111 N.E. 241 | NY | 1916
This action is upon a policy of credit insurance. The defense relied upon is breach of warranty. The plaintiff made written application for the policy on June 16th, 1910. In that application it made the following statement as to its losses: "Losses $8,959.05 from July 1st, 1909, to date, showing amount owing as accounts stand to day." It is conceded that this statement of losses did not include the loss occasioned to the plaintiff by reason of the insolvency of F.W. Edwards *562
of Duluth, Minnesota. The defense of breach of warranty is predicated upon the failure of the plaintiff to include in his statement of losses the loss that resulted upon this account. The amount of the loss which the plaintiff suffered upon this Edwards account was $9,667.63. Five months and thirteen days before the plaintiff signed the application for the policy Edwards made a deed of trust to the plaintiff covering all of his property. This trust deed shows Edwards to have been indebted to the plaintiff and some twenty-four other creditors in an amount in excess of $16,000. The largest part of this amount was due to the plaintiff. The trust deed gave to the plaintiff the right to continue the business of Edwards, to sell his property and to apply the proceeds thereof to the payment of his indebtedness to the plaintiff and to the other creditors. The plaintiff and the other creditors of Edwards accepted the property in payment of their claims and agreed to discharge Edwards from liability. These circumstances disclosed to the plaintiff the fact that a large sum of money was due to it from a debtor who was insolvent and had turned over his property to it. The property transferred was wholly insufficient to pay the debt due the plaintiff and the debts due to the other creditors of Edwards. At the time the plaintiff signed the application for the policy it must have been evident to it that it would sustain a loss upon the Edwards account although at that time the extent of the loss may not have been apparent. The large indebtedness of Edwards to the plaintiff was due, and the plaintiff had released Edwards from liability. Its only opportunity for payment was that it should realize from the administration of the insolvent estate a sum sufficient to pay all the creditors of Edwards. The question is presented whether the Edwards account was a loss within the meaning of the word "losses" as used in the application for the policy. The application and the terms used in it are "not to be interpreted technically, but the language must be held to *563
mean what the words import to the commercial world." (People v.Mercantile Credit Guarantee Co.,
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., HISCOCK, COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, CARDOZO and POUND, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc. *565