5 Denio 154 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
,A new question is presented in this case, and one, it must be admitted, of some novelty in its application to a case like this, and which has therefore been examined and considered with more than ordinary care and attention.
The contract of insurance between these parties was entered into in September, 1838, and I assume that the plaintiff, by his application for insurance, which was made a part of the contract, engaged that there was no building within less than ten rods of the store insured, except those mentioned in said appli
I regal'd it is clear that if the policy was originally void, on the ground now taken by the defendants, that is, a breach of the plaintiff’s contract of warranty, the premium note was also invalid. The only consideration for the note, as is expressed on its face, was this policy, and if that was void there remained not a scintilla of consideration, and the note, consequently, could not be enforced.
The plaintiff was only liable on this note as a member of the corporation—the Saratoga County Mutual Fire Insurance Company ; he not being one of the persons named in the charter, nor the heir, executor, administrator or assignee of any person who had been a corporator, and he could only become such member “ by effecting insurance ” in the company. (Laws of
The defendants, with full knowledge of the facts invalidating the policy, have chosen to act upon the premium note of the plaintiff, as an available security in their favor and which he was bound to pay. Several sums have accordingly been assessed by the directors of the company, and payment thereof required on said note. These payments have been made by the plaintiff, and the question is presented, can the defendants, who have thus affirmed the original and continuing validity of the premium note, in which the plantiff has fully acquiesced, be allowed to set up that this policy, which formed the onlv
No objection is made in the points submitted on behalf of the defendants that the declaration was not adapted to the case as proved, although a suggestion to that effect was made at the circuit. I have not examined that question. Looking only at what appears on the face of this policy it is unobjectionable, for nothing there appears to impeach it. The conclusion at which I have arrived does not, however, rest on the idea that the policy was certainly valid in its inception, but on the ground that these defendants have precluded themselves from setting up any fact out of the policy to show that it was originally void.
New trial ordered.