84 N.Y.S. 374 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
Upon the trial the defendant insisted upon three defenses : First, that under the terms of the policy it was void “if the interest of the insured be other than unconditional and sole ownership”; secondly, that the plaintiffs furnished fraudulent proofs of loss; thirdly, that the property was burned by the act or connivance of the plaintiffs. We are convinced that the defendant’s first objection must prevail, and it therefore becomes unnecessary to examine the other questions which the defendant has urgently insisted upon.
It is unquestioned that the interest of McGrath, who was insured by the defendant, was not the unconditional and sole ownership of the property insured. Under the terms of the policy itself, therefore, the policy was ineffective unless the defendant has waived this condition to its validity. The force of this objection is sought to be evaded by the plaintiff by testimony of McGrath to the effect that McIntyre was correctly informed as to the actual ownership of the property at the time the application was made to him. There is no claim that any information of such fact was conveyed by McIntyre to the defendant’s lawfully appointed agents, and in fact McIntyre denies that such information was given to him. Assuming, for the argument, that McIntyre was so informed of that fact, we think it cannot avail the plaintiffs by reason of the fact that McIntyre was not the agent of the defendant. The policy provides that in any matter relating to this insurance “no person, unless duly authorized in writing, shall be deemed the agent of this company.” There is no pretense that McIntyre had any authority in writing, or that he acted other than as an insurance broker soliciting insurance, and placing his orders with the defendant’s agent. It is insisted "by the plaintiffs’ counsel that information to McIntyre had the same effect as would information to a clerk in the office of the defendant’s agent. To this we cannot agree. Clerks are necessary adjuncts to business of any size, and, as far as they may be necessary adjuncts, their knowledge may, to an extent, be deemed knowledge of their employers. The relation of McIntyre to these agents was quite different, and his knowledge could no more be deemed the knowledge of the defendant’s agent than would the knowledge of any agent or broker who was soliciting insurance between private parties and the insurance company. Without knowledge, then, of the fact that the insured was not the sole owner of the property insured, and without having waived this provision of the policy, we see no escape from the defendant’s contention that the policy has thereby become void.
“The contention of the appellant that the defendant, by submitting the case upon the testimony without making a motion for a nonsuit, conceded that*377 the evidence was sufficient to make the question of the creditor’s knowledge one of fact, cannot he sustained. It cannot he properly held that, where a plaintiff fails to establish a cause of action, the defendant, by submitting the case without moving for a nonsuit, supplies the necessary proof, or is to be regarded as waiving his right to raise that question on appeal.
“Nor do we think the appellant’s other contention—that, because the defendants were not sworn as witnesses in the case, the court may assume that a cause of action exists without the proof necessary to constitute it— can be upheld. So long as the plaintiff had not established a cause of action against them, they were neither required to make a motion for a nonsuit to protect their rights, nor were they called upon to introduce evidence to contradict the plaintiff’s facts, which were insufficient to establish any liability against them.’’
The doctrine of the case of Griffith v. Staten Island R. T. R. Co., 89 Hun, 141, 36 N. Y. Supp. 157, seems to be overruled in the Shot-well Case cited.
We conclude, therefore, that the trial court erred in submitting this case to the jury, and the judgment and order should be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs" to the appellant to abide the event of the action. All concur; PARKER, P. J., in result.