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Union Ins. Soc. v. Consolidated Ice Co.

Supreme Court of Michigan
Dec 6, 1932
261 Mich. 35 (Mich. 1932)

Opinion

Docket No. 9, Calendar No. 36,412.

Submitted October 4, 1932.

Decided December 6, 1932.

Appeal from Calhoun; Hatch (Blaine W.), J. Submitted October 4, 1932. (Docket No. 9, Calendar No. 36,412.) Decided December 6, 1932.

Assumpsit by Union Insurance Society of Canton, Limited, a foreign corporation, and others against Consolidated Ice Company, Limited, a partnership association, and others, as subrogees under insurance policies. Cases consolidated for trial. Directed verdict and judgment for plaintiffs. Defendants appeal. Reversed, and new trial granted.

Charles H. Farrell and Claude J. Marshall, for plaintiffs.

Joseph W. McAuliffe, Howard W. Cavanagh, and Walter P. North, for defendants.


In these consolidated causes the plaintiff, Union Insurance Society of Canton, and three other insurers, hereinafter called plaintiff, insured against loss and damage by fire the ice house of defendant, Consolidated Ice Company. In June, 1923, the building was destroyed by fire. Plaintiff paid the total of insurance, $4,000, on the loss, averred to be $17,000, and received receipt, usual in form, of subrogation to that extent.

The fire, it appears, was due to negligence of City Ice Cold Storage Company. Insured commenced suit in its own name against such third party to recover the full damages. Counsel are agreed that plaintiff here, although not a party of record in such suit, encouraged it, giving aid. The suit was settled on December 24, 1925, ostensibly by parties thereto, but in fact with plaintiff's help and consent. By the settlement the suit was discontinued and the defendant there, City Company, signed a contract with insured, Consolidated Company, in part as follows:

"Prior to December 31, 1926, the defendant shall at its own cost erect on the demised premises in the same position as the burned house occupied a new ice house of the same size, dimensions and substantially the same construction and material as the old ice house."

Other provisions of the contract relate chiefly to a leasing by the City Company from the Consolidated Company of the building to be constructed.

In July, 1929, plaintiff brought this suit at law to recover back the insurance paid, and had directed verdict and judgment thereon for full amount of its claim, less insured's costs and expenses in connection with the suit against the City Company. Defendants have appealed.

Plaintiff's theory is that the insured recovered from the City Company full loss and damages, and also received the amount of insurance, and, therefore, the total recoveries exceed actual loss by the amount of insurance paid, less costs, and that plaintiff is entitled to the excess.

Defendants' position is that the contract with the City Company for the new building was executory merely, that the City Company breached it, did not erect the building agreed upon, but put up an inferior and nearly worthless structure, of which insured salvaged but $1,200 for lumber, and received by such executory contract not a building worth $17,000 but mere salvage $1,200, and insured contends that, as it received but a total of $5,200, less costs, on its loss of $17,000, it owes plaintiff nothing.

The court directed verdict at the conclusion of plaintiff's case, and refused defendants' offer of proof to support the defense sought to be made. In disposing of the case, verdict having been directed for plaintiff, we must assume defendants' evidence to be that offered and refused.

As to subrogation, we quote from note 41, L.R.A. (N.S.) 720:

"It is generally held, on the principle that a contract of insurance is only a contract of indemnity and that, upon payment of the loss, the insurer is subrogated to the insured's remedies against those liable for the loss, that an insurer which has paid a loss may recover from the insured any excess (not exceeding the amount paid as insurance) of the latter's actual loss remaining after the application of the insurance money, which he has recovered from a third person who was liable therefor."

And syllabus of Washtenaw Mutual Fire Ins. Co. v. Budd, 208 Mich. 483:

"Where the total amount received by the insured from the insurer and the wrongdoer, after deducting attorney's fees and costs, did not exceed the value of the property destroyed, the insurer was not entitled to subrogation against the insured to the judgment recovered against the wrongdoer."

Counsel on both sides concede this to be the rule.

Subrogation as covered here by the written contract is designed to be as broad as the law of subrogation. The statutory form of policy, 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 12572, provides that subrogation under the policy may extend not only to right of recovery against any party for loss and damage, but to all contractual rights against any third party.

From 5 Joyce on Insurance (2d Ed.), § 3572:

"Where the insured has entered into a contract with third parties, by the terms of which such third parties are liable to the insured for any loss or damage to the property insured, the insured will, upon payment of the loss, be entitled to be subrogated to the rights of the insured under the contract."

And, see, Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Pullman Southern Car Co., 139 U.S. 79 ( 11 Sup. Ct. 490).

The contract between insured and the City Company is within the above description, covers the subject-matter in question, and arose upon liability to the insured for the loss by fire. By consent and cooperation of the insurer it was taken in lieu of the claim for damages in the suit against the City Company. Insurer's asserted right of subrogation is as applicable to the contract as it had been to the claim for damages.

We are not in accord with the holding of the trial judge that insured, on this record, received full satisfaction for its loss by the execution and acceptance of the executory contract to restore the building, although there is authority tending to support such holding.

The theory of recovery is upon an equitable principle, and that is true whether the recovery be in equity or upon the equitable, assumpsit, count of money had and received. The insured should be charged in fixing its total recoveries on the basis of what of value it has received.

In Washtenaw Mutual Fire Ins. Co. v. Budd, supra, the insured was not chargeable on the face of a judgment obtained against the third party, wrongdoer, but for the net amount he, as judgment creditor, received in cash upon the judgment.

The author of a note, 36 A.L.R. 1277, says:

"Thus, in Darrell v. Tibbitts (1880), L. R. 5 Q. B. Div. (Ct. of Appeal) 560, where property leased by the insured was injured by an explosion caused by a gas leakage due to the negligence of the municipality, and the insurance was paid without knowledge by the insurer of the fact that the lessee was bound to make good such injuries, the insurer is, upon the lessee repairing the premises, entitled to recover back money paid to the landlord."

It will be noted that in the above the insured was held to answer, not on the contract of the lessee, but upon full performance of the contract.

See Shawnee Fire Ins. Co. v. Cosgrove, 86 Kan. 374 ( 121 P. 488, 41 L.R.A. [N. S.] 719); note, 36 A.L.R. 1267; note, 55 A.L.R. 926; 14 R. C. L. § 568, pp. 1404-1406; 33 C. J. p. 43.

In the case at bar, if the insured had recovered judgment in full against the City Company, insured would be held in determining the total of its recoveries only to the net amount received upon it. The situation is not worse for insured because it took, instead, an executory contract, a promise, of the City Company.

The tendered defense ought to have been permitted, and the total of insured's recoveries determined as here indicated. Whether the defense can be substantiated will be learned, of course, in a new trial. If the total amount actually received by insured from plaintiff and from City Company does not in fact exceed the value of the property destroyed, there can be no recovery here.

It is argued that insured had right to sue the City Company for breach of its contract. Insurer's claim of subrogation, as we have seen, extended to the contract, just as it theretofore had covered the claim for damages. There is no showing that insurer requested or sought action. It was free to act. The insured was not required "to take any special steps to protect the insurer." Washtenaw Mutual Fire Ins. Co. v. Budd, supra. Insurer was in as good a position to enforce subrogation in respect of the contract as it had been in respect of damages for the tort. If prejudice has resulted by reason of the failure to assert breach of contract against the City Company, it is no more the fault of insured than of insurer. Neither may blame the other.

Liability of remaining individual defendants, who were managers of defendant Consolidated Ice Company, a partnership association, is dependent upon section 13, Act No. 191, Pub. Acts 1877 (2 Comp. Laws 1929, § 9921), being in force when it is claimed a cause of action accrued, viz.: "December 24, 1924, or some time in 1925." The statute was repealed by Act No. 233, Pub. Acts 1923, and was not in effect at the time. Whitney Realty Co. v. Secretary of State, 228 Mich. 96.

Reversed, with costs to appellant. New trial granted.

McDONALD, POTTER, SHARPE, FEAD, WIEST, and BUTZEL, JJ., concurred. NORTH, J., did not sit.


Summaries of

Union Ins. Soc. v. Consolidated Ice Co.

Supreme Court of Michigan
Dec 6, 1932
261 Mich. 35 (Mich. 1932)
Case details for

Union Ins. Soc. v. Consolidated Ice Co.

Case Details

Full title:UNION INSURANCE SOCIETY OF CANTON v. CONSOLIDATED ICE CO

Court:Supreme Court of Michigan

Date published: Dec 6, 1932

Citations

261 Mich. 35 (Mich. 1932)
245 N.W. 563

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