Summary
In Foley et al. v. Manufacturers' Builders' Fire Ins. Co. of New York, 152 N.Y. 131, 46 N.E. 318, plaintiffs owned land upon which structures were being erected.
Summary of this case from Dubin Paper Co. v. Insurance Co. of North AmericaOpinion
Argued February 10, 1897
Decided March 2, 1897
Frank Hiscock for appellant.
William P. Goodelle for respondents.
The sole question in this case is whether the plaintiffs had an insurable interest equal to the full value of the incomplete buildings in course of construction on their lot when the fire occurred. It is the contention on the part of the defendant that, as the houses were being constructed under a contract by which the contractors were to furnish the materials and build the houses (above the foundations), and to complete them by a time specified, which had not expired at the time of the fire, for a specified sum to be paid within ten days after their completion, the plaintiffs had no interest to protect in the structures while in their incomplete state, since their destruction by fire would be the loss of the contractors and not of the owners, whose obligation to build and complete the houses, as the condition of payment, would continue after as before the fire. It may be admitted that the contractors would remain bound by the contract, notwithstanding the destruction of the buildings by fire, and that the owners would not be bound to pay for the work done or materials supplied up to the time of the fire. ( Tompkins v. Dudley, 25 N.Y. 272. ) The contention of the defendant rests upon a misconception of the insurer's contract and as to the insurable interest of the plaintiffs in the structures. The defendant, by its contract, undertook to insure the plaintiffs against loss by fire, not exceeding the sum specified to the "described property," the loss or damage to be ascertained "according to the actual cash value" of the property at the time of the fire. The parties by this contract made the value of the property insured, within the limit, the measure of the insurer's liability. It is an undoubted principle in fire insurance that there must be an insurable interest in the insured, or an insurable interest which he represents in the subject of insurance, existing at the time of the happening of the event insured against to enable him to maintain an action on a fire policy. This flows from the nature of the contract of fire insurance, which is a contract of indemnity; and where there is no interest there is no room for indemnity. The plaintiffs had an interest in the subject of insurance both at the inception of the contract and at the time of the fire. They owned the land upon which the structures were being erected. They themselves had constructed the foundations of the buildings, and in describing the property insured the foundations were specifically named. They were in possession of the premises, and the ownership of the fee of the land on which the contractors were erecting the buildings carried with it the ownership of the structures as they progressed, which, according to the general rule of law, became part of the realty by annexation. It is not claimed, nor could it upon the evidence be claimed, that there was any intention either on the part of the owners or the contractors to sever the ownership of the structures from the ownership of the land while the work was in progress or that the contractors should retain title to the materials put into the buildings until their completion. The defendant is compelled to admit that the loss sued for is within the exact terms of the policy. It is conceded that the recovery does not exceed the property loss occasioned by the fire, and if counsel can be deemed to have denied that the legal ownership of the structures was in the owners of the land at the time of the fire, the denial is very indistinct and certainly is not justified by the facts or the law. The defense comes to this: That as the plaintiffs, by their contract with third persons, have imposed upon them the risk and expense of furnishing complete structures, and have assumed no liability until the structures are completed, they had no insurable interest and have sustained no loss. But the contract relations between the plaintiffs and the contractors is a matter in which the defendant has no concern. When the policy was issued it could not be known whether the contractors would perform their contract. If they abandoned it the owners would derive such advantage as would accrue from the partial construction of the buildings prior to such abandonment. It is possible that if the defendant is compelled to pay the policy the plaintiffs may, if they insist upon their rights against the contractors, get double compensation, unless they should be adjudged to hold the fund recovered for the contractors. But, however this may be, the owners had an insurable interest to the whole value of the buildings on their land, and the defendants neither can compel the plaintiffs to put the loss on the contractors, nor can they resort to the terms of the building contract to diminish the liability for an actual loss within the terms of the policy.
The fact that improvements on land may have cost the owner nothing, or that if destroyed by fire he may compel another person to replace them without expense to him, or that he may recoup his loss by resort to a contract liability of a third person, in no way affects the liability of an insurer, in the absence of any exemption in the policy. (See Clover v. Greenwich Ins. Co., 101 N.Y. 277; Kernochan v. N.Y. Bowery F. Ins. Co., 17 id. 428; Riggs v. C.M. Ins. Co., 125 id. 7; International Trust Co. v. Boardman, 149 Mass. 158.)
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur, except MARTIN and VANN, JJ., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed.