159 N.E. 183 | NY | 1927
The plaintiff was the owner of the steam tug Globe. On the 20th day of October, 1924, he chartered the tug to the Waterway Navigation Company through one Guidera, who represented that company at Buffalo, New York, where the plaintiff resided. The tug was then in inland waters in the vicinity of Buffalo. Guidera agreed to have the tug covered with marine insurance, and upon the following day assured the plaintiff that the insurance had been placed by the New York office of the navigation company. In point of fact the insurance had not then been written. However, on October 23, 1924, the New York office of the company did telephone B.T. Nolan Company, brokers of marine insurance, to place fire and marine insurance upon the tug. On Friday, October 24th, B.T. Nolan, of that company, applied to the defendant, at its New York office, for insurance. He was told that he must supply more information than he was able to reveal. On the following morning, Saturday, October 25, 1924, at about eleven o'clock, Nolan renewed his application at the defendant's office. After some objection, the defendant issued a binder insuring the tug Globe, "lost or not lost" from noon of the previous day, October 24, 1924, for the term of one year, in the sum of $6,000. Meanwhile, on October 25th, before eight o'clock in the morning, at least three hours before the binder was issued by the defendant, the tug, while tied up at the Terminal Wharf in the Erie Basin at Buffalo, New York, had sunk to the bottom of the basin. The plaintiff was informed of the loss at about eight o'clock *399 that morning. He did not know the name of the company in which, according to Guidera, the Waterway Navigation Company had caused the tug to be insured. Between eight o'clock and eleven o'clock that morning the plaintiff made several efforts to get into telephonic communication with the president of the navigation company in New York, to ascertain who had the insurance, but was unable to reach him.
Ordinarily, contracts of insurance are conditioned upon the existence of the subject of insurance at the time the policies are written. (Mead v. Phenix Ins. Co.,
In this case the plaintiff was not aware that the policy *400 in question was about to be written. He had been informed and believed that insurance had been written before the loss, but was unaware of the name of the insuring company. Under the circumstances shown by the present record there was no call for him to proceed with extreme diligence. He knew of no situation which required information of loss promptly to be given in order that insurance might not be written. As the facts appear, he did all that a reasonably prudent man would have done. He made immediate attempts to telephone the charterer which, according to the plaintiff's advices, had effected the insurance, to learn the name of the insurer, but his efforts were unavailing. Under the circumstances the complaint should not have been dismissed.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
CARDOZO, Ch. J., POUND, CRANE, ANDREWS, LEHMAN and O'BRIEN, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.