Smith v. Royal Ins.

5 F. Supp. 435, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1231
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedDecember 9, 1933
DocketNo. 19382
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 5 F. Supp. 435 (Smith v. Royal Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Royal Ins., 5 F. Supp. 435, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1231 (N.D. Cal. 1933).

Opinion

KERRIGAN, District Judge.

The plaintiff is suing upon a policy of insurance in the sum of $15,000 upon his “leasehold interest” in certain real property on the shore of the town of Belvedere. The company refused payment of the policy on the ground that the plaintiff had no lease of the property and no insurable interest therein, which was the sole defense relied on at the time of the trial.

The nature of plaintiff’s tenure of the property is most unusual and can only be understood in the light of a full statement of the facts. Plaintiff was the owner of a valuable house of considerable beauty known as “The Anchorage” and regarded as one of the show places of Belvedere. The house stood on land of which he was not the owner. This house was built by Hugo D. Keil prior to 1896 when certain dealings in connection with the land were commenced, a transaction which will be discussed in detail later. In 1910 Keil deeded the house to a Mrs. Bland; in 1928 plaintiff purchased the house from the trustee under the will of Mrs. Bland. Both deeds passed title to the house with its appurtenances, wharf, float, and outhouses; but neither deed makes any reference to any leasehold or other interest in the land upon which the property is located.

The house, as shown by maps introduced in evidence, stood in part on property which originally belonged to the Belvedere Land Company, and in part on property which [436]*436originally belonged to a man named Coleman. All of this property now belongs to tbe town of Belvedere. There is no evidence as to the terms of the agreement of lease between Keil and the Belvedere Land Company. It is apparent that there was such an agreement, for Keil invested his capital in the construction of the house. On September 14, 1896, at a meeting of the Belvedere Land Company, a corporation, a resolution was adopted expressing the intention of deeding certain water-front land to the town of Belvedere if and when it should be incorporated “to be held by the town in trust for the use of all its people as a general public beach or parkway,” upon certain conditions and reservations. On March 12, 1897, the town having been incorporated, the deed was executed and was subsequently recorded. In the deed the resolution of intention was quoted and the deed was made expressly subject to the reservations and conditions of the recited resolution, providing further that if any of the conditions be at any time broken the title to the property would at once revert to the Belvedere Land Company. The reservations and conditions that are material to this controversy are the following: The reservation “of all rents collected by the said town for the use of any portion of said strip of land and particularly of the land rents paid by the owners of the Keil, Crocker and Magill cottages and the owners of the Red and White Cottages.” The condition “that no private structure other than private wharves, boat houses or bathing houses * * * shall be permitted to stand wholly or partially upon said land and that neither of the five private residences or cottages now standing upon said beach shall be renewed in case of destruction by fire or otherwise and that said cottages shall remain thereon as long and subject to such conditions as shall be determined by said town.” The condition “that if any of the conditions of this grant when made axe violated the said strip of land shall revert to the company.”

The deed was formally accepted by the board of trustees of the town. A search was made of the minutes of the board of trustees of ’the town of Belvedere, and no record was found of any reference to the terms of any lease of the land upon which the Keil or other cottages stood. In July, 1898, the town marshal was instructed to post a notice to the effect that no structures might be erected or arks or sailing craft moored or beached on this property. In June, 1899, there was another reference to this property and the tide lands adjacent to it. In a resolution the board of trustees recognized the rights of the owners to the wharves privately constructed as well as the rights of the public to the use of the beach and wharves, providing that the owners might not shut off the wharves from public use by gates, etc., but might construct gates barring the public “at such points as said wharves, or the approaches to them, join private property.” The public was given the right of passage over the wharves, but not the right to moor boats or store property on the privately owned wharves. I mention this in detail because it shows the disposition to recognize the rights of the owners of structures on the public land to remain there and receive certain protection.

October 3, 1928, we find the next reference to the property, when the plaintiff was granted a permit to make extensive alterations and repairs to the cottage. Pursuant to this permit, he spent a large sum of money, approximately $25,000, in improving the house and garden. May 6, 1929, plaintiff’s application for a permit to build a garage was refused on the ground that it was a new structure and the deed prohibited the erection of any new structures on the land. Plaintiff paid the taxes on the house and improvements and paid a monthly rental of $3 for the ground directly to the land company, to which it was reserved. This was apparently the rent that had been paid by plaintiff’s predecessors. It was paid to September 30, 1932, and was paid more than four months in advance when the house was destroyed by fire May 17, 1932.

The other piece of real property upon ■which the structures belonging to plaintiff stood was known as the Coleman water lot No. 21, which adjoined the lot just referred to. In 1909, a lease of this lot was executed by the trustee of the Coleman estate to Keil. It was a year to year lease for an annual rental of $1 with a clause that the lessor might terminate it at any time upon thirty days’ written notice. This lot was included in a purchase of property by the town of Belvedere in 1924 to provide a place for the public mooring of water craft, the funds having been provided by a bond issue.

In 1929 plaintiff took out various policies insuring the house and its contents against fire, earthquake, etc. July 12, 1929, plaintiff received the poliey of insurance in question executed by defendant company. It is what is known as a valued poliey in the sum of $15,000 upon plaintiff’s leasehold interest in the property. It provided in substance that if the house were destroyed by fire and the léase canceled for that reason and no [437]*437re-lease could be obtained, that tbe whole of the insurance should be payable to plaintiff. It further provided that there should be no loss payable “except as a result of fire of sufficient extent to cause the cancellation of the lease.” The circumstances under which the policy was written will be discussed later in connection with the admissibility of the testimony concerning it.

May 17, 1932, the house and adjacent structures were destroyed by fire. It is conceded that it was a total loss and operated as a forfeiture of plaintiff’s right to maintain a structure upon the lands under the terms of the deed of 1897. Plaintiff asked the town for permission to rebuild the house, and permission was refused on the ground that to grant it would cause the property to revert to the Belvedere Land Company. Plaintiff also sought permission from the land company, the reversioner under the deed, and it likewise refused.

It is apparent that plaintiff did not have what is commonly known as a “lease,” namely, a written agreement for the hiring of real property for a fixed term at an agreed rental.

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Lee v. North Dakota Park Service
262 N.W.2d 467 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1977)
College of the Virgin Islands v. Vitex Manufacturing Co.
5 V.I. 34 (Municipal Court of The Virgin Islands, 1965)
Smith v. Royal Ins.
26 F. Supp. 238 (N.D. California, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 F. Supp. 435, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-royal-ins-cand-1933.