22 A.D. 64 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The plaintiff, an insurance company doing business in the United States, issued and delivered to Patterson, Downing & Co., merchants, a policy of insurance by which it insured a three-fifths interest in all goods of said assured “ at and from interior points in the United States to Baltimore, Norfolk, Wilmington, N. C., Charleston,
The complaint alleges that “ on the second day of April, 1896, while the said policy was in full force, a fire occurred by which a large part of the property insured was destroyed. Thereafter the amount for which the plaintiff was liable to the insured under the said policy was ascertained and adjusted at the sum of §47,270.56, which the plaintiff paid on or before May 27th, 1896.” This action is brought to recover the defendant’s proportion of such loss.
The defense insisted upon by the defendant was that, under the terms of the policy of reinsurance, the risk assumed by this defendant only attached to such naval stores as were, while awaiting ship, ment, “in or on the warehouses and
We think the learned referee erred in directing the reformation of this policy. To sustain the counterclaim, it was proved that one
There is here no evidence to justify a finding that there was any mutual mistake as to what the policy itself contained; certainly none to show that the plaintiff understood- that the contract was to contain any such limitation as was sought to be written into it. Nor is there any evidence to show that the defendant understood that this limitation was in the contract, or that the contract thus prepared contained any provision limiting the insurance to property which had been for a period less than a week in the warehouses or sheds of the assured under the original policy. The utmost that could be said was that-the defendant had been induced to accept a policy, general in its terms, upon a statement that by the method of business adopted by the assured under the original policy issued by the plaintiff there would not be an accumulation of goods in the yard; and there is no evidence to show that at the time the policy was issued, or prior to that time, this representation was not true. The referee in his opinion states the rule as follows: “ Where, through fraud or accident, a written agreement varies from what the parties intended, or where, through mistake, it fails to express the intention of the parties, equity will decree its reformation. * * * But the party seeking the reformation must establish the fraud or accident or mutual mistake by evidence that is ‘clear, positive and convincing.’” We agree with this statement of the law, but think the evidence failed to prove . that, through fraud or accident, the
We think, therefore, that the judgment reforming the policy was wrong, and to that extent the judgment must be reversed.
We think, however, that the learned referee was right in holdingtliat, under the proof, the policy issued by the defendant never attached to the goods destroyed by fire. Under the policy issued by the plaintiff, it insured Patterson, Downing & Co. against loss, “ in all goods, their own property, or in which they may be interested as part owners or agents * * *” at and from interior points in the United States, to various cities upon the seaboard, which included the city of Brunswick. The policy, then continuing, provided that
The plaintiff was liable while the goods were in the yards as well as when upon the cars, but the liability of‘defendant was limited to the naval stores in or on the warehouses or sheds. The parties have made their contract, and by the terms of this contract the liability of the defendant is to be determined. It is quite clear that this policy would not attach to naval stores while laden upon railroad cars waiting to be discharged into warehouses of Downing & Co.
It is equally true that the policy would not attach while the goods were in the yard or before they were actually put in the warehouses or sheds provided by Downing & Co. for that purpose. It is also clear that as soon as any naval stores had been taken out of the sheds or warehouses for the purpose of being placed upon vessels, or for any other purpose, this policy would cease to cover such goods. In other words, by the express provisions of the contract the liability of the defendant was limited to an insurance upon naval stores when in such sheds or warehouses, and not to naval stores upon the trains
It seems, however, that the turpentine which was destroyed was in a shed upon the- premises, and we think that-for that-turpentine the defendant was clearly liable. The referee has found that the loss by fire on the turpentine was $14,006.61. As" these-underwriters were liable for one-sixteenth of that sum, the liability under this policy would be $875.41, and the plaintiff is entitled to judgment against the defendant for his proportion of that amount.
The judgment should, therefore, be reversed, and judgment directed for the plaintiff against the defendant for his proportion of this-sum of $875.41, the amount of this judgment tobe ascertained upon the settlement of the judgment. The question of costs in the court below to. be ’determined by the amount of the judgment, but. without costs of this appeal.
Van Betjnt, "P. J., Rumsey, Patterson and O’Brien, JJ., concurred.
- Judgment reversed, without costs, and judgment ordered for plaintiff as directed in opinion.
Sic.
Sic.