65 N.Y. 6 | NY | 1875
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[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *10 No question was made on the argument in this court as to the sufficiency of the preliminary proofs in this cause, nor was there any claim of fraud. The questions in controversy between the parties were narrowed down substantially to three: 1. Can the plaintiff recover as assignee, or in behalf of his co-tenant, George N. Pitney? 2. Can he recover the insurance on his own undivided interest, assuming that he was owner at the time of the fire? 3. Does the proof show that he was owner, or did he by his oral contract transfer his interest in the subject-matter of the insurance to Thayer?
I. The policy, as originally drawn, was made to cover solely the interest of Norman Pitney, the plaintiff. There appears at that time to have been no intimation of joint ownership of the wool. Subsequently, an interview was had with Bowen, the defendant's agent, in which it was stated to him that the plaintiff had forgotten to mention that his son had an interest in the wool, and that his interest was to be covered by the insurance. Bowen, at first, thought that it would be necessary to make out a new policy. He finally determined to insert the clause, "in case of loss, if any, one-half payable to George N. Pitney, as his interest may appear." The policy, as corrected, then read as follows, as far as the insuring clause is concerned: "By this policy of insurance * * * the Glen's Falls Insurance Company do insure Norman Pitney, of Cambridge, against loss or damage by fire to the amount of $1,200 on 2,400 pounds of wool, in horse-shed on the George McKie farm, Cambridge. In case of loss, if any, one-half payable to George N. Pitney, as his interest may appear."
The court, at the trial, admitted evidence, under objection of the defendant, to show that George N. Pitney was tenant in common, and that the intent of the parties was to have that interest insured. It was claimed that such parol proof *13 was inadmissible as affecting a written instrument. The defendant, in this contention, overlooks the words "as hisinterest may appear." If the words had simply stood, "in case of loss, if any, one-half payable to George N. Pitney," the meaning would apparently have been that the insurance was made solely on Norman Pitney's property, and that one-half of the loss was to be paid over to the plaintiff's nominee instead of to himself. But when the words "as his interest may appear" are added, something more seems to be intended. The language, though informal, points to an ownership in the wool of some kind. What interest is intended is not specified. The entire clause must be construed, and parol evidence is admissible to place the court in the situation of the parties so as to be able to ascertain what interest George Pitney had, and thus what interest belonging to him was intended to be covered by the policy.
It will readily be conceded that there are authorities to the effect that if one joint owner insures for himself and his co-owner, without mentioning the latter's name, and without any knowledge of him on the part of the insurers, no action will lie in that person's favor. (Dumas v. Jones,
The reason of this case does not apply if there be any thing on the face of the policy to indicate that a party has an interest in the subject-matter of the insurance. If the words thus employed be ambiguous, or if the designation be so imperfect that it cannot be understood standing alone, extrinsic evidence may be resorted to in order to ascertain the meaning. Those *14
persons are deemed to be included in the policy who were in the minds of the parties when the contract was made. (Clinton v.Hope Ins. Co.,
The case of Bidwell v. North-western Company (
The application had been signed in blank, and was filled out by Bowen in the plaintiff's absence. When Norman Pitney went for the policy, he saw it did not cover that of his son George, and then told him that part of it belonged to him. Bowen suggested that he could buy his son's wool. He made an effort to do so, but failed. He then sent the policy back by Harvey Burch, his son-in-law, to Bowen to have the necessary alteration made. Burch testified that he handed the policy to Bowen, and stated to him that Norman and George N. Pitney requested him (Burch) to take the policy to Bowen, and to state that they wanted to have the policy so fixed that George's interest would be insured. Bowen at first thought that he would have to send it to the office, but finally said that he could fix it, and inserted the clause already quoted from the policy. The testimony also showed that George's interest was that of a tenant in common with his father, and its amount and value were fully proved. In the subsequent portions of this opinion, it will appear that Bowen was a general agent of the defendant, and had sufficient authority to make the alteration under consideration. The clause may be regarded as a new contract with the real party in interest. (Solms v. Rutgers' Fire Ins.Co., 4 Abb. Ct. App. Dec. 279; S.C., 3 Keyes, 416, Opin. of GROVER, J.) There was sufficient consideration for this agreement, as, had it not been made, the plaintiff would have had an equitable right to a return of a proportionate part of *16 the premium, as he would not have had sufficient interest for all the policies to act upon, and the overpayment would be regarded as a mere mistake in the haste of transacting the business.
On these grounds the plaintiff, as assignee of George N. Pitney, may recover to the full extent of his loss, there being no other insurance on his interest. His cause of action and the assignment of the same were sufficiently set forth in the complaint. That commences, by stating that for another and further cause of action against the defendant, under and by virtue of the policy of insurance, which was annexed and referred to, there is a clause in the following words, etc. The clause in question is set out. It is then averred that George had an interest in the property, as owner, to a specified amount; that it was destroyed by fire; that all the conditions of the policy were fulfilled, including notice and preliminary proof of loss; that the policy was assigned to plaintiff for a valuable consideration, and the defendant is justly indebted to the plaintiff as such assignee in a specified sum. This pleading is sufficient under section 162 of the Code, which allows a party to set forth a copy of the instrument under which he claims, and to specify the amount due.
The objection to a passage in the charge of the judge to the jury on this branch of the case is not well founded. He said: "Taking the words of the contract alone, independent of surrounding circumstances, the fair and legitimate construction of the language of the contract would be not that George Pitney was insured for his own property, but he would receive a portion of the money going to Norman Pitney, according to any interest that George Pitney may have in the property." This sentence was not objected to by the defendant, as it was more favorable to him than he had any reasonable ground to expect. The judge added: "But in giving construction to this instrument, it is proper for you to look at the surrounding circumstances for the purpose of seeing what the parties intended, and if the defendant intended to contract that George Pitney's interest in that wool, together with the *17 interest of the plaintiff in it, should be insured, and if the circumstances surrounding the transaction satisfy you that that was the intention, you will have the right to say so, and to give such construction as those circumstances require." This part of the charge was objected to as leaving a question of construction of a written instrument to the jury, when it should have been disposed of by the judge. This passage must be read in connection with other parts of the charge where he stated that he charged, as matter of law, that if, from the surrounding circumstances, they believed that it was the intention of the parties that the contract should read as an insurance of both Norman and George Pitney's interest in the wool, they had a right to say so, and the plaintiff could recover. Taking the whole subject together, the judge, when he said that the jury could give "such construction as the circumstances might require," only meant that they could give such construction to the circumstances as they thought proper as modifying the legal construction of the instrument which they must take from him, independent of those circumstances. It was one of those frequent instances of the unguarded use of language to which every judge is subject in the haste and excitement of a trial at Circuit, and to which attention should be called specifically by counsel, pointing out the precise bearing of the objectionable matter, in order to found an exception upon it; instead of that, the defendant simply excepted "to so much of the charge as stated that if the jury were satisfied from surrounding circumstances and the words ofthe contract" (the meaning of which the judge had already laid down to the jury independent of those circumstances) "that it was the intention of George Pitney and the defendant to insure George's interest, then they may find that fact," the defendant's counsel claiming that no question of construction could be submitted to the jury.
This last proposition of the counsel was much too large. It is well settled that questions as to the meaning of particular words used in a special sense in a written instrument are for the jury. The judge might well refuse to follow the counsel *18 upon a statement so broad and unqualified. It is not true thatno question of construction can be submitted to a jury.
This subject may also be considered from another point of view. Assume that by force of the policy, taken as a whole, the contract of the company to insure George Pitney is made not with him, but with Norman Pitney, in his behalf, and that it was so understood by the parties, Norman Pitney is then but an agent for an unnamed though known principal, to the extent of George Pitney's interest. Norman Pitney then becomes trustee of an "express trust," under section 113 of the Code, as being one "with whom a contract is made for the benefit of another." (Considerant v. Brisbane,
II. The next question is, as to the effect of that clause in the policy which provides that if any other insurance had been or should thereafter be made on the property, and not consented to in writing, on the policy, then the same should be void. *19
The plaintiff claimed, on the argument, that this clause is not applicable to the case. He insisted that the interest insured in the Hartford companies was not the same interest as that insured by the defendant. The ground was, that the one simply insured the plaintiff's interest, without any reference to joint ownership, while the other applied to undivided property.
I do not think that this view is sustainable. All the interest which the plaintiff had for the Hartford insurance to affect was an undivided interest, so that, as a matter of fact, each policy attached itself to the same subject-matter.
It is true that the word "property" in a clause prohibiting double or over-insurance means nothing else than the interest of the insured, whatever that may be (Springfield F. and M. Ins.Co. v. Allen,
As the Hartford policies and the defendant's insurance thus cover the same "property," so far as the plaintiff is concerned, the condition in the policy is applicable, and it is void unless there is something in the attendant circumstances to prevent the application of the rule. It is clear that the consent of the company was not given in writing on the policy. The question to be considered is, whether such consent was waived, or whether the defendant is estopped from setting up non-compliance with the condition.
It will be observed that the agency of Bowen in the present case was very broad. He was supplied by the defendant with blank applications and blank policies. He effected insurances and returned them to the company. At the time this contract was made, November 2, 1866, he issued policies, including that in litigation. In this case, the plaintiff signed a blank application, which Bowen filled up, then issued him a policy on the same or a subsequent day, and then transmitted the application to the company as an accepted application. At the time of the application, the plaintiff delivered to Bowen, according to a prior request from that person, the Hartford policies, as well as the one of which the policy in litigation was substantially a renewal. The Hartford policies had been previously issued by Bowen.
The judge, on this state of facts, refused to nonsuit the plaintiff, holding that if notice was given to Bowen of the former insurance that was sufficient, even though the required entry upon the policy was not made, and that Bowen was such an agent as to have the same power of waiver as if he were president or other authorized officer of the company, and that the whole matter must go to the jury. The charge maintained substantially the same ground, and the defendant excepted to so much of it as instructed the jury that if they believed notice of the Hartford policies was given to Bowen at the time of the application, the plaintiff could recover. There was also a *21 request to find a verdict for the defendant on these causes of action. This state of facts fairly presents an inquiry as to the power of such an agent as Bowen.
It will be observed that the defendant is a stock company in which, according to some authorities, the agents are to be construed to have larger powers than those which appertain to mutual companies. Some of the defendant's authorities, cited from the reports of Massachusetts and other States, are to be explained by this distinction, being special cases involving the powers of agents of mutual companies, in which exceptionally strict rules of construction were followed. (See Brewer v.Chelsea Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 14 Gray, 203.)
It is clear that a person authorized to accept risks, to agree upon and settle the terms of insurance and to carry them into effect by issuing and renewing policies, must be regarded as the general agent of the company. (Post v. Ætna Ins. Co., 43 Barb., 351.) The possession of blank policies and renewal receipts, signed by the president and secretary, is evidence of a general agency. (Carroll v. Charter Oak Ins. Co., 40 id., 292.)
The power of such an agent of a stock company is plenary as to the amount and nature of the risk, the rate of premium, and generally as to the terms and conditions of the contract, and he may make such memoranda and indorsements, modifying the general provisions of the policy, and even inconsistent therewith, as in his discretion seems proper, before the policy is delivered and accepted, and in some cases even afterwards. (May on Ins., § 129.) He may also insert, by memorandum or indorsement, a description of the property insured inconsistent with the description of the same contained in the application, and such change will be effectual to protect the insured, although the policy itself provides that all the conditions named in the application are to be fully complied with, and that the application shall be a part of the policy and a warranty on the part of the insured. (May on Ins., § 129; Gloucester Manuf. Co. v. Howard Fire Ins. Co., 5 Gray, 498.)
In the case at bar, Bowen was agent both for the Hartford *22 company and the defendant. When the Hartford policies were handed to him at his own request, he must have known what the object was, and had full opportunities to acquire information by reading the policies. He was clearly put upon inquiry to know their relation to the subject on hand. The plain presumption is, that he read the policies and acquired full information of their existence and contents. The notice thus supplied to him was, on general principles of the law of agency, notice to the defendant. It must be assumed, accordingly, that owing to his general agency the defendant knew that there was "other" insurance on the property, and with that knowledge made no statement of the fact on the policy. This act may be called a waiver, or may be treated as an estoppel.
The case of Von Bories v. United Insurance Co. (8 Bush [Ky.], 133) is very near to that under discussion. In that case Shea and O'Connell obtained from the insurance company (defendant) a policy upon merchandise and fixtures. On the following day they obtained further insurance in Kenton Insurance Company. Both policies were issued by one George S. Moore, who was a general agent for both companies. The policy of the first-named company provided that any subsequent insurance should be made known and indorsed in writing. Consent was not indorsed, and no actual notice, as far as appeared, given by Moore, living in Louisville, to the defendant, doing business in Covington. The court said that it could not be claimed that the defendant company did not have notice; both policies were issued by the same person, who was general agent. If Moore did not notify the defendant, that was a fault of an agent toward his principal, and did not exonerate the insurer. It was further held that the failure to take the steps required by the policy did not, in any event, make the policy absolutely void. At most, it only makes it voidable; so that the insurer, in that view, had an election either to cancel the policy or to retain the premium. This election should have been exercised within a reasonable time after notice. It had notice from the moment the general agent *23
issued the policy, and, by retaining the premium, has become estopped or has waived any right which it may have had to cancel the policy. This case is supported by Horwitz v. EquitableIns. Co. (
The effect of the agent of the company filling up a blank application has been already considered by this court in Rowley
v. The Empire Ins. Co. (
There is a number of authorities, some of which are cited by the defendant, which take a different view of the subject under discussion from that which has been maintained therein. Some of them are cases in which statute law required "other" insurance to be indorsed in writing on the policy, and the courts considered that they had no power to dispense with a statute requirement. Others depend upon special rules applied to mutual, as distinguished from stock companies; others still are from States that are known to adhere to constructions of *24 peculiar severity, e.g., Massachusetts and Rhode Island. (May on Insurance, § 145.) The weight of opinion is now, throughout the country, with these later New York cases and the results of this opinion. The very recent writer just quoted, Mr. May, sums up all the cases as follows, and his generalization, after a careful examination of the authorities, is believed to be accurate: "In many policies the notice of `other' insurance is required to be in writing and indorsed on the policy, and it hasformerly been frequently held to be essential that these particulars should be literally complied with, and that verbal notice or any thing short of the notice and the formalities subsequent thereto required by the condition would subject the delinquent to forfeiture. Thus, where the insured, after procuring subsequent insurance, gave a memorandum of it to the agent of the company which issued the prior policy to be entered on the records, the policy not being at hand, the agent saying that such entry would answer every purpose, and the agent afterward told the insured that he had made the entry, it was held that the condition was violated" (citing many cases). "But," he adds, "the courts have become more liberal in favor of the assured in their construction of this sort of stipulation in policies of insurance. While, as we have seen, the old rule required the consent to be in writing and indorsed on the policy, it is the decided tendency of the modern cases to hold that if the notice be duly given to the company or its agent, of the additional insurance, and no objection is made, the company will be estopped from insisting on a forfeiture of the policy because their consent thereto was not indorsed, as literally required by the stipulation; and where both policies are negotiated through the same person, who is agent for both companies, his knowledge is the knowledge of each company." (May on Ins., §§ 369, 370.) Other sections of this work show that by the term "agent" in this statement is meant "general agent." (§§ 118-154.) These authorities are sustained by this text-writer by a large array of very recent decisions, some of which have already been noticed in this discussion. *25
It has been plausibly objected that the view of the subject herein taken is, that it is opposed to the rule that parol evidence is inadmissible to affect a written instrument. The objection, however, proceeds upon a misconception of the effect of that rule. That is but a canon of construction applied to ascertain the meaning of an instrument conceded to be valid. This has no bearing upon the point now under discussion. That concerns the validity or existence of an instrument. The defendant urges that there is a condition precedent in the instrument which, by reason of non-performance, makes the contract utterly void. The plaintiff says, in substance: "That I admit, but it has been dispensed with, and the instrument is valid." The question is accordingly not one of construction, but of validity. Nothing is better settled than that the existence of a written instrument may be established or overturned by parol evidence. There is no question of construction in such a case. It is a preliminary one, whether there is any contract to interpret or construe. It is of the nature of a condition precedent to be subject to waiver, and that may be in general either oral or written. When the waiver is established, the contract takes effect free from the condition.
The result is that as Bowen was a general agent to issue policies, and was authorized to fill up blank applications, any omission to follow the company's rules is imputable to his neglect, and is not the fault of the plaintiff. The company had constructive knowledge of the prior insurance through express or implied notice to Bowen, and are now, under all the circumstances, estopped from making any claim that the policy is void by reason of the non-observance of the required conditions.
The defendant further insists that if this be all true, it is inapplicable to the renewal of the Hartford policies. One of these (for $500) was renewed after the policy in suit was issued, viz., January 10, 1867. Bowen was not the agent at this time, and it is claimed that the plaintiff was bound to give notice of this renewal under the clause in the defendant's policy. It is urged that the renewal is a new contract. *26
This position is untenable. A renewal is in one sense a new contract, but it is not "other" insurance within the meaning of the policy. It is but a continuation of an existing insurance. It would be in the highest degree inconvenient to hold that notice must be given on every renewal to other insurers on the theory that it was a new insurance. If the notice of the original insurance is properly given, it must be held to continue through all true renewals of it. This position agrees with the views of this court in Brown v. Cattaraugus County Mutual InsuranceCompany (
III. The defendant's claim that the title to the wool had been changed by the oral sale to Thayer is unfounded; at most, it could only affect that portion of the wool which plaintiff owned prior to the fire, and not that to which he had title as assignee of George Pitney. The evidence showed that the whole transaction of sale rested in words. Thayer orally agreed to give the plaintiff fifty-six cents for the wool, which was to be weighed, sacked and delivered at a specified place, and the unwashed wool was to be shrunk. Payment was to be made by crediting the amount of the sale on an existing debt. No visible outward act was done in furtherance of this transaction. It is true that the plaintiff and Thayer owned the property, to a certain extent, in common, though this was not the case as to all the lots of wool; even if it was so held, it was still necessary that some act should be done to comply with the statute of frauds. (Per COWEN, J., inArtcher v. Zeh, 5 Hill, 200; Shindler v. Houston,
There was no evidence of delivery, in the case at bar, in accordance with the terms of the contract, and no writing to establish the sale; reliance must be had solely on the proposed payment, and that, as has been shown, was not sufficient.
It is immaterial that the plaintiff supposed that the title was in Thayer. That was a mere mistake of law, having no influence on the rights of the parties. It is claimed that this supposition on his part may have diminished his watchfulness and lulled to sleep his vigilance, and that the act thus tended to "increase the risk" under a clause in the policy relating to that subject. This argument is, however, remote and speculative, and has no practical bearing upon the case. If these views are correct, it is unnecessary to consider in detail any exceptions to the charge of the judge bearing upon this branch of the cause. *28
The whole case was disposed of rightly in the court below, and the judgment should be affirmed.
GRAY and REYNOLDS, CC., concur; LOTT, Ch. C., and EARL, C., dissent.
Judgment affirmed.