78 N.Y. 462 | NY | 1879
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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *465
The complaint states two causes of action; one for loss by fire, of property insured by the defendant, the other for reformation of the application, upon the faith of which the policy issued. The policy provides that no action shall be sustained against the company under or by virtue of it, unless commenced within one year next after any claim shall accrue, and the omission to comply with its terms, is, I think, a conclusive answer to the complaint. That such condition is valid cannot now be questioned. (Ripley v. Ætna Ins Co.,
The loss occurred on the 8th of March, 1876, proofs of loss were duly served on the 8th of May, and as by the terms of the policy the amount thereof became payable in sixty days thereafter, the claim accrued on the 8th of July, 1876. The action was not commenced within a year thereafter, and the case is thus brought directly within the terms of the condition. Nothing occurred during the progress of the former suit to relieve the party from its effect. That was an action on the policy upon the grounds stated in the first cause of action herein. In it the plaintiff might have had all the relief which he now seeks, and with or without *467
the amendment, which the court gave him leave to make, he would have been entitled to recover, if the facts had been then established as they are now found to be. (Emory v. Pease,
I have not adverted to the former suit as being a bar to this, or in any way preventing the bringing of another, but to show that the present one was unnecessary so far as the enforcement of any legal or equitable right of the plaintiff is concerned. Nor do I think that the conduct of the defendant therein gives any new life to the plaintiff's cause of action. Doubtless the condition might be extended or waived by such acts of the insurer, as hindered or prevented the action, or induced the insured to suppose that a strict compliance therewith would not be insisted upon, but in such a case he must have acted in good faith, and been actually misled. (Ripley v. *468 Ætna Ins. Co.,
The plaintiff also relies upon the fact that the defendant's counsel extended the time within which the plaintiff might prepare his case, or bill of exceptions in the first action. There is no connection between the two events, nor was one the inducement of the other. An attorney may mitigate the rigor of practice in one suit without creating a new cause of action against his client.
It is further urged that the defendant should be estopped from asserting that the plaintiff had a remedy at law, so far at least as it effects the limitation of the time of commencing the action, because the defendant's counsel upon the trial of the first action insisted that the remedy of the plaintiff was in equity, and not at law. What the defendant's counsel did upon the former trial, and in the progress of it is binding upon his client so far as that action and its consequences are concerned, but no farther. It was not within the scope of his authority to change the rights of his client except so far as it might be done in that action; and by putting an end to that, he did not justify the commencement of another, nor could he create a cause of action which did not before exist. But although the court entertained the objection, the trial judge gave leave to amend. Instead of doing so the plaintiff elected to discontinue; this was not the fault of the defendant, yet it was still in the plaintiff's power to commence a new action before the expiration of the year; he did not do so, and for his omission the defendant is in no respect to blame.
The second cause of action, although in form for the reformation of the application is in fact to get rid of a defense interposed by the defendant, and so far, and for that purpose is unnecessary. Nor would the contract of insurance be other or different when the application is corrected, than it was before. (Maher v. Hibernian Ins. Co.,
The judgment of the General and Special Terms should therefore be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
All concur.
Judgment reversed.