100 N.Y.S. 399 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1906
This action is brought upon an ordinary fire insurance policy. In order to recover, the plaintiff must allege and prove that the insured property was destroyed or injured by fire. This fact is not specifically alleged, but the court is asked to infer the same from all the allegations of the complaint.
It is true that, when parties proceed to the trial of an issue of law or fact upon an uncertain or equivocal pleading, the court must regard every allegation which is expressly, impliedly or argumentatively averred, and so give effect to every fact which can, by reasonable and fair intendment, be implied from the entire pleading. Marie v. Garrison, 83 N. Y. 14; Sanders v. Soutter, 126 id. 193; Sage v. Culver, 141 id. 241.
But the loose application of this rule in practice has tended to reduce the science of pleading to the art of wording an allegation so indefinitely that as many different constructions may be placed upon it as the various necessities of the pleader demand. As recently said by the Court of Appeals, it may be doubtful if it has not set a positive premium on bad pleading. O’Connor v. Virginia Passenger & Power Co., 184 N. Y. 46-53.
In drawing an inference from facts alleged, the rule is, that the facts constituting the basis for the inference must be clearly and unequivocally alleged and not themselves rest, either in whole or in part, upon inference. Thus an allegation so indefinite that its meaning rests upon inference, or so equivocal as to bear two or more constructions, may not be employed to form the basis, either in whole or in part, for another inference. One inference may not be used as the basis for another. Furthermore, the facts constituting the foundations of the inference must reasonably and fairly exclude every other hypothesis except the fact inferred,
As the complaint does not allege specifically or by fair intendment that the insured property was destroyed or injured by fire, the demurrer must be sustained, but with the usual leave to plead over upon payment of costs. -
Ordered accordingly.