70 N.Y.S. 824 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
This action was brought upon a policy of reinsurance issued by the appellant, the Continental Insurance Company, to the respondents, the Home Insurance Company of New York and the Phcenix Insurance Company of Hartford, The plaintiffs had a judgment for the amount claimed, from which the defendant has appealed.
The facts as to which there is no dispute are as follows: On the 13th of June, 1895, the plaintiffs issued a joint policy insuring certain property of one Heilner, for the term of one year, in the sum of $10,000 against all direct loss or damage by lire, and on the sixteenth of July following the defendant issued to the plaintiffs a policy for $5,000, reinsuring their risk “ against all direct loss or damage by fire, except as hereinafter provided.” The policy issued by the defendant contained this clause: “ This policy is subject to the same risks, conditions, valuations, endorsements and assignments as are or may be assumed or adopted by the Home Insurance Company of New York and the Phcenix Insurance Company of Hart
In Consolidated Real Estate & Fire Ins. Co. v. Cashow (supra) a company issued its policy for $10,000, and reinsured its risk to the extent of $5,000 with the Consolidated Insurance Company. The property insured was destroyed and a loss sustained to the extent of $9,000. The plaintiff Cashow, as an assignee of the claim against the reinsurer, brought an action upon the policy of reinsurance which contained a clause similar to the one here under consideration. The court there held, following the decision in Blackstone v. Alemannia Fire Ins. Co., that the reinsurer became liable only for that proportion of the loss which the amount of reinsurance bore to the amount of original insurance.
In Illinois Mutual Fire Ins. Co. v. Andes Ins. Co. (supra) the original policy was for $6,000. The policy of reinsurance issued by the defendant was for $2,000. A fire occurred and the amount paid was $600. It was there held that inasmuch as the reinsuring policy was only one-third of the amount of the original policy, that under the pro rating clause the reinsurer was only liable to pay one-third of the loss. (See, also, Imperial Fire Ins. Co. v. Home Ins. Co., supra, where the Blaekstone case is cited with approval.)
In the case at bar the original insurance, as we have already said, was for $10,000. The amount of reinsurance was for $5,000, or one-half of the original insurance. Upon principle, as well as under the authorities cited, it seems to us that the proper construction of the clause in defendant’s policy, providing that the loss, if any,
The judgment, therefore, must be reversed and a new trial ordered before another referee, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
O’Brien, Ingraham, Hatch and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered before another referee, 'with costs to appellant to abide event. . '