12 Misc. 395 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1895
These actions are brought upon policies of fire insurance annexed to and made part of the complaints to which the demurrers are interposed. In each action the defendant who alone appears and demurs is one of the members of certain respective firms acting as attorneys in fact for the underwriters by whom the insurance was assumed. No claim is made, nor well can be, that the allegations of the pleadings are insufficient to constitute a cause of action were the policies in suit not embodied by intrinsic reference, the ground of the demurrers being that a defense is disclosed, available to these demurrers, by the terms of the policies as set forth. The clauses upon which this contention is founded are substantially the same in each policy sued upon, and these issues
“No action shall he brought by the insured to enforce the provisions of this policy except against the attorneys in fact, as representing all of the underwriters; and each of the underwriters hereby agrees to abide the result of any suit- so brought, as fixing his individual responsibility hereunder. * * * Judgment entered in such an action shall be satisfied out of the premiums in the hands of the underwriters unexpended; if such premiums shall be insufficient, then out of the deposit made by the several underwriters; if both be insufficient, then out of the individual liability of the several underwriters, as hereinbefore expressed and limited; but in no case shall the judgment bind the property of the said attorneys to a greater extent than the several liabilities of each of them as individual underwriters.”
The demurrant in each action is one of the underwriters of the respective policies in suit, as well as a member of the firm constituting the “attorneys in fact”; and the basis of the argument made is that the pleadings disclose a failure of compliance with the requirement as to actions upon the policy noted above, the demurrant being sued as an individual, and the action not proceeding against the “attorneys in fact.” Unless the clauses in question operate to oust the court of jurisdiction, there can be no question as to the propriety of joining all the underwriters, including the demurrants, as defendants, which was done in these actions; the complaint alleging their several liability (Code Civ. Proc. § 454), the joinder not affecting the individual rights of the parties (Id. § 455), and it being expressly provided by the contract that there should be a liability of each underwriter in proportion to the amount of risk assumed by him. It was the common-law practice in actions upon insurance policies of this character for the court to make a “consolidation rule,” upon consent of the parties, whereby all the actions which would lie against the underwriters severally should abide the result of one. Phil. Ins. 1989, and cases cited. This result was apparently what these parties in some degree attempted to provide for by agreement in advance, and there would seem to be no reason why such an agreement should not be upheld, the consent of the parties being the principal element of consideration. Doyle v. Anderson, 1 Adol. & E. 635. How far the present agreement would be valid in view of the provision that judgment in the action against the attorneys in fact, as underwriters, in their individual capacity, could be enforced only to the extent of their separate liability, need not be determined, for as to these demurrants, at least, the condition has been fulfilled. Upon the point raised, that the plaintiff should have instituted her action against the “attorneys in fact,” as acting in some representative capacity, there can be no doubt as to the futility of the demurrant’s contention.
The mere making of a contract through an attorney in fact is only an incident to the contract itself. It need not be said that the contract is just as much the engagement of the underwriters as if made directly by them. What would be the effect if the contract had been made directly with the underwriters, and it had contained a provision to the effect that, if there was a breach of the contract,
The invalidity of the provision to preclude suit against the underwriters did not destroy the latter’s contractual obligation to pay in the event of a loss. A distinction is here to be observed between the insured’s right to payment of the sum insured and the remedy for the enforcement of such right. The promise of the underAvriters to pay was wholly independent of the insured’s promise to enforce such payment only in an action against the attorneys in fact, as such, of the underwriters. The insured’s promise was intended to affect her remedy only if the underwriters failed to pay as promised by them. The facts in the case at bar, therefore, do not present a case of mutually dependent or interdependent provisions of the same contract, where the invalidity of one provision necessarily involves the annihilation of others. It does not here follow that the underwriters’ obligation is extended, or their liability increased beyond the terms of the contract of insurance, because the restriction of the remedy for the enforcement of the obligation or liability is removed or adjudged inoperative. Nor can it be said that these “attorneys in fact” were proper parties against whom the action could be brought by reason of their being viewed as ^trustees of an express trust,” or parties “with whom a contract is