100 Misc. 550 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1917
The plaintiff is the assignee of a claim against the defendant for a loss covered by a valued marine insurance policy issued by the defendant on a vessel called Libertad, owned when the policy was issued by the Companía Zamorense de Navegacion, which company is also claimed to have been the owner of the vessel when she became a total loss on August 3, 1916, because of perils insured against by defendant’s policy.
This is a motion by plaintiff for judgment on the pleadings, which will be taken to contain a true statements of the facts, because the defendant expressly admits all the allegations of the complaint and defends solely by separate defenses which also for the purpose of this motion are conceded to state the facts correctly.
The plaintiff’s assignor, being the owner of the
“ Should the vessel be sold or transferred to other ownership, then, unless the underwriters agree in writing to such sale or transfer, this policy shall thereupon become canceled from the date of sale or transfer. ’ ’
After the issuance of the above policy and on or about June 1, 1916, and while it was.in force, the plaintiff’s assignor entered into an agreement to sell said vessel to one Fuss for $180,000, under which it received from Fuss $60,000 in cash and twelve promissory notes of $10,000 each, the first one pavable June 10,1916, and one on the tenth day of each month following, and upon the payment in full of the $180,000, and only then, should the title pass to Fuss. It was agreed that Fuss was to be and he was in fact immediately thereafter put in possession of the vessel, but that he should not acquire ownership thereof until full payment, until which the vessel “ shall continue to be the property of the Companía, Zamorense de Navegación.” By this agreement Fuss was to assume and pay the unearned portion of the premiums of the $60,000 of insurance, and in addition was to pay for an additional $60,000 of insurance to equal with the first $60,000 the part of the purchase price unpaid. This additional insurance was taken out by the plaintiff’s assignor in its name as owner and in the policies covering the same the value of the vessel was fixed at $150,000. The agreement further provided that until full payment Fuss was bound to
The notes which came due June 10 and July 10, 1916, were paid to the plaintiff’s assignor by Fuss, so that the plaintiff’s assignor has actually received $80,000 on account of its contract to sell. Thereafter and on August 3, 1916, the Libertad was lost at sea, and demands were made by the plaintiff’s assignor against the insurers under the policies in the first mentioned group, and the plaintiff’s assignor has collected the sum of $38,500 from some of those insurers, but while it has filed proofs of claim under the policies in the second mentioned group it has neither demanded nor collected anything from the second group of insurers.
The defendant having refused to pay the amount of its policy, this action was commenced, and defendant has set up three defenses:
First. That its policy was canceled by reason of the sale or transfer above mentioned.
Second. That Fuss has commenced an action against the plaintiff’s assignor to recover back the purchase money paid on the above mentioned contract to sell, which action the plaintiff’s assignor is defending; also that the plaintiff’s assignor has commenced an action against Fuss to recover the balance due on the contract to sell, which action Fuss is defending.
Third. That the plaintiff’s assignor, having received $80,000 on the purchase price of the vessel and $38,500 under the first group of insurance, has already received more than the agreed valuation of the vessel, viz., $90,000, and therefore has no further claim under the insurance policies in the first group. This defense also sets ont the facts in regard to the
The first defense cannot be sustained. There has been no “ sale or transfer to other ownership.” The words in that clause “ to other ownership ” apply equally to “ sale ” and to “ transfer,” so that it should read “ sale to other ownership or transfer to other ownership.” While.the vessel was delivered to Fuss, there was no “ sale or transfer to other ownership.” The contract between the plaintiff’s assignor and Fuss was only an agreement to sell and expressly retained the ownership in the plaintiff’s assignor, and the contract itself was called a “ contract of promise of purchase-sale.” The title was not to pass and no evidences of title delivered until the whole purchase price was paid. This had not occurred when the vessel was lost, there still being $100,000 due. While Fuss had an equitable interest in the vessel and while he could transfer that interest, he had no legal “ ownership.” 35 Cyc. 651-654, Hitchcock v. Northwestern Ins. Co., 26 N. Y. 68; Lloyd v. North British & Mercantile., Ins. Co., 174 App. Div. 371, 376.
The policies in the cases cited by the defendant all have some distinguishing words. In Brighton Beach Racing Association v. Home Ins. Co., 113 App. Div. 728, the vital words are “if any change * * * takes place in the interest, title or possession of the subject of insurance.” In Germond v. Home Ins. Co., 2 Hun, 540, the words are “ if the property insured should be sold or conveyed, or the interest of the parties therein be changed.” See Savage v. Howard Ins. Co., 25 N. Y. 502; Griffey v. N. Y. Central Ins. Co., 100 id. 417, 422.
While there is force in the defendant’s argument that the personal equation enters very decidedly into
The second defense also cannot be sustained. Although it alleges evidence rather than a defense, I will assume that it pleads, as defendant contends, that the plaintiff’s assignor has elected to regard its agreement with Fuss as a sale of the vessel and has in effect estopped itself from now claiming that there was no sale and that it was the owner of the vessel at the time of its loss. It is not alleged that the interposition of the answer of the plaintiff’s assignor in the suit by Fuss, or the commencement of its suit against Fuss, took place before its assignment of this cause of action to the plaintiff in this action, and I do not see how acts of plaintiff’s assignor subsequent to the assignment can be deemed to bind the plaintiff either as an election or by way of estoppel. But, even if such an allegation were contained in the answer, I do not think that the defense of the plaintiff’s assignor to the Fuss action or the commencement of its own action against Fuss could be deemed to be a good defense to this action, either as an election or by way of estoppel. The plaintiff’s assignor in defending the Fuss action and in commencing its action against Fuss is only seeking to maintain such right as it has under its contract with Fuss, and I find
The third defense also cannot be sustained. The parties agree that the policy of insurance sued on is a valued policy, that is, that the valuation of the vessel was fixed and agreed upon by the parties thereto, and that that valuation is, in the absence of fraud and other special defenses, binding and conclusive upon the parties as to the amount to be recovered under this policy in case of loss. The defendant’s theory¡ as I understand it, is that as policies of insurance are contracts of indemnity an insured cannot in any event recover more than the amount of his actual loss from the insurers, and that as the plaintiff’s assignor has already received from Fuss by
But even if this were not so, and the policy of insurance should be treated as a perfect contract of indemnity, it does not seem to me that the result urged by the defendant follows. The principle underlying the application of the doctrine of indemnity to contracts of insurance is to do justice between the parties and to see to it that the insured shall not
It is under the application of this principle that the doctrine of subrogation has been applied to insurance, so that if the insured receives or is entitled to receive more than the total amount of his actual loss the insurer becomes subrogated to his rights to the extent of the insurance. It seems to me, however, that the defendant is in error when it seeks, to apply this doctrine of indemnity to a case where the valuation of the property has been agreed upon in a valued policy of insurance, but where that valuation is not necessarily the actual value of the property. Nowhere in the answer is there any allegation as to the actual value of the vessel, although it might possibly be implied from the contract to sell the vessel to Fuss that the vessel was worth $180,000, instead of $90,000, as valued in the first group of insurance. It is not alleged that the $118,500 which the plaintiff’s assignor has actually received is equal to the total
Nor does the fact that two different valuations were stated in the two groups of insurance taken out on this vessel at two different times afford any defense to this action. The first group of policies valued the vessel at $90,000; the second group of policies valued the vessel at $150,000. There is high authority for the proposition that under such circumstances the insured may not only recover in case of loss the insurance up to the amount of valuation in the earlier group of policies from the insurers in that group, but may also recover from the second group of insurers the insurance up to the amount of the difference between the valuation of the property fixed in the
In addition to all this, it appears that the plaintiff’s assignor has not only not collected any thing from the insurers under the second group of policies, but has not even made demand upon them that they pay anything under their policies. If it appeared that the plaintiff’s assignor had already collected the total amount of insurance under the second group of policies, or if it appeared that the plaintiff’s assignor had received from Puss payment in full for the total actual value of the vessel at the time of its loss, it might be that the defendant would then have a defense to this action. See Bruce v. Jones, 1 H. & C. 769. But those are not the facts here. Non constat that the plaintiff’s assignor will ever receive another cent from Puss or collect any thing whatever from the second group of policies. If it does, and should ultimately receive more than the total amount of its actual loss, then the doctrine of subrogation may come into play, and the defendant may be able to recover its proportion of the surplus received by the plaintiff’s assignor. That situation, however, is not before us on these pleadings or at the present time, and the possibility of its arising hereafter cannot be deemed to be a defense to this action.
The defendant’s fourth defense is a partial defense based upon the same facts and allegations as the third defense, and cannot be sustained for the reasons given for holding that the third defense is invalid.
Plaintiff’s motion for judgment on the pleadings will therefore be granted, with ten dollars costs.
Ordered accordingly.