4 N.Y.S. 925 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
The action was on a fire policy for the loss of a steam sawmill, in McKean county, Pa. Several defenses were set up by the answer, only two of which are insisted upon on this appeal, viz.: (1) That the plaintiffs have violated the condition of the policy in respect to rendering proofs of loss; (2) that the plaintiffs had no insurable interest in the property at the time of effecting the insurance. The omission to render proofs of loss until
Tlie other question is possibly one of more difficulty. It is made by the contract one of the conditions of the validity of the policy that the assured were, at the date of the insurance, the sole, absolute, and unconditional owners of the property insured. If not so the policy is declared to be void. The proofs and admission of the plaintiffs show that, at the date when the insurance was effected, the plaintiffs had no legal title to the property insured, but held it under a contract of sale. The contract was executed by the national State Bank of Elizabeth, H. J., as party of the first part, dated September 10,1881, and thereby the bank agreed to sell and convey the premises to the plaintiff George C. Carpenter on or before the 6th day of December, 1882. On the contract was indorsed an assignment by George G. Carpenter to the plaintiff Henry M. Carpenter of “an undivided one-half part of the premises.” There was also evidence tending to show, and the jury, by a special verdict, found the fact to be, that the plaintiffs, at or before the time of the issuance of the policy, to them, informed the agent of the defendant, who countersigned and issued
We do not understand the defendant to question here the proposition maintained by counsel for the plaintiffs, and upon which the court directed a general verdict for the plaintiffs, that the notice found by the jury to have been given to the agent at the time of issuing the policy was notice to the defendant, and that the defendant is chargeable with knowledge of the facts thus communicated to the agent, so far as they were facts, to the same effect as if those facts had been stated in the contract itself. But there is the further question here whether that statement represented the actual facts of the case. If not, it had no effect to relieve the plaintiffs from the express condition of the contract to the effect that they were the sole, absolute, and unconditional owners of the property insured, and upon that question the burden of proof was clearly on the plaintiffs. By their contract with the defendant the plaintiffs have expressly consented to the condition that if they were not at the date of the contract the sole, absolute, and unconditional owners of the property the policy should be void.. It is conceded that this condition was not fulfilled. The plaintiffs seek to avoid the condition by proof that the insurer was informed at the time of making the contract that they were not the sole, absolute, and unconditional owners of the property, but held an equitable title thereto by virtue of a contract of purchase and sale. The theory of the plaintiffs’ case in this respect is that the defendant was estopped from insisting upon the violated condition because it contracted in view of the actual facts of the case, which were communicated to its agent at the time of the contract. Clearly, in .order to avail themselves of the estoppel, it was necessary for the plaintiffs to prove both the fact of the communication to the defendant’s agent, and the truth of the fact communicated. This they have failed to do. The evidence is that the plaintiffs had a contract from the Bank of Elizabeth, but that the title of the property was in one John ICean. There is a suggestion that Kean was the president of the bank, and that he held the title in trust for the latter; but there is no evidence to that effect, and, so far as the evidence goes, it negatives the proposition that the vendor in the plaintiff’s contract of purchase had any title to convey. The plaintiffs have therefore failed to show that at the time of the issuance of the policy they held an equitable title by virtue of a contract of sale from the owner of the property, as, in substance, they allege that the jury have found they informed the defendant’s agent. We must consider the plaintiffs as having failed to make a case in the respect last considered, and that the defendant was entitled to a direction of a verdict in its favor on the first and second grounds stated in its motion to that effect. The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed, and a new trial granted. All concur. So ordered.