25 Barb. 189 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1855
The objections to the right of the plaintiff to recover are three-fold. (1.) That the premium was not actually paid at the time of the loss of the premises by the peril insured against, and therefore the policy had not attached. (2.) That after the delivery of the policy, and before the loss, the defendants had signified to the insured their desire to cancel the policy, and that from that time the policy ceased to be valid. (3.) That by the transfer, by one of the insured to his co-tenant, of his interest in the claim, after the loss, the liability of the defendants was discharged.
The cause was tried before me out of court, for the convenience of the parties and their witnesses, and the better to enable them to present the legal questions upon which their rights depended ; and the decisions of the propositions now brought under review were rather formal, and to put them in form for adjudication by the court in banc, than the expression of a deliberate opinion of my own. Upon a review of the questions, however, the impressions which I entertained in favor of the plaintiff have been strengthened and confirmed, and I am of the opinion that the objections are susceptible of a satisfactory answer.
To the first I think several answers may be made. (1.) It is a well settled maxim that a party may waive the benefit of any condition or provision made in his behalf, no matter in what manner it may have been made or secured. (Broom's Legal Max. 547.) It extends to all provisions, even constitutional
(2.) The general rule that receipts, being mere admissions, are liable to contradiction and explanation by parol, may be universally true as applicable to mere receipts when they are disconnected with, or unnecessary to give validity to, contracts or agreements of any kind. When they make a, part of a contract, as in deeds and bills of lading, the same rule is applicable when the paper is used as a receipt or acknowledgment simply, to defeat an adverse claim, and not as upholding the contract. It is unnecessary to refer to any.of the numerous cases in which this has been held. But it is quite another thing when it is sought to contradict a written receipt incorporated into the contract, for the purpose of defeating the contract itself. The writing read as a whole shows a valid contract, and in this case the receipt, in connection with the condition, shows that to this policy the condition has no application. There being no pretense of fraud on the part of the assured, it would be a fraud upon them to allow the witness now to contradict this acknowledgment for
For the purpose of supporting the contract, so long as the payment of the premium was, as is claimed, a condition precedent to the attaching of the policy, the receipt inserted in the contract should be considered a part of it. (1 Phil, on Ins. § 515.) (3.) The parol evidence of waiver of this condition may be said to be competent to overcome the parol evidence of the defendant to defeat the contract.
The second objection is untenable, for the reason that the defendants never availed themselves of the condition authorizing them to cancel the policy. If they intended their agent to do so, it is sufficient to say that the agent did not comply with their directions. It was competent for the agent to determine the time at which he would comply with the wishes of the company, and indeed the very instructions seem to imply that he shall do so, and accommodate his action in the premises to the interest of the assured. But whatever may have been the instruction of the company, this policy never was canceled.
The third objection is one of the first impression, so far as I am aware. Conditions against the assignment of policies have been long in use, and have been sustained by courts. The contract of insurance is one eminently of personal confidence, and the character of the insured forms an important element among the inducements of the underwriters to assume the risk; and hence the provision against assignments of the policy during the continuance of the risk is highly beneficial to the insurer. It has been left for modern ingenuity to attempt the application of the same condition, and under the same penalty, to the assignment of any claim under the policy after the risk has ceased by the destruction, by the perils insured against, of the object insured.
There is certainly not the same reason for prohibiting an assignment after a loss, as before. After the loss the confidential relation of insurer and insured no longer exists, but a new rela
Nothing can be taken against the defendant upon the ground that the insured never read or knew of the condition until the objection was taken after loss, and after the assignment; but were this a proper case for presumption, it would be fair to say
I am of opinion that the contract of insurance proper terminated with the loss, and an absolute debt then upon furnishing the proofs by the insured, accrued against the company, and that the provisions relied upon ought not to be allowed to defeat this absolute claim. The judgment should be affirmed.
Wm. F. Allen, Pratt, Hubbard and Bacon, Justices.]