DocketNumber: No. 261.
Judges: Browa
Filed Date: 3/18/1895
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
For the purpose of deciding the question presented, the following is a sufficient statement of the case:
The plaintiffs in error and S.N. Allison constituted a copartnership for the purpose of carrying on a gin business, under the firm name of Allison, Bailey Co. The firm bought machinery from the Keating Implement Company of Dallas to the amount of $2900, and executed two firm notes, each for $1450, payable, one due December 1, 1888, and the other December 1, 1889. The machinery was placed in a house owned by the firm, situated on land belonging to and the homestead of S.N. Allison. The two notes to the Keating Implement Company were secured by a chattel mortgage upon the machinery. After the notes were given, S.N. Allison purchased the machinery and the house from the other members of the firm, and agreed to pay the debts of the firm, including the Keating Implement Company debt. By agreement at the time of the sale of the machinery, the plaintiffs were to have a lien upon the machinery and building to secure their liability on the Keating Implement Company debt, and it was agreed that the property should be insured for the purpose of securing that debt.
S.N. Allison procured the defendant in error to issue a policy for $1500 on the machinery and buildings, payable to Allison, Bailey *Page 595 Co., explaining the condition of the property to the agent. S.N. Allison paid the premium.
The property insured was destroyed by fire, and notice given and proof of loss forwarded in due time. After the destruction of the property, S.N. Allison paid the debt to the Keating Implement Company, to secure which the policy was procured. The assurance company refused to pay the policy, and suit was instituted in the District Court in the names of the assured, Allison, Bailey Co., and judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs below. The Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment of the District Court, and rendered judgment for the defendant.
The defendant in error, appellant in the Court of Civil Appeals, presented a number of assignments, all of which except one involved questions of fact, upon which there was a conflict in the evidence, and we therefore can not examine them.
The defendant in error presents, by its first assignment of error in the Court of Civil Appeals, the proposition of law, that the payment of the debt due from Allison, Bailey Co. to the Keating Implement Company after the fire, discharged the assurance company from liability on the policy. The proposition seems to be based upon the conclusion, drawn from the evidence by the counsel, that the policy was procured by Allison, Bailey Co. for their own benefit; but the conclusions of the Court of Civil Appeals do not sustain this proposition of fact, and the law as asserted by defendant in error is not applicable to the facts of this case.
Under the facts found by the Court of Civil Appeals, when S.N. Allison paid the debt due the Keating Implement Company he was subrogated to the rights of Allison, Bailey Co. in the policy of insurance. The payment did not discharge the insurer from liability on the policy of insurance. Sheldon on Subrog., sec. 235.
The Court of Civil Appeals correctly held that S.N. Allison was subrogated to the rights of Allison, Bailey Co., and the person beneficially interested in the policy of insurance, but erroneously concluded that for that reason Allison, Bailey Co. could not maintain a suit upon the policy.
The right to the proceeds of the policy as between S.N. Allison and Allison, Bailey Co. is not in issue in this case. The defendant did not claim that it had any defense against the policy as against S.N. Allison that could not be made available in this suit, and in fact if it had any interest in the disposition of the fund it could have asked that S.N. Allison be made a party to the suit; but no such claim was made.
It is a general rule applicable to all written contracts, that he who has the legal title may maintain an action upon it, notwithstanding another may have the equitable right to the proceeds of it when collected. *Page 596
Thompson v. Cartright,
This court has applied this rule to actions upon policies of life insurance. Ins. Co. v. Williams,
In this case the insurance company contracted with S.N. Allison to pay the money in case of loss to Allison, Bailey Co. It has not paid to any one, and while S.N. Allison might intervene and claim the proceeds, yet it does not concern the defendant what disposition is made of the proceeds, unless it had some equitable claim against S.N. Allison to be offset, or some defense that it could not make in this action, which could not be the case under the facts presented. S.N. Allison acted for Allison, Bailey Co. as well as for himself in procuring the policy, and defendant presented as a defense in this suit the alleged fraud of S.N. Allison, which is the only right claimed against him. It has been denied no right.
The Court of Civil Appeals erred in reversing and rendering the judgment, and it is ordered that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals be reversed, and the judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Judgment of the District Court affirmed.
Delivered March 18, 1895. *Page 597
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