180 A. 249 | N.H. | 1935
The defendant contends that the indorsement-provision attached to the mutual policy to the effect that the insurance shall not be available to one who carries other collectible insurance *376 conflicts with the provisions of section 1 of Chapter 54 of the Laws of 1927 which provides that a "Motor Vehicle Liability Policy" in order to conform to the requirements of that act must cover the insured and any person responsible for the operation of the insured's motor vehicle with his express or implied consent. It is claimed that the terms of this statute were made a part of the insurance contract between the plaintiff and the Murray company, since the policy contained the special provision that "If any of the Agreements, Conditions or Declarations of this Policy are at variance with any special statutory provision in force in the state within which coverage is granted, such specific statutory provision shall supersede any such Agreement, Condition or Declaration of this Policy inconsistent therewith."
The act of 1927 does not compel the owner of an automobile to carry liability insurance. Sauriolle v. O'Gorman,
The purpose of chapter 54 is simply to induce motor-vehicle operators to provide security to persons injured by their negligence. To attain this result the court is authorized on preliminary inquiry concerning an accident to order a defendant to furnish security, and if the defendant fails to obey the order, his license to operate and the registration of his car are forthwith suspended (s. 3). The security which the court is empowered to order may be in the form of "cash, bonds, stocks, or other evidences of indebtedness satisfactory to the court" (s. 10), and the court is required to accept as a sufficient compliance with any order for security, a certificate of an insurance company to the effect that the defendant carries a liability policy in the amount and form designated by the act or the certificate of a surety company that it has issued to the defendant a motor vehicle liability bond containing the requisite provisions (s. 4).
It is thus apparent that the sections of the act relating to the form and coverage of motor-vehicle liability policies have reference to those policies which entitle the insured to a certificate and cannot reasonably be interpreted to mean that every motor-vehicle liability policy issued in New Hampshire shall be subject to the provisions *377
of the act whether those provisions are contained in the policy or not. As stated by the trial court in Sheldon v. Bennett,
The "financial responsibility acts" of New York and Rhode Island have received a very similar interpretation. Cohen v. Insurance Co.
The question here presented was not raised in the case of Raymond v. Insurance Co.,
In accordance with the agreement of the parties the order is
Judgment for the plaintiff for $1,055.67.
All concurred. *378