Zaharias v. Vassis

789 S.W.2d 906, 1989 Tenn. App. LEXIS 805
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 8, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 789 S.W.2d 906 (Zaharias v. Vassis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zaharias v. Vassis, 789 S.W.2d 906, 1989 Tenn. App. LEXIS 805 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

NEARN, Special Judge, Retired.

This suit was brought to determine the liability of the insurance company to the mortgagee named in the policy. The Chancellor found in favor of the mortgagee and the insurer has appealed.

Plaintiff, Harry Zaharias, owned a restaurant in Jamestown, Tennessee, of late, known as Angelo’s Pizza and Steak House. Zaharias hired his fellow countryman from Greece, the defendant Angelo Vassis, to work in the restaurant. Vassis managed the restaurant and later came to own a half-interest in the restaurant business with Zaharias. Later on, Vassis desired to acquire Zaharias' interest in the restaurant business as well as the building and land owned by Zaharias where the business was located. The parties reached a “lock, stock and barrel” agreement for $190,000, that is, Zaharias agreed to sell his interest in the restaurant business and to sell the real estate upon which the business operated for said sum. There was no breakdown of the separate value of the things sold.

The parties agreed that Vassis would borrow $100,000 from The American Bank and Trust Company of Cookeville, Tennessee and that Zaharias would sign the note with the bank as an accommodation maker to assist Vassis in the acquisition of those funds. Additionally, Zaharias agreed to carry a $90,000 second mortgage (behind the bank’s first mortgage) to secure the payment of the balance owed. The first mortgage or trust deed conveyed the real property as security and the second mortgage or trust deed conveyed the same real property as security as well as the building contents. Under the terms of both trust deeds, it was the duty of Vassis to keep the secured property insured. Vassis contacted the insurance agent who had been carrying the coverage and advised, in somewhat broken English, that he was the owner of the business, land, building and all and that he wanted “full coverage insurance” and “to bring the first mortgage and for American Bank & Trust in Cookeville, and second mortgage on Mr. Zaharias.” The record reveals that there was no specific statement to the agent that the personal property was secured by the Trust Deed or that in addition to describing the personal property in the Trust Deed, Zaharias had also filed a financing statement under the UCC securing the personal property. The policy was issued insuring from loss by fire and other perils, the building in the amount of $148,500 and contents in the amount of $100,000, with Vassis as the named insured and showing the bank as first “mortgagee” and Zaharias as second “mortgagee”. The binder which was issued indicated the status of the parties by means of a “block” where the party having a security interest could be designated as “mortgagee” or “loss payee”. The block designating “mortgagee” was checked.

The property burned. The insurer has paid its liability under the policy for loss to the real property but has refused to pay to Zaharias for the loss of the personal property. The insurer has refused to pay on the grounds that it is not obligated to pay under the policy because Zaharias was designated as a “mortgagee” in the policy and not a “loss payee”. The policy contains a “Mortgage Clause” which provides that it “Applies only to building items and is effective only when policy is made payable to a named mortgagee or trustee.” Under the terms of the policy, “building items” includes the building and certain permanently affixed items such as heating and air-conditioning units. The clause appears to be a standard one and provides among other things that the policy “shall not be [908]*908invalidated by any act or neglect of the mortgagor or owner of the within described property, nor by any foreclosure or other proceedings.”

After the fire, Zaharias foreclosed on his second mortgage (the first having been satisfied by insurance, but only a portion of the second having been so satisfied). The foreclosure by Zaharias included the foreclosure of the personal property and Zaha-rias was the highest and best bidder for the remains of both. The bill of sale covering the remnants of the fixtures included “all of Angelo Vassis and Saundra Vassis’ interests in the fixtures and equipment.”

As we read plaintiffs complaint, recovery is based upon any one or combination of three theories. The first is that as a listed mortgagee, under the terms of the policy, he is entitled to recover. The second is that as purchaser of the damaged contents at the foreclosure sale he became the owner or assignee of the claim for insurance proceeds for the damaged contents and that “based on the Security Agreement, Bill of Sale, and Tennessee Uniform Commercial Code, Harry Zaharias maintains he has the legal right as assign-ee, purchaser and successor in interest to Angelo and Saundra Vassis’ ownership of the damaged contents to pursue the claim under the insurance policy.” Thirdly, plaintiff claims an interest in the policy proceeds available to cover damage to the contents on general equitable principles and as a third party beneficiary of the insurance contract.

The defendant insurer denied that Zaha-rias was entitled to any payment for content loss under the insurance contract and denied that Mr. and Mrs. Vassis were entitled to receive any proceeds for damage to the contents of the property. Further, that Zaharias could not be the owner or assign-ee of any claim against the policy as it specifically provided that “assignment of this policy shall not be valid except with the written consent of this company.”

The Chancellor concluded as follows:

1.Harry Zaharias had a legal and equitable mortgage or lien on all of the contents of Angelo’s Pizza & Steak House at the time of the fire.
2. Harry Zaharias was a third party beneficiary of the insurance policy and had a lien on the insurance proceeds from the collateral.
3. The insurance company’s defenses under the terms of the mortgage clause and non-assignment clause do not apply in this case, particularly given the equitable principles which the Court is required to apply.

We concur in the Chancellor’s conclusion that Zaharias had a legal and equitable mortgage or lien on the building contents at the time of the fire. However such conclusion is certainly not determinative of the case. The question to be determined is whether that interest of Zaharias is protected by the policy. We do not concur in the Chancellor’s conclusion that Zaharias is a third party beneficiary of the insurance policy.

There is no doubt from this record that as a matter of fact, both Vassis and Zaharias intended that the interest of Zaharias in both the real and personal property be protected under the insurance policy. However, it is as equally free from doubt that their mutual intent was never communicated to the insurer. The insurer was told only that Zaharias occupied the status of mortgagee, with no mention of the fact that Zaharias held an interest in the personal property. While it must be conceded that personal property may be the subject of a mortgage, the proof in the record is that in the insurance industry the term “mortgagee” applies only to real property and the term “loss payee” is used in regard to another who has an interest in personal property. We understand the law of this state to be that it is necessary, in order to be considered a third party beneficiary, for the party seeking such status to show that he was contemplated as such by the contracting parties. Wilson Estate v. Arlington Auto Sales,

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Bluebook (online)
789 S.W.2d 906, 1989 Tenn. App. LEXIS 805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zaharias-v-vassis-tennctapp-1989.