Sanders v. Frankfort Marine, Accident & Plate Glass Insurance

57 A. 655, 72 N.H. 485, 1904 N.H. LEXIS 45
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 1, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 57 A. 655 (Sanders v. Frankfort Marine, Accident & Plate Glass Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanders v. Frankfort Marine, Accident & Plate Glass Insurance, 57 A. 655, 72 N.H. 485, 1904 N.H. LEXIS 45 (N.H. 1904).

Opinion

Parsons, C. J.

The plaintiff has recovered judgment against the defendant Paper Company for some $9,000. The Paper Com *492 pany have not paid the judgment and have no property upon which a levy can be made, but they hold a policy of insurance issued by the defendant Insurance Company covering their liability for the injury which constituted the plaintiff’s cause of .action, to the extent of $5,000.

The obligations imposed upon the insurer by the policy contract are in dispute. The plaintiff claims it constitutes upon the facts a subsisting obligation upon the Insurance Company to pay ■$5,000 to the Paper Company, and he contends that upon equitable grounds the money should be paid to him. The Paper Company, so far as appears, make no claim to the money, nor do they ■object to a payment to the plaintiff. If the Insurance Company •are under an existing obligation to pay $5,000, it is immaterial to -them whether they pay it to the Paper Company or to the plaintiff. The Paper Company cannot object to a decree for a payment of the money to the plaintiff in discharge pro tanto of his judgment against them, for thereby they are relieved from loss or discharged from liability to that amount, which is all they can claim under any construction of the policy. The Insurance Company •concede the validity of the policy, that it covers the injury for which the Paper Company have been found liable, and that the amount of such liability has been judicially determined to be .■greater than the total claim under the policy. Their position is, that as the Paper Company have paid nothing they have lost nothing, and the contingency upon which the liability of the Insurance Company was made to depend by the terms of the policy has not yet occurred. They rely upon the grant or covenant of the policy by which they “ agree to indemnify . . . against loss from . . . liability for damages on account of bodily injuries, fatal or non-fatal, accidentally suffered by any person . . . and resulting from negligence of the assured,” and the further agreement or condition hi clause 8: “ No action shall lie against the company as respects any loss under this policy unless it shall be brought by the assured himself to reimburse him for loss' actually sustained and paid by him in satisfaction of a judgment after trial of the issue.” Under these provisions, the Insurance Company claim that the only legal obligation resting upon them is to pay to the Paper Company such sum as may have been paid by the insured upon a judgment recovered upon the liability covered by the policy. Two cases similar to the present ■are cited in which this contention appears to have been adopted ■upon a similar policy: Frye v. Company, 97 Me. 241, and Travellers Ins. Co. v. Moses, 63 N. J. Eq. 260. In the last case, in an ■earlier decision in the court of chancery, it was held that equity would apply the whole indemnity to the satisfaction of the plain *493 tiff’s judgment. Beacon Lamp Co. v. Insurance Co., 61 N. J. Eq. 59. This view was not followed in the court of appeals, which limited the amount so applied to a sum which the court by a process of reasoning construed had been paid. Travellers Ins. Co. v. Moses, supra. In Bain v. Atkins, 181 Mass. 240, which has also been cited by the defendants, the obligation of the insurance company had been performed. The question of the plaintiff’s equitable right to compel the application of a subsisting obligation to indemnify against his claim to its satisfaction was not in the case and was expressly excluded from consideration (y>. 243).

Discussion has been had of the question whether the present contract was one of insurance against damage or of insurance against liability. In the following cases cited by the plaintiff the policies in question were held to be contracts of indemnity against, liability: Fritchie v. Company, 197 Pa. St. 401; Hoven v. Company, 93 Wis. 201; Anoka Lumber Co. v. Company, 63 Minn. 286; American etc. Co. v. Fordyce, 62 Ark. 562; Fidelity etc. Co. v. Fordyce, 64 Ark. 174; Fenton v. Company, 36 Or. 283. The phraseology of the agreement or covenant in the policy before the court differs materially from that of the policies construed in those cases. The decisions, therefore, are not directly in point.

If it be conceded that the contract is one of indemnity against damage merely, the question presented would not be whether an action at law is now maintainable by either the plaintiff or the Paper Company, but whether there is power in equity to grant the relief asked. But whether such power exists or not, the indemnitor has the right to perform his contract of indemnity by payment of the claim indemnified against. He may also, if he deems it necessary, stipulate for the right to perform the contract in this way, and may also agree that he will so perform it. If' there be any uncertainty as to the right of a creditor to claim payment in equity of one who has agreed to indemnify the debtor against his claim, there is no doubt of his right to do so against one who has assumed the debt or agreed to pay the claim. An agreement to assume a debt is a promise to pay it as the promisor’s, own debt. Locke v. Homer, 131 Mass. 98, 109. “If one person agrees with another to be primarily liable for a debt due from that other to a third person, so that as between the parties to the agreement the first is the principal and the second the surety, the creditor of such surety is entitled, in equity, to be substituted in his place for the purpose of compelling such principal to pay the debt.” Keller v. Ashford, 133 U. S. 610, 623. If the Insurance Company, by force of the policy and the plaintiff’s loss, are now indebted to the Paper Company, it is plainly equitable that such indebtedness should be applied to the satisfaction of the plaintiff’s *494 claim. It is equally clear that equity has power to make such application. Hunt v. Association, 68 N. H. 305. See, also, First Nat’l Bank v. Hunton, 70 N. H. 224; Barton v. Croydon, 63 N. H. 417; Holt v. Bank, 62 N. H. 551; Gerrish v. Gerrish, 62 N. H. 397; Keene etc. Bank v. Herrick, 62 N. H. 174.

These propositions do not appear to be seriously controverted; but the contention is, as has already been suggested, (1) that the insurers have not agreed to discharge the liability, and hence have not assumed the claim, and (2) that they do not now owe the Paper Company anything. The question for investigation is, therefore, the meaning of the policy ■ contract; and if the converse of either contention is sustained, the plaintiff is entitled to relief.

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Bluebook (online)
57 A. 655, 72 N.H. 485, 1904 N.H. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-frankfort-marine-accident-plate-glass-insurance-nh-1904.