101 Misc. 598 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1917
This defendant, being an insurance corporation, insured this plaintiff against loss to him on account of injuries inflicted on other people by reason of the operation of an automobile owned by this plaintiff. Later a woman was injured on the streets of the
This defendant in its answer — besides making appropriate denials — pleads in substance as an affirmative defense that when the mishap in question occurred the automobile was operated by an infant under eighteen years of age, not only to the knowledge and with the consent of this plaintiff, but pursuant to this plaintiff’s instructions and under his orders; and that such operation of the automobile resulting in said mishap was a crime under the laws of the state of New York of the commission of which both the driver and his master, this plaintiff, were guilty as principals. The plaintiff contends that the policy should be strictly construed against the defendant which prepared it; that the policy contains no exception or reservation to which the defendant can now resort for salvation, and that no implied condition which will protect the defendant can be read into the policy. Of course, on this motion the answer must be taken as true and given all possible force and effect.
"With all the arguments and claims of both parties the real and only question here involved is this: Does the following language of the policy, namely, “ [the defendant] agree to indemnify the insured against loss * # # by reason of the * * * use * * * of the automobile ” furnish security for financial loss incurred by the insured through use of the automobile by the insured directly, or by another under his orders which is criminal under the statutes of this state? Whether the result at which I am arriving be deemed
I appreciate that insurance policies are in general to be construed strictly against the companies which draft and issue them; however, this rule is not so broad as to compel a construction which would force such companies to save harmless those- of their policy holders who suffer financial loss on account of their having committed crimes. And this, too, even though the.policy does not except criminal acts; for such an exception, in my judgment, even though express, would be valueless because contrary to good public policy. A contrary holding would permit such an insurance policy holder not only to take advantage of his own wrong but to profit financially from his own criminal act. If the estate of a suicide cannot recover under a life insurance policy which is silent as to death by suicide (and this is now the law in the state of New York — Shipman v. Protected Home Circle, 174 N. Y. 406, 410), surely, a fortiori, this plaintiff cannot recover if this defendant proves what it has alleged in defense.
Motion denied, with costs.