Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court (Cobb, J.), entered August 29, 2000 in Columbia County, which, inter alia, granted motions by third-party defendants American Title Insurance Company and Kenneth Pregno Agency for summary judgment dismissing the third-party complaint against them.
When this matter was last before us (
In December 1989, defendants’ counsel received a preliminary title report prepared by third-party defendant Kenneth Pregno Agency (hereinafter Pregno) on behalf of third-party defendant American Title Insurance Company which specifically excepted the aforementioned easement (hereinafter the Hess easement) from title insurance coverage. The survey reading referenced in such report also noted, as an exception to the policy, a proposed 40-foot-wide right-of-way crossing the northerly portion of the premises, as well as a driveway crossing such premises adjoining property to the east;
At a closing on January 4, 1990, Madeline Feingold of Pregno appeared on behalf of American Title. At that time, she marked an original and duplicate title policy. On the original, which was signed by defendants and retained by American Title, she marked, as an exception to coverage, both the Hess easement and a utility easement; on the duplicate, however, she marked those items as omitted. Significantly, on both copies, the survey reading portion of the title report, which incorporated the earlier survey providing that the premises were subject to, inter alia, the Hess easement, was marked to be included in the policy. The final title insurance policy mirrored the
In July 1990, plaintiff commenced this action to compel defendants to remove a garage which allegedly obstructed their easement (
Both Pregno and American Title propounded motions for summary judgment; defendants cross-moved for partial summary judgment against American Title. Supreme Court dismissed the third-party complaint against Pregno finding that any claim of negligence in the marking of the preliminary title report merged into the final title insurance policy and the record was “devoid of any evidence that [Pregno] acted with fraudulent intent * * * [or induced] justifiable reliance.” For similar reasons, it granted American Title’s motion for summary judgment. This appeal followed.
We find no error in the dismissal of the third-party complaint against American Title. The title certificate that American Title provided to defendants at the closing declared that it “shall be null and void * * * upon delivery of the policy.” The final title insurance policy issued by American Title provided, inter alia, that any “actions or rights of action that the insured may have or may bring against this company in respect of other services rendered in connection with the issuance of this policy, shall be deemed to have merged in and be restricted to [the policy’s] terms and conditions.” Once an “insurance policy has been received, it constitutes ‘conclusive presumptive knowledge’ of [its] terms and limits” (Madhvani v Sheehan,
Although the easement was included in one marked copy of the preliminary title report at the closing and excluded in the other, defendants had knowledge of the easement prior to the closing, made no efforts to seek its omission and ultimately signed the copy which mirrored the terms in the final policy clearly excluding the Hess easement from coverage. It is for
As to defendants’ claims against Pregno, we find the record bereft of evidence supporting the contention that Pregno acted with fraudulent intent or somehow induced defendants’ justifiable reliance upon the incorrect markings contained in the preliminary title report received at the closing (see generally, Inavest Enters. v TRW Tit. Ins.,
Cardona, P. J., Mercure, Crew III and Lahtinen, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is affirmed, with one bill of costs.
Notes
. It appears that the Hess easement described in Liber 527 page 964 is the 40-foot right-of-way which is where the driveway referenced in this survey is located. Hence, there appears to be only one easement at issue.
. The record does not reveal the date upon which defendants received the policy.
