OPINION OF THE COURT
This appeal presents a question of first impression for our court. At issue is whether a policy of title insurance will be rendered void pursuant to a standard misrepresentation clause found therein as a result of the insured’s failure to disclose a material fact which was a matter of public record at the time the policy was issued.
In.November, 1967, the Town of Hempstead condemned and thereby acquired title to certain property on and adjacent to the premises known as 31-39 Carvel Place, which is located in Inwood, Long Island. At that time, the premises were owned by Bass Rock Holding, Inc. (Bass Rock), a
The Bass Rock property was heavily indebted and in 1968 there was a default in mortgage payments. A foreclosure proceeding was instituted in the early part of 1969. It was at about this time that Gerald Tucker, general counsel for one of the mortgagees in the foreclosure proceeding, indicated an interest in the property and negotiations were commenced with the De Giulios with a view toward the eventual purchase of the Bass Rock property. Soon thereafter, the plaintiff corporation was formed by Tucker and a group of associated investors.
It was also around this time, according to the testimony of Abraham Lee, Special Counsel for the Town of Hemp-stead, that Lee telephoned Tucker to inform him that a portion of the Bass Rock property had been condemned by the town and should be excluded from the foreclosure proceeding. Lee testified that he identified the condemned parcel as “abutting on Carvel Place”, but that Tucker stated that he was not interested and would proceed with the foreclosure action anyway. The parcel in question subsequently was identified in the record as the town’s damage parcel 8-6, taken for street alignment purposes.
Sometime after Tucker spoke with Lee, Tucker and Joseph Tiefenbrun, the attorney retained by plaintiff, met with the Bass Rock attorney to discuss the details of the sales contract. At this meeting, Tucker was informed that,
On May 14, 1969, title was closed. During the closing, and in the presence of defendant’s title closer, Tucker and Mrs. De Giulio discussed the condemnation award referred to in the sales contract. In fact, Mrs. De Giulio sketched an outline of the condemned property on the Bass Rock title survey. The parcel marked by Mrs. De Giulio was adjacent to the southwest corner of the Bass Rock property, but it was not part of nor did it affect any access routes to the warehouse.
After title closed, defendant issued plaintiff a title policy covering the warehouse property. The policy contained the following clause insuring access to public streets: “Notwithstanding any provisions in this paragraph to the contrary, this policy, unless otherwise excepted, insures the ordinary rights of access and egress belonging to abutting owners.” It should be noted that no exception was listed in the policy for any condemnation affecting Carvel Place, St. George Street or Jeanette Avenue.
At the time the property was purchased, plaintiff leased the entire premises to Pan American World Airways, Inc. In addition, plaintiff had spent an additional $95,000 above the purchase price in order to improve the premises for its new tenant. Unfortunately, it was soon discovered that the title search had failed to reveal that the roadbeds of St. George Street and Jeanette Avenue and a portion of the property along Carvel Place had been condemned by the Town of Hempstead two years prior to plaintiff’s acquisition of the property. It was apparent that the defendant’s title searchers simply failed to check the master card on
By 1971, plans for urban development in the Town of Hempstead required the closing down of the warehouse access'routes at St. George Street and Jeanette Avenue, thereby rendering the property valueless. As a result, Pan American quit the premises and plaintiff eventually lost 31-39 Carvel Place in a foreclosure sale. Plaintiff then commenced the present action against the defendant seeking to recover $600,000 in damages pursuant to its title insurance policy based on the defendant’s failure to discover the condemned roadbed property.
In its answer, defendant pleaded an affirmative defense based on the following standard provision in its policy:
“MISREPRESENTATION
“Any untrue statement made by the insured, with respect to any material fact, or any suppression of or failure to disclose any material fact, or any untrue answer by the insured, to material inquiries before the issuance of this policy, shall void this policy.”
According to defendant, plaintiff, through its agent Tucker, had knowledge prior to the closing of the town’s condemnation as a result of his conversation with Lee. Defendant asserted that plaintiff’s failure to divulge this knowledge to the defendant was a “failure to disclose [a] material fact” which rendered the title policy void.
At the end of a nonjury trial, Trial Term dismissed plaintiff’s claim. Finding that plaintiff, through Tucker, had knowledge of the condemnations prior to the issuance of the policy which it failed to disclose to the defendant, Trial Term concluded that the policy was nullified.
On appeal, a unanimous Appellate Division affirmed, but
In addressing this issue, the court below defined materiality in terms of “whether the suppression deprived the insurer of its freedom of choice in determining whether to accept or reject the risk upon full disclosure of all the facts which might reasonably affect that choice.” (
At the outset, we note our agreement with the court below that information concerning the condemnations of damage parcel 8-6 adjacent to Carvel Place and the St. George Street and Jeanette Avenue roadbeds was material. It is manifest that revelation of this information certainly would have affected defendant’s choice of insuring the risk covered by the policy issued to plaintiff. (See Vander Veer v Continental Cas. Co.,
By definition, title insurance involves “insuring the owners of real property * * * against loss by reason of defective titles and encumbrances thereon and insuring the correctness of searches for all instruments, liens or charges affecting the title to such property”. (Insurance Law, § 46, subd 18; see, also, § 438.) Or, as one lower court has expressed it, “[a] policy of title insurance means the opinion of the company which issues it, as to the validity of the title, backed by an agreement to make that opinion good, in case it should prove to be mistaken, and loss should result in consequence to the insured.” (First Nat. Bank & Trust Co. of Port Chester v New York Tit. Ins. Co.,
Beyond its purely contractual aspects, however, the unique nature of a title insurance transaction was quickly recognized by the courts. In Empire Dev. Co. v Title Guar. & Trust Co. (
Interestingly, in response to the decision in the Empire Dev. Co. case, title companies adopted as a standard provision in their policies the very misrepresentation clause at issue on this appeal. (See 5A Warren’s Weed New York Real Property, Title Insurance, § 2.08.) To date, however, this court has not been presented with an opportunity to examine the effect to be given to this clause in terms of imposing an obligation on the insured to disclose information to the insurer. Moreover, although at least one lower court has recognized the validity of this misrepresentation clause based on the insured’s failure to divulge information to its insurer (Glickman v Home Tit. Guar. Co.,
One Federal court, addressing a provision identical to that found in the defendant’s policy, stated that the clause “must be given a common sense application and, considering the nature of title insurance transactions, a duty to speak could be found only if the insurance applicant had actual knowledge of certain defects or encumbrances. Further, misrepresentation could be found only if one charged with such a duty to speak intentionally failed to disclose the information.” (Lawyers Tit. Ins. Corp. v Research Loan & Inv. Corp., 361 F2d 764, 768.) In a like manner, other jurisdictions which have addressed similar clauses have required a showing that the insured had actual knowledge of the title defect which was intentionally concealed from the insurer. Moreover, these cases indicated, either expressly or by implication, that the title policy would only be voided in instances where the undisclosed information was not discoverable by the insurer by reference to publicly filed records. (Collins v Pioneer Tit. Ins. Co., 629 F2d 429; Rosenblatt v Louisville Tit. Co., 218 Ky 714; Fohn v Title Ins. Corp. of St. Louis,
We agree with the view expressed by these cases. Therefore, we hold that a policy of title insurance will not be rendered void pursuant to a misrepresentation clause absent some showing of intentional concealment on the part of the insured tantamount to fraud. Moreover, because record information of a title defect is available to the title insurer and because the title insurer is presumed to have made itself aware of such information, we hold that an insured under a policy of title insurance such as is involved herein is under no duty to disclose to the insurer a fact
In so holding, we merely recognize the practical realities of the transaction involved. As mentioned earlier, title insurance is procured in order to protect against the risk that the property purchased may have some defect in title. The emphasis in securing these policies is on the expertise of the title company to search the public records and discover possible defects in title. Thus, unlike other types of insurance, the insured under a title policy provides little, if any, information to the title company other than the lot and block of the premises and the name of the prospective grantor. Armed with this information, the title company then can search the various indices and maps to ascertain the state of title to the property. Indeed, it is because title insurance companies combine their search and disclosure expertise with insurance protection that an implied duty arises out of the title insurance agreement that the insurer has conducted a reasonably diligent search. (McLaughlin v Attorneys’ Tit. Guar. Fund, 61 Ill App 3d 911; Shotwell v Transamerica Tit. Ins. Co., 16 Wash App 627, 628-631, affd 91 Wn 2d 161; see 9 Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice, § 5213.) This duty may not be abrogated through a standard policy clause which would, if given the effect urged by defendant, place the onus of the title company’s failure adequately to search the records on the party who secured the insurance protection for that very purpose. (See Empire Dev. Co. v Title Guar. & Trust Co.,
Of course, an intentional failure by the insured to disclose material information not readily discernible from the public records will render the policy void. .For instance, where the insured secures title insurance with knowledge that there exists some hidden defect in title, such as a forged deed, incapacity of the grantor, or the existence of an unrecorded easement (see, generally, 5A Warren’s Weed New York Real Property, Title Insurance, § 2.04) and the insured conceals that information from the title insurer,
In this case, there was no showing that plaintiff’s agent, Tucker, intentionally failed to disclose the information concerning the Carvel Place condemnation. In fact, it would appear that defendant was at least put on notice as to the existence of condemnations affecting the Bass Rock property by the recital in the sales contract assigning all condemnation awards to plaintiff and by the discussion of the condemnation of the small southwest parcel which took place at the closing. In any event, it is undisputed that the existence of the St. George Street and Jeanette Avenue condemnations was readily ascertainable from the public records available at the Nassau County Clerk’s office. Defendant, having failed to avail itself of this information, now attempts to avoid its obligation under the policy by claiming that plaintiff failed to disclose material information concerning title to the property. However, because plaintiff was under no duty to disclose this publicly available information to defendant, the policy will not be rendered void pursuant to the misrepresentation provision found therein.
Finally, defendant’s answer contained a counterclaim premised upon an agreement entered into between the parties whereby the defendant advanced certain moneys in plaintiff’s behalf for taxes and expenses attributable to plaintiff’s attempt to secure a condemnation award from the Town of Hempstead. Pursuant to that agreement, plaintiff was to repay defendant the amounts so advanced subject to a setoff of any sums found due to plaintiff under its title policy. Inasmuch as plaintiff offers no basis for overturning the judgment rendered in defendant’s behalf on this counterclaim, we do not disturb that award. Of course, payment of the amounts owing under this counterclaim must await a determination of the amount due plaintiff as damages under its title policy.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be modified, with costs to plaintiff, to the extent of reversing the dismissal of plaintiff’s first cause of action and remitting the case to Supreme Court, Nassau County, for a
Chief Judge Cooke and Judges Gabrielli, Jones, Wachtler and Fuchsberg concur; Judge Meyer taking no part.
Order modified, with costs to plaintiff, and the case remitted to Supreme Court, Nassau County, for a trial on the issue of plaintiff’s damages in accordance with the opinion herein and, as so modified, order affirmed.
Notes
As a second cause of action, plaintiff alleged that defendant was negligent in conducting its title search by failing to discover the public records of the condemnations. The Appellate Division held that this second cause of action properly was dismissed because any claim of negligence in the title search merged into the subsequently issued title policy pursuant to the express terms of the certificate of title. Inasmuch as no appeal was taken by plaintiff from this determination, we do not concern ourselves here with plaintiff’s second cause of action in negligence.
