Kentucky Farmers Mut. Ins. v. Mathers
Kentucky Farmers Mut. Ins. v. Mathers
Opinion of the Court
deliveked the opinion op the coukt.
The Kentucky Farmers Mutual Insurance Company, a corporation of which the late John H. Harney was a member at the time of his death, brought this suit in equity for the purpose of enforcing an alleged lien on a tract of land and building thereon, which were devised by said Harney to his widow, and sold and conveyed by her to John G. Mathers; the building and property of Harney having been insured by the plaintiff, for which he was indebted at his death in several sums assessed against him by the corporation, according to its charter and the terms of Harney’s contract of insurance.
A demurrer of Mathers to the petition was sustained and the action dismissed; and this appeal is prosecuted to reverse that judgment.
By the charter of the corporation the policy of Harney was rendered void, or at least voidable, at the option of the company, by the alienation of the property to Mathers. (Acts of 1857-8; Baer v. The Phoenix Insurance Co., 4 Bush, 242.) And the charter, besides imposing on each member of the corporation an obligation to pay his portion of its losses and expenses, provides as follows: “ All buildings insured by and with said company, together with the right, title, and interest of the assured,.to the lands on which they stand, shall be pledged to the company, and the company shall have a lien thereon against the assured during the continuance of his or her policies.”
If it be conceded, as we think it ought, that the provision of the charter declaring the policies of the company void upon the alienation of the property insured, except in particular contingencies, means only that they may thereby become void
In the case of McCulloch and others against the Indiana Mutual Fire Insurance Company, 8 Blackford, 50, bearing a strong analogy to this so far as essential to this inquiry, the Supreme Court of Indiana held that the lien of the insurance company was lost by an alienation of the property insured; and the court, commenting on the private character of the books and papers of the corporation, said: “We can not believe it was the design of the legislature to subject purchasers to the operation of a lien the existence of which they had no sure means of ascertaining.”
We are of the opinion therefore that the demurrer of Mathers was properly sustained.
Wherefore the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.