By the Court
— Daniels, J.The sole, consideration for the defendant’s note to the company was the agreement contained in the policy, to insure his property; and when that was terminated by a sale of the subject of the insurance it was con*303templated by the charter that the liability of the company under its agreement should cease, and that the defendant should incur no liability to contribute to the payment of losses occurring after that time. By the express provisions of the charter he continued to be a member of the company only so long as he continued to be insured by it. And when the property owned by him and insured by it, was alienated by sale, it was declared that the policy should be void and be surrendered to the company to be canceled ; and upon such surrender he should be entitled to receive his note upon the simple condition of paying his proportion of the losses and expenses occurring prior to such surrender. These provisions clearly intended that both the liability of the company upon its policy and the future liability of the defendant upon his note, should be terminated by force of the act of selling the subject-matter of the insurance. If he failed to surrender the policy as he was required to do by the charter when he made such sale, neither the liability of the company nor his own, could be prolonged by such failure-; for no such consequence as a continuance of his liability for future losses was in that event provided for by the charter. The only consequence resulting from such failure would be that he could not secure the actual surrender of his note upon the payment of his proportion of prior losses and expenses. Without surrendering it the policy would become void by reason of the sale, and as the policy formed the only consideration for the note, the liability of the maker of it for future losses would necessarily cease from that time. (Tuckerman v. Bigler, 46 Barb., 315.) That this was the design of the provisions inserted in the charter upon the subject -is shown by the right secured to the alienee. For, after the purchase of the property insured, he, upon securing an assignment of the policy, could have it ratified and confirmed to him for his own benefit, on giving proper security, to the satisfaction of the directors, for the portion of the premium note remaining unpaid. And it was provided in the charter, that upon such ratification and confirmation, the alienee should *304be entitled to all the privileges, and be subject to all the liabilities to which the original party to whom the policy was given was entitled and subjected under the charter. These are the only legal consequences resulting from the revival of the insurance in favor of the alienee; and the continued liability of the vendor is not among them. On the other hand, the revival of his liability is plainly inconsistent with the results declared and provided for. Because the assignee and vendee is to become subject to all the liabilities of the original party, upon the policy being revived and continued in his favor. And that could not be true, if the person originally insured still continued liable upon his note. But beyond that, the charter provided that the vendee and assignee could have the policy ratified, and confirmed to him for his own use and benefit, not for the use or benefit of the vendor, and not upon his deposit note, but solely upon the assignee and vendee furnishing the proper security for that purpose. By that means the policy rendered void by the sale could be revived as an insurance in favor of the assignee and vendee. He was provided with the means of rendering it an insurance in his own favor, for which it would have been entirely unreasonable, as well as unjust, to have imposed a liability for the premium upon the vendor.
This view of the charter is confirmed by the mode in which the business was actually transacted. Bor the note taken by the company from the vendee was in form precisely the same as that taken when the policy was issued, from the defendant. This note, and the revival of the policy by the confirmation and ratification of the company was, in legal effect, a new contract between it and the vendee of the insured property. Bor it rendered the company liable to pay him for any loss incurred by means of injury to the property by fire during the future portion of the term mentioned in the policy, and bound him to pay the entire consideration for the insurance. And these new agreements were plainly designed to supply the places of those that had been avoided by the sale. The effect, of the sale of the property, the *305assignment of the policy, and its revival as an insurance to the vendee upon the liability of the defendant on his note, was not changed by the circumstance that he afterward, with the assent of the company, received an assignment of the policy as pollateral security for a debt owing him by the assured. For it was no part of that transaction, that he should continue to be liable to the company upon his own note. The charter required no such continuance of his liability, in order to entitle him to hold the policy as a mere security, when it was in fact an insurance upon the property owned by the assignor. It was only when the assignee -was also the purchaser of the insured property, and he desired to secure the revival of the policy, as an insurance for his own use and benefit, that the charter required him to secure the unpaid portion of the assignor’s premium note. A simple assignee of the policy as security, was within neither the language, nor the spirit of that portion of the charter.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.
Marvin and Talcott JJ., concurring. Judgment reversed.