When this cause was here on a former appeal the questions now presented for review by this record were not presented or decided. Capital City Ins. Co. v. Jones, 122 Ala. 421.
On the 3rd day of January, 1894, one Livennan made. an assignment of all his property to one J. P. Etheridge for the benefit of 'certain of his creditors, not including among them the National Building and Loan Association. In the list of property conveyed, was a storehouse. and lot owned and occupied by him, upon which was a mortgage to the National Building and Loan Association for $1,000. As to this house and lot, it is expressly provided in the deed of assignment, that only the equity of redemption is conveyed. By the terms of th mortgage given by Liverman to the National Building and Loan Association, which mortgage was recognized as valid, substituting and binding upon him to keep this storehouse insured in some reliable insurance company for at least fifteen hundred dollars, pav•able in case of loss to the association to the amount *363secured by the mortgage. On the 5th of May following, J. P. Etheridge, assignee, procured the issuance of the policy of insurance sued upon. This policy was for' $1,000 -upon the storehouse in which he acquired by the deed of assignment the equity of redemption — the right to pay off and discharge the mortgage to the National Building and Loan Association. It would >seem that, for the purpose of carrying out the mortgage contract imposing the obligation to insure -the house for the benefit of the mortgagee, there was inserted in the body of the policy this clause: “Any loss occurring under this policy will be due and payable to the National Building and Loan Association of Montgomery, Ala., mortgagees, as their interest may appear, balance, if any, to J. P. Etheridge, assignee of W. E. Liverman, for the use of the creditors of the said W. E. Liverman, named in his deed of assignment now recorded in the office, of'the judge of probate of Conecuh county, Ala.”
On the 6th of November, 1894, the house was destroyed by fire. Its value is shown to have been about $2,000, making the amount due upon the policy, $1,000, its face value.
In November, 1895, Etheridge-transferred the policy to the plaintiff who became his successor by appointment of the chancery court to administer the trust estate and who instituted and-prosecuted this suit, which resulted, upon the trial, in a. judgment in his favor for the full amount of the. policy.
There was, at the time the loss became due and payable under.the policy, due upon -the mortgage, if we accept the plaintiff’s construction of the evidence, the sum of $888 and some cents. The contention of the defendant, however, is that the evidence undisputedly, and beyond adverse inference, shows, that there- was due upon the mortgage the -sum of $1,000- — an amount equal to the amount of the policy. This contention is based upon the-stipulation in the mortgage providing for the application of the monthly payments made under it. Under these stipulations, these monthly payments did not go in reduction of the principal of the debt secured by the mortgage. — Southern Building & Loan Asso. v. *364Anniston Loan and Trust Co., 101 Ala. 582; Gwin v. National Building and Loan Asso., 126 Ala. 679; 25 So. Rep. 843.
It doubtless could be affirmed as a matter of law, that the monthly payments should be applied as agreed upon in the mortgage contract, in the absence of all evidence, that they had not been applied to the principal sum and interest thereon secured by the mortgage. Rut there is no rule of law or of public policy which prohibits their application on the mortgage debt, instead of upon the stock subscribed for in the association by the mortgagor. If they were so applied hy the mortgagee and the mortgagor assented to their application, they go to reduce the amount due upon the mortgage debt. Whether they were so applied is a question for the jury under the evidence in this case.
If the amount due upon the mortgage was equal to or exceeded the loss under the policy of insurance, the National Building and Loan Association or its assignee, being the exclusive beneficial owner of the whole money due by defendant, is the only person entitled to recover it. After the loss became fixed, “the policy was nothing other than a contract for the payment of money.” — Code, § 280; Perry v. Merchants Ins. Co., 25 Ala. 355; Fire Ins. Companies v. Felrath, 77 Ala. 194; Baltis v. Dobin, 67 Barb. (N. Y.) 507; Pitney v. G. F. Ins. Co., 65 N. Y. 6; Donaldson v. Ins. Co., 95 Tenn. 280; Bartlett v. Iowa Ins. Co., 77 Ia. 186; Hanover F. Ins. Co. v. Brown & Son, 77 Md. 64; Motley v. Ins. Co., 29 Maine 337; Franklin v. National Ins. Co., 43 Mo. 491; Brown v. Ins. Company, 5 R. I. 394; Ins. Co. v. Chase, 5 Wall. 509; Flanders on Insurance, 588.
Fan the plaintiff maintain this action in the event the amount due upon the mortgage debt is less than the amount of the loss;, which we have shown was the face of the policy? In the case of Insurance Companies v. Felrath, supra, the policies contained the provision “Loss, if any, payable to Joseph Felrath, to the extent of his mortgage interest.” The amount due to Felrath at the time of the loss was less than the amount of the policies. The court, after recognizing the right *365of Felratli to recover liad tlie amount of Iris mortgage been equal to or exceeded tbe amount of tbe policies, said: “They [tbe policies] appointed tbe payment of a part of tire money to Felratli, in case of loss. Tliey did not appoint tbe payment of tbe entire sum, nor were tbe policies assigned. Tliey did not confer on Felratli a right, to sue for a part, and on Clark [tbe insured] tbe right to sue for tbe residue. That would have been to split one contract into two causes of action, which 'Can only be done by agreement of debtor and creditor, having that object in view.” It is obvious from this language that Felratli wras denied tbe right to maintain tbe suit because the court was of tlie opinion that tlie debtor, tbe insurance companies, bad not agreed ’to split tbe debt or cause of action, so as to entitle Felratli 'to maintain a suit for bis portion of tbe loss and Clark for bis part. I-Iad Clark brought tbe suit, tlie same process of reasoning would have defeated any recovery by him. For be could have no more been allowed to split tlie cause of action than Felratli. Tbe logical result of tbe bolding in that ease is, that Felratli and Clark should have brought a joint action. We are of tlie opinion that tbe decision is wrong on this point, and it is overruled. That the agreement on tbe part- of tbe insurance companies, tlie debtor, to pay to Felratli so much of tbe loss as was equal to the amount of bis mortgage debt and tlie balanee to Clark ivas a separate, independent and distinct promise to each — a splitting of tlie debt or cause of action by the debtor upon which each could maintain separate' suits for tbe amount due him. So in this ease, we bold that the plaintiff can maintain this suit for tbe balance, if any, of the loss, after deducting the amount due upon tbe mortgage at the time of the loss. This is tbe promise of tbe defendant and there is no good reason why it should not be enforced as made. — Palmer Savings Bank v. Ins. Co., 166 Mass. 189. This, of course, imposes the burden upon tbe plaintiff of showing there was a balance, after paying tbe mortgage, and tbe amount of such balance.
*366The rulings of the circuit court were not in conformity to these views, and the judgment must he reversed and the cause remanded.
.Tyson, J., not sitting.