56 N.Y.S. 68 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This action was brought to recover the amount of the loss sustained by the plaintiff under a policy of insurance whereby certain underwriters, represented by and acting through Daniel Woodcock, as attorney in fact, agreed to insure the plaintiff’s assignor against all loss or damage by fire to certain specifically described property, to an amount not exceeding $2,000. This policy contained the fol
Upon the trial the plaintiff offered in evidence a judgment roll in-the case of this plaintiff against Daniel Woodcock, as attorney for-the underwriters of the Insurers’ Alliance, and, having proved the: demand and the assignment to the plaintiff, rested. The defendant-then offered in evidence a transcript of the county clerk showing the-payment of the judgment obtained by the plaintiff against Woodcock as attorney in fact for the underwriters, and moved to dismiss-'the complaint upon the ground that the judgment against the attorney and manager upon which the suit rested had been paid and satisfied of record, and that, therefore, there existed now no liability-under the terms of the policy upon which this defendant could beheld liable in this action, and, therefore, that the action could not be-sustained. The plaintiff then moved that a verdict be directed in. his favor. The court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff,, and ordered the exceptions to be heard in the first instance in this-court.
The judgment in the action against Woodcock adjudged that “ Charles A. McCredy, the plaintiff, do recover of Daniel Woodcock (as attorney of the underwriters of the Insurers’ Alliance), the defendant, the sum of One hundred and fifty dollars and fifty-nine cents, the amount, claimed and interest, with twenty dollars and. eleven cents costs and disbursements, amounting in the whole to the sum of one hundred and seventy and 70/100 dollars ($170 70 / 100),. and that said plaintiff have execution therefor.”
The case of Compton v. Beecher (17 App. Div. 38) was an action upon a policy similar to the one in question. In the policy in that case it was provided : “'Ho action shall be brought by the assured to enforce the provisions of this policy except against the attorneys in fact, as representing all of the underwriters, and each of the underwriters hereby agrees to abide the result of any suit so brought as fixing his individual responsibility hereunder.” It was contended in that case that the action could not be maintained against the attorneys in fact. It was held, following Leiter v. Beecher (supra), that an action to recover the Avhole amount of the loss could be maintained by the insured, and that a judgment requiring that the amount of the loss should be -paid, Jarst, out of the unexpended premiums on hand; second, if not paid from that fund, out of the fund established by the deposit by each of the undenvriters, and in case it Avas not paid out of either fund, the amount should be paid by the sixteen undenvriters, at $187.51 each, Avas proper.
Under a policy of this character, therefore, the insured may maintain an action against the attorney in fact for the underwriters to recover the full amount of the loss sustained under the policy. In such an action the insured can have the amount of his loss ascertained and determined, and the amount of the individ
It appears that the plaintiff, having a claim under this policy for the loss, commenced an action against Daniel Woodcock, as attorney
The jdaintiff had no cause of action against Daniel Woodcock, as the attorney in fact of the underwriters of the Insurers’ Alliance, to recover for any amount that he was liable for individually. Under this policy of insurance, as alleged in the complaint, the action must, in the first instance, be brought against the attorney in fact of all the underwriters. Whatever liability there was upon his individual obligation as an underwriter must be enforced against him individually ; and when he was sued as attorney in fact of the underwriters, the only cause of action that existed against him in that capacity was that upon the contract of insurance, which provided for an action to recover for the loss sustained by the insured, the judgment to be entered in such an action to be satisfied out of a specific fund specified in the policy of insurance.
It is not necessary to determine whether or not this .provision, that no action could be. maintained against the individual underwriters, would be rendered inoperative by reason of the failure of the underwriters to provide the fund specified in the policy of insurance from which the amount of the loss was, in the first instance, to be payable. The plaintiff sued the general manager as agent of the underwriters, and alleged in his complaint, not that there was no fund at the time of 'the commencement of the action
It follows that the exceptions must he sustained and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Rumsey and McLaughlin, JJ., concurred.
Exceptions sustained, new trial ordered, costs to defendant to abide event.