150 N.Y. 190 | NY | 1896
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *192 Two questions are presented by this appeal: 1. Whether the defendant waived any forfeiture that otherwise it would have had the right to insist upon. 2. Whether the award was properly set aside. The policy in question contained the following clause: "This entire policy * * * shall be void if * * * the interest of the insured be other than unconditional and sole ownership * * * or if the subject of insurance be personal property and be or become incumbered by a chattel mortgage." It also contained *194 the usual provision for an appraisal in case of loss by "two competent and disinterested appraisers," aided, if necessary, by an umpire to be chosen by them, and expressly provided that the company should not "be held to have waived any provision or condition of the policy or any forfeiture thereof by any requirement, act or proceeding on its part relating to the appraisal."
As the policy was issued upon different kinds of property, each separately valued, the contract is severable, although but one premium was paid and the amount of insurance was the sum total of the valuations. (Pratt v. Dwelling House, etc., Ins. Co.,
As the forfeiture claimed in this case did not extend to all the personal property, because the chattel mortgage covered only a part thereof, an adjustment of the loss was necessary, and the company had the right to demand an appraisal, even if it intended to insist upon the breach of warranty as a defense. Hence it is unnecessary to consider the effect of the provision in the policy that the insurer should not be held to have waived any condition or forfeiture "by any requirement, act or proceeding on its part relating to the appraisal." As an appraisal was proper in any event the mere fact that one was had at the request of the company has no bearing upon the question of forfeiture, and in reviewing the facts relied upon to constitute a waiver care should be taken to discriminate between acts relating exclusively to the appraisal and those wholly independent thereof. *196
Prompt notice of the fire was given to the defendant, and Mr. Vail, its president, at once called on the plaintiff and imformed him that the adjuster would be around in a few days and "settle up" with him. When this remark was made it does not appear that the company knew about the chattel mortgage upon the cows, but before the interview terminated, the plaintiff, replying to questions put to him by the president, disclosed the fact, which elicited no comment. In a short time Mr. Selvage, the adjuster and general agent of the defendant, saw the plaintiff by direction of Mr. Vail, and asked him as to the nature and value of the property, and when, from whom and at what price he purchased the cows, horses, etc. The plaintiff gave the adjuster full information upon these subjects, furnished him with a partial list of the various items of loss, and at his request, the next day, walked two and one-half miles to Kingston and gave him a complete schedule of the property destroyed. During the interview Mr. Selvage asked him what he would "take in cash to settle the whole matter up," and the plaintiff answered that he wanted the face of the policy. Selvage said that he did not see how they could settle in that way and suggested an appraisal, and after much persuasion the plaintiff consented to the appointment of appraisers before proofs of loss were prepared. Appraisers were selected, under circumstances to be mentioned hereafter, and they made an award which was satisfactory to the company only, and which the court found to be "insufficient and false."
The defendant then prepared proofs of loss based upon the award and presented them to the plaintiff for execution, but he refused to sign them. It also offered him a draft for $1,037, the amount of the award, but he declined to accept it and thereupon employed counsel, made out proofs of loss, stating the value of each kind of property insured in separate and distinct items, including that covered by the mortgage, and served them upon the defendant. They were promptly returned with a letter from Mr. Vail stating, in substance, that they were rejected as not in accordance with the facts because *197 they were not based upon the award, and declining "to receive any proof of loss made upon any other basis." No other ground was stated, and no allusion was made to the right or the intention of the company to take advantage of the chattel mortgage clause in the policy. The plaintiff at once re-served the proofs of loss, notified the defendant that the appraisal was fraudulent and void and offered to have the amount of his loss settled "by an honest appraisement as provided by the policy." The company retained the proofs and, so far as appears, several months passed before it intimated any intention to insist upon a forfeiture. During all the negotiations there was neither act done nor word spoken by any officer or agent of the company indicating an intent to rely upon the breach of warranty, or discriminating in any way against the property to which the warranty related. The policy was treated as valid in every respect, and the only questions raised related to values. The preparation by the defendant of proofs of loss, based upon the award and including the mortgaged property, showed an intention to waive the forfeiture and to rely upon the appraisal. There was no condition suggested, nor right reserved, nor even an allusion made to the possibility that the company might refuse to pay anything on account of the property in the mortgage. It did not deny its liability to pay for that property until after all negotiations had ceased and this action was about to be commenced. The officer who prepared and tendered the proofs of loss represented the company, and what he intended at the time, the company is presumed to have intended. Unless his intention was to pay the loss on the mortgaged property as well as the rest, why did he insert it in the proofs of loss? Why did he ask the plaintiff to swear to a loss upon property that he did not intend to pay for? Why did he treat one kind of property the same as another, unless he intended to waive the breach of warranty?
The rejection of the proofs of loss solely for the reason that they were not based upon the award, without saying anything about an intention to forfeit, indicates that no such intention *198
existed. Where an insurance company returned proofs of loss for alleged irregularity, without insisting upon a known breach of warranty as to occupancy, it was held that a waiver of the breach might have been found. (McNally v. Phœnix Ins. Co.,
The plaintiff was induced to accept Mr. Vischer as one of the appraisers upon the representation of Mr. Selvage, as the trial court found, that he "was a business man, a resident of Kingston and an impartial and disinterested person to act as appraiser." In fact he did not live in Kingston, but in Syracuse. *199 He was not a business man, in the ordinary sense of those words, but a professional insurance adjuster of long experience, who was then in the employment of an association of insurance companies engaged in adjusting insurance rates in the city of Kingston. He was a friend of Mr. Selvage, had been associated with him in the adjustment of losses "on the side of the insurance companies," and had been visited by him at his house in Syracuse. He had adjusted many losses in behalf of insurers, and for twenty years had been engaged in the insurance business. His extensive experience had made him skillful, and constant employment by insurance companies had given his mind an honest bias in their favor. The other adjuster, Mr. Coutant, was a man of no experience in such matters, so that Mr. Vischer took the leading part in fixing values. Although neither of them had ever seen the property, when the plaintiff asked leave to be present at the appraisal so as to describe the various articles and state their value, they refused permission, through Mr. Vischer, and excluded both him and Mr. Selvage from the room. Mr. Coutant testified that Vischer's estimates usually prevailed; that they differed as to the value of the buildings, but Mr. Vischer inserted his own estimate, saying, "We will put the figures down now and go on," but they never returned to the subject, and Mr. Coutant thoughtlessly signed the award with these figures unchanged and with no actual meeting of minds in relation to them. While all this was strenuously denied by witnesses for the defendant, it was admitted that Mr. Selvage did not tell the plaintiff that his nominee for appraiser was an insurance adjuster.
The evidence tended to show and the trial court found that Mr. Vischer dominated and controlled the mind of Mr. Coutant, and that the former was not an impartial and disinterested person to act as appraiser. It is impossible to distinguish this branch of the case from the principle that governed our decision inBradshaw v. Agricultural Ins. Co. (
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.