221 A.D. 727 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1927
The defendant appeals from a judgment decreeing reformation of a contract of insurance and, as reformed, for damages thereon. The judgment cannot be sustained for the reasons hereinafter stated.
The facts, in so far as necessary to indicate the reasons for this decision, briefly, are as follows: The defendant is a mutual insurance company incorporated to insure members of the jewelry trade. The plaintiff manufactures and sells jewelry and is a member of the defendant society. In the conduct of its business the plaintiff sent salesmen out on the road with stocks of jewelry. This jewelry the plaintiff would insure with the defendant while in the custody of its salesmen by procuring a policy containing the names of its salesmen and the amount for which each particular salesman was insured. In the event the plaintiff desired to change the amount of property for which a salesman was insured, or change the salesmen covered, the plaintiff would request the defendant to increase or decrease the amount accordingly or to transfer the insurance from one salesman to another. On May 1, 1924, the plaintiff obtained from the defendant a policy insuring merchandise in the custody of certain of its salesmen in the amounts set opposite their names as follows: “ William G. Grimes $25,000; Albert Strauss $5,000; Jack Lewitt $20,000,” a total of $50,000. During the course of the period for which the policy was issued it was changed from time to time. On April 1, 1925, a month before the policy by its terms expired, the policy covered merchandise in the possession of only two salesmen, namely, William G. Grimes and Jack Lewitt, in the sum of $25,000 each. On April 13, 1925, the plaintiff requested the defendant to issue a new policy commencing May 1, 1925, to cover merchandise in the possession of these two last-mentioned salesmen in the sum of $25,000 each. On April 15, 1925, the defendant received from the plaintiff a request so to transfer “ our policy of insurance ” as to cover merchandise in the custody of three salesmen, in names and amounts as follows: “ William G. Grimes $25,000; Ernest E. Strauss $15,000; Jack Lewitt $10,000.” On April seventeenth the defendant acknowledged the receipt of plaintiff’s application for a renewal policy covering merchandise in the custody of two salesmen amounting to $50,000. On April twentieth the defendant mailed to the plaintiff a rider to be attached to the then existing policy so as to cover the three salesmen in accordance with the plaintiff’s request of April fifteenth. On May 1, 1925, the defendant, in accordance with the plaintiff’s written application, issued a new policy to the plaintiff for one year from its date, covering merchandise in the possession of two salesmen in the sum of $25,000 each, namely,
Also in Metzger v. Ætna Insurance Co. (227 N. Y. 411, 417) Judge Collin, writing for the court, said: “ While in equity a rescission of a contract may be adjudged on the ground of a unilateral mistake in its contents, in order that a reformation may be adjudged, there must be mutual mistake or inadvertence or the excusable mistake of one party and fraud of the other. There must have been a meeting of the minds of the contracting parties concerning the agreement, or agreements, which the court is asked to declare existent. (Albany City Savings Institution v. Burdick, 87 N. Y. 40; Bidwell & Banta v. Astor Mutual Ins. Co., 16 N. Y. 263; Bryce v. Lorillard Fire Ins. Co., 55 N. Y. 240 ; 21 Halsbury, Laws of England, pp. 16-20.) It is manifest, in virtue of what we have written, there was not a mistake on the part of the insured concerning the terms and conditions of the policy. It is manifest from the evidence there was not a mistake on the part of the insurer. It, by its agent, wrote and delivered the policy. It expressed in it, in language which it could not have misunderstood, the contract it intended and made. The policy as written and delivered must, then, be deemed and taken as the contract of the parties.”
In the case at bar there is no claim of fraud and, as noted, there was no mutual mistake. Any mistake by reason whereof the plaintiff did not obtain coverage for goods in possession of its salesman Ernest E. Strauss really occurred, as already noted, through the failure of the plaintiff, first, in not communicating what may have been its intention; and, second, in not reading the acknowledgment mailed by the defendant on April 17, 1925, wherein it was distinctly stated that the new policy would be issued to cover goods in the possession of but two salesmen, not including Strauss; and, third, in failing to examine the policy which was issued and received by the plaintiff prior to the loss in question. In this connection the language of Judge Collin in Metzger v. Ætna Insurance Co. (supra) is appropriate: “ If the insured obtained or held a mistaken view or belief concerning the agreements of the policy, the fault or negligence of its president and representative was the cause. A mere reading of the policy would have made him and the plaintiff
It follows that the judgment appealed from should be reversed, with costs, and the complaint dismissed, with costs.
Dowling, P. J., Mekrell, McAvoy and O’Malley, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, with costs and complaint dismissed, with costs. Settle order on notice.