Starke J. I agree that this appeal must be allowed. It
long been settled in insurance law that an insured who gives securi
whether by way of bill of sale or otherwise, over the subject matter
insured, retains an insurable interest in the full value of that property
(Alston v. Campbell (2); Ward v. Beck (3); Hibbert v. Carter (4) %
The question is whether the conditions and stipulations in clause
No. 9 (d) in the policy in this case have made a contrary provision.
Tt cannot, I think, be approached without some reference to the
history of legal opinion upon fire insurance. Fire policies, it has
been said, "are not in their nature assignable, for they are only
contracts to make good the loss which the contracting party himself
shall sustain; nor can the interest in them be transferred from one
person to another without the consent of the office" (Park on
Insurance, 8th ed., p. 978, and note Form VII. in App. Cl, 1034;
Lynch v. Dalzell (5); Sadlers' Company v. Badcock (6); Bank of
New South Wales v. North British and Mercantile Insurance Co.
(7) ). In many cases, the assent of the company may, as pointe
out by Shaw C.J. in Fogg v. Middlesex Mutual Life Insurance Oo.
(8), create "a new and original contract, embracing all the elements
of a contract of insurance between the assignee and the insurers."
On the other hand, high authorities have suggested that there is
apparent reason why a fire policy should not be assignable with
subject matter, as readily as a marine policy has always bee
(Porter on Insurance, 6th ed., p. 302; Rayner v. Preston (9);
Bank of New South Wales v. North British and Mercantile Insurance
Co.). But most policies of fire insurance do in fact contain