11 N.Y.S. 125 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1890
This is an appeal from a judgment entered upon the report of a referee in favor of the plaintiff for $1,147.48 and costs in an action upon a policy of insurance against loss and damage by fire. The defense set up is that the assured violated the provisions of the policy, and that therefore the defendant is not liable. The policy was issued on the 3d of January, 1882, for one year, for $1,100, on a frame house, and $100 on ice-box, benches^ block, and counters therein, and cash premium per year $13.30, and was payable to Whitbeck & Green, mortgagees, in case of loss, as their interest might appear. The policy had been renewed from time to time until the time of the fire,—December 28, 1885. It was executed by the president and secretary of the company, not under seal, and counter-signed at West Troy by J. H. Hulsapple, agent, and contained the provision that “this policy shall become void unless consent in writing is indorsed by the company hereon in each of the following instances, viz.” Then follow numerous conditions, provisions, and; qualifications, among which are the following, which are claimed by the appellant to have been violated by the assured: “If any building herein described be or become vacant or unoccupied for the purposes indicated in tbisco n tract, where a fire has occurred injuring the property herein described, the assured shall use all practicable means to save and protect the same, and shall give immediate notice of the loss in writing, to the company. A particular statement of the loss shall be rendered to this company, at its office, within. 30 days alter the fire, signed and sworn to by the assured.” Then' follows, in this article, a very minute circumstantial statement in detail of the condition-of the property, the cause of the fire, condition of the title and incumbrances, amount of loss, and many other facts, circumstances, and conditions, intended,, doubtless, to work a forfeiture of the policy if not performed. The policy also contained the following provisions: “Any fraud, or attempt at fraud, or any misrepresentation in any statement touching the loss, or any false swearing on the part of the assured or his agents in any examination, or in the proof of loss or otherwise, shall cause a forfeiture of all claims to this company upon this policy. And this company shall not be bound upon this policy
Whatever may be said of the impolicy, not to say iniquity, of the technical and generally unread provisions sometimes incorporated in insurance policies, by which the unwary policy-holder is lulled into a false security, and induced to pay premiums exacted from time to time, only to be aroused from his delusions on the happening of a loss, by notification that he has violated some, to him, unknown provisions of the policy, by which his claim for indemnity is forfeited, still, in an action upon the policy, it is the duty of the court to regard the letter of the bond, and enforce it like any other contract, according to its terms and provisions, applying to it the same rule of construction by which other contracts are interpreted.
The first question, then, is, was the fact that the building was unoccupied at the time of the fire, and had been from the middle of the preceding November, without the written consent of the company or its agent, such a violation of the terms of this policy as to render it void? The referee finds that at the time of the fire the building was not occupied for the purposes indi•cated in the policy of insurance; that the policy contained no'consent in writing, indorsed thereon by the company or its agent, that such building should remain vacant or unoccupied; and that no written consent of any kind was ever given by the company or its agent that such building might be vacant or unoccupied. The referee also finds that in November the son and agent of the assured notified John Hulsapple, the local agent of the defendant at West Troy, that the building insured was vacant, and inquired how it would be in case of tire, and that Hulsapple said that it was all right as long as he notified the agent, and he also finds that at the time Hulsapple was the general agent ■of the defendant at West Troy, and transacted the general business of the defendant. On these facts the plaintiff insists that Hulsapple had the power, as between the company and the assured, to waive any of the special conditions of the policy, and that by this declaration to the plaintiff’s agent he did effectually waive the procuring of the written consent of the company, and thereby estopped the company from taking the objection that the consent of the company had not been indorsed in writing by the secretary on the policy. In support of this position we are referred to the case of Pechner v. Insurance Co., 65 N. Y. 195, where Dwight, 0., discusses elaborately the powers of general agents of insurance companies, as to their power to bind the company by their acts and declarations, and also as to their ability by paroi to waive a condition in writing in a policy not under seal. One of the ■questions in that case was whether a general agent of the company could by paroi waive this condition in the policy: “If the insured shall have, or shall hereafter make, any other insurance on the property hereby insured, or any part thereof, without the consent of the company written herein, then and in ■every such case the policy shall be void.” The agent issuing this policy resided in Elmira. Afterwards additional insurance was placed on the goods, with the oral consent of the agent, not wr.tten in the policy. A loss having ensued, in the trial of an action upon the policy the above facts were in substance proved, and the judge declined, on motion by defendant’s counsel, to direct a verdict for the defendant, and the jury found a verdict for the plaintiff. The learned judge, in discussing the question raised by these facts, uses
The referee also .found that the declaration and assurance given by the agent, Hulsapple, to the assured and his agent, on being notified the next day after the fire of the loss, and his agreement to furnish the proof, and statement that it would be all right, was a sufficient notice to the company, and a waiver of strict compliance with the terms of the policy, and giving written notice and proof of loss within 30 days; when taken in connection with the acts of the company in making examination of the premises, and making their estimates, by their experts and adjusters, the assured had a right to assume that the notice required had been given, and that the company had waived a strict technical compliance with the language of the policy on that point. In Goodwin v. Insurance Co., 73 N. Y. 490, it was held that, where the statement of the agent of the company had caused the policy-holder to delay in furnishing proof of loss, a strict compliance with the policy as to time was waived, the court says: “The statement of the agent of the defendant was no doubt the cause of the omission to present the proofs of the death of the insured, and misled the plaintiff into the mistake, if it can be so regarded, which is now urged as a defense. I think the act of tile agent in this-respect was not outside of the limits of his authority.” And,-after stating in a general way facts which showed that the agent was in law a general agent of the defendant, the learned judge adds: “The authorities are numerous which hold that under such circumstances the acts of the agent bind the principal, and that he has a perfect right to waive conditions of this description contained in a policy.” Citing numerous authorities. The referee having found that there was a waiver upon this question by the company, if we are right as to the power of the agent, his finding was correct, and must be sustained upon this point.
The remaining question is, was there fraud practiced by the assured in the estimate of his loss? The policy provides that it shall be forfeited for fraud in the assured in Reference to the same, either before or after loss. It is insisted by the defendant that the assured had been guilty of a fraudulent overestimate of value in the proof of loss. There were conflicting opinions by the witnesses at the trial as to the value, but we do not see anything in the estimate of value by the assured that would justify this court in reversing this judgment on the ground of fraud, especially as the referee upon this point had found the facts against the defendant. Fraud, in this class of cases, as well as in others, must be proved, and cannot be presumed, and it is well settled that the overestimate must be willful and intentional to defeat the claim of the-assured on the ground of fraudulent overestimate of value. Titus v. Insurance Co., 81 N. Y. 421.
The objection that the paroi assignment of the cause of action in this case is invalid we think is not well founded; and, as the policy does not declare that an assignment without the consent of the company renders the policy void, we see no reason why the plaintiff, if right upon the other questions, may not maintain an action on this policy. Marcus v. Insurance Co., 68 N. Y. 625. Judgment affirmed, with costs. All concur.