80 N.Y. 21 | NY | 1880
We are of opinion that the condition in the policy, that the company shall not be liable "if without *22
the consent of the company written on the policy, the property (insured) shall hereafter become incumbered in any way," is to be construed as referring to incumbrances created by the act of the insured, and has no application to incumbrances by judgment, or otherwise in invitum, created by operation of law. We think the condition has the same meaning as if it had provided that the policy should be void if the assured should in any way incumber the property without the written consent of the company. The language used implies that the consent of the company which will prevent the avoidance of the policy, is to precede the creation of the incumbrance. This condition of things has no proper application to the case of judgments which may be obtained by third persons against the insured, but only to incumbrances created by his voluntary act. The provision for consent was not intended primarily to relieve the insured from a forfeiture incurred, but to prevent the incurring of a forfeiture. It is not reasonable to suppose that the parties intended to provide for the consent of the company in advance to the rendition of a judgment against the insured in favor of third persons. If the condition embraces incumbrances by judgment, then in case of an insurance upon real property the moment a judgment is rendered, and the lien attaches to the insured property, a forfeiture occurs, and the contract of insurance is at an end, unless the company consents to re-instate it, by waiving the forfeiture, and this too, although the land cannot be sold on the judgment until an execution against personal property is returned unsatisfied. If incumbrances created by operation of law, are within the condition, the imposition of a tax on the insured property would create a forfeiture of the insurance, and the result would be that each year on the tax-rolls being completed, and put into the hands of the proper officers, for the collection of the taxes imposed, the insurances of the company on real property would beipso facto terminated, taxes being an incumbrance on the land taxed (Barlow v. St. Nicholas Nat. Bank,
The language of the condition in question fairly interpreted, does not extend to incumbrances created by law. To so construe it would defeat the contract of insurance in cases which could not have been contemplated. The defendant is claiming a forfeiture. When a clause in a contract is capable of two constructions, one of which will support, and the other defeat the principal obligation, the former will be preferred. Forfeitures are not favored, and the party claiming a forfeiture will not be permitted, upon equivocal or doubtful clauses, or words contained in his own contract, to deprive the other party of the benefit of the right or indemnity for which he contracted. In Egan v.Mutual Ins. Co. (5 Denio, 326), the condition was to the effect that the policy should be void if the insured should suffer any judgment, etc., unless he notified the company thereof, in which case, the power was reserved by the company to assent thereto, or to cancel the policy. This was a reasonable provision, and a defense founded thereon was sustained by the court, but the case has no bearing upon the one now before us.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *24