24 N.Y. 302 | NY | 1862
This case comes up on a state of facts essentially different from that of the same case as reported in
This state of facts would seem properly proved in the case within the decision in
If this be so, then there is no breach of the warranty against liens on the interest insured. And the company remains *304 liable just as it agreed to be, and for just what it agreed to be. Indeed it is not easy to perceive why an insurance company, by reason of the formal words or clauses (of a general and comprehensive nature), inserted in a policy intended to meet broad classes of contingencies, should ever be allowed to avoid liability on the ground that facts, of which the company had full knowledge at the time of issuing the policy, were then not in accordance with the formal words of the contract, or some of its multifarious conditions. If such facts are to be held a breach of such a clause, they are a breach eo instanti of the making of the contract, and are so known to be by the company as well as the insured. And to allow the company to take the premium without taking the risk would be to encourage a fraud. It would, as a legal principle, be equivalent to holding that a warranty of the soundness of a horse is a warranty that he has four legs, when one has been cut off.
The decision of the general term of the Superior Court of Buffalo should be affirmed, and judgment final should be given for the plaintiff.
SELDEN, Ch. J., and ALLEN, J., did not sit in the case; all the other judges concurring,
Judgment affirmed.