30 N.Y.S. 714 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
This action was brought upon a fire insurance policy known as the “Standard Fire Insurance Policy of the State of New York.” It contained the following clause:
“No suit or action on this policy for the recovery of any claim shall be sustainable in any court of law or equity unless commenced within twelve months next after the fire.”
The fire occurred on the 16th day of January, 1892. The summons in the action was sent by mail to the sheriff of Albany county on the 14th day of January, 1893, with directions from the plaintiff’s attorney to serve the same personally on the superintendent of insurance. This official was not in Albany at the time, and the sheriff, being in doubt as to the validity of a service on the deputy superintendent, waited until the return of the superintendent, which was on the 17th of said month, and on that day he served the summons personally on the superintendent. This was the only service of the summons in the action. The defendant interposed the defense that the action was not commenced within the' year limit provided for in the policy. The complaint was dismissed at the trial upon that ground, with direction that the case be heard at the general term in the first instance.
The principal question presented is, can the action be deemed as having been commenced within the year limit? The answer to this question depends upon whether the plaintiff is entitled to the benefit of the provision of section 399 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which is as follows:
“An attempt to commence an action in a court to record is equivalent to the commencement thereof against each defendant within the meaning of | each provision of this act which limits the time for commencing an action „ when the summons is delivered with the intent that it shall be actually served, to the sheriff,” etc.
If this section applies to a case where the limitation is one not specifically provided for by the Code, the plaintiff is right in his contention. If the words of section 399 be taken literally and
“The Revised Statutes contained a provision saving the rights of parties stayed by injunction, which is now section 406 of the Code. This provision does not aid the plaintiff. The exception has no application where the limitation is prescribed by the contract of parties, but only applies to cases governed by the limitation in the general law. This is sufficiently clear from a reading of the section, but the question has been adjudicated, arising under a contract similar to the one in question. Riddlesbarger v. Insurance Co., 7 Wall. 386.”
While, as claimed by the plaintiff, this precise question was not involved in the case in 72 N. Y., supra, it was involved in the case referred to with approval by Judge Andrews, in Wall.
Proska v. McCormick, 56 Iowa, 318, 9 N. W. 289, is an authority supporting the defendant’s contention. Unless this case can be distinguished from the cases referred to, the question must be deemed as settled against the plaintiff’s contention. The limitation provided in this policy, with some propriety, may be claimed not to be a matter of contract alone. The limitation was one prescribed by the legislature, or rather prescribed under and in pursuance of legislative authority; and it was not within the power of the defendant company to fix a shorter limitation, and bind the insurer thereby. Such a limitation would not only be a nullity, but would subject the company, or its officers and agents, to punishment as for a misdemeanor. Chapter 488 of the Laws of 1886, as amended by chapter 690 of the Laws of 1892, § 121, provides for a uniform contract or policy of fire insurance to be made and issued in this state by all insurance companies taking fire risks on property within this state. The form of this policy was one adopted pursuant to law. It may be found in Rich. Ins. pp. 584-588. The clause in question was therefore inserted here in obedience to the direction of an act of the legislature. A shorter period for commencing the action, as stated, could not have been lawfully inserted. It cannot, therefore, with propriety, be claimed that the limitation was a matter of contract alone.
“Section 405 was enacted with reference to the enforcement of the civil remedies prescribed by the Code, and its application is to actions generally, and which the Code of Civil Procedure was enacted to regulate. But this special law of 1855 gave a civil remedy which is independent of the Code remedies, and in enacting section 414 the legislature obviously had in view to except those particular or special remedies by action which they had the power to allow, and to leave themselves free to attach such conditions as to limitation of time as they saw fit.”
Our attention is called by the appellant’s counsel to the language of Learned, P. J., in Hammond v. Shephard, 50 Hun, 323, 3 N. Y. Supp. 349. The question in that case arose under the mechanic’s lien law, which provides that a lien shall not bind longer than a year after the filing of the notice, unless within that time an action is commenced to force the same. Section 8 of the act provides that the manner and form of instituting and prosecuting such an action shall be the same as in actions for the foreclosure of mortgages upon real estate. Judge Learned, in commenting upon the clause providing that the action shall be instituted and prosecuted the same as in foreclosure of mortgages, says:
“The time of limitation is different, but the mode of commencing in respect to the limitation is the same in these actions as in those. It would, I think, be unreasonable to hold that the general rules which govern all other actions do not govern these, unless positively forbidden. We ought to apply the same uniform system to all actions, these included. There is no reason for any distinction, and I think none was intended.”
The case in 119 N. Y. and 23 N. E., supra, would seem to be decisive of the question against the appellant.
If the plaintiff is not entitled to the benefit of the provisions of section 399, is the defendant company estopped from claiming that