clause under consideration.”

In the same case, we quoted with approval from the opinion of the Supreme Court of Iowa, in Ayres v. Hartford Ins. Co., 17 Iowa, 176, this language : “But if the real ownership remain the same ; if there is no change in the fact of a title, but only in the evidence of it, and this latter change is merely nominal, and not of a nature calculated to increase the motive to burn, or diminish the motive to guard the property from loss by fire, the policy is not vitiated.” And in the same case we said : “ It is difficult to perceive how the insured, whose property has been illegally sold, and who is entitled to have the sale declared void, occupies a different position than that occupied by him who owns a mere equity of redemption. This court held, in Roberts et al. v. Fleming et al., 53 Ill. 196, a trustee, under a mortgage containing a power of sale, can not become a purchaser at his own sale, either directly or indirectly, by procuring another to purchase for his benefit; and if he does so become the purchaser, the rights of the mortgagor will remain precisely the same as’ though no sale had been made. And so, here, the interest of the insured remained, notwithstanding the sale, precisely as it was before.”

In the same case we said, the case here, in brief, is simply this: “ A trust deed is made of property to secure a debt. Afterwards, the maker of the deed takes out a policy of insurance upon the same property, in which there is a clause prohibiting its alienation.

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144 Ill. 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/niagara-fire-insurance-v-scammon-ill-1891.