282 A.D. 817 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1953
Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Albany County, entered August 16, 1951, in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants-appellants after a trial before the court without a jury. The plaintiffs had held a policy of fire insurance in the amount of $3,000 issued by the defendant Mutual Insurance Association of Nassau, Sehodack and Chatham, covering certain real property owned by them. In August, 1947, the plaintiffs secured a larger mortgage and, on September 5, 1947, they requested the agent of the defendants Continental Insurance Company and Fidelity and Guaranty Insurance Corporation to issue new insurance in the amount of $5,000. The agent accordingly issued two policies, each in the amount of $2,500, one in the name of the Continental and the other in the name of the Fidelity. At the plaintiffs’ request, the agent wrote to the mortgagee requesting it to return the outstanding policy issued by the defendant Mutual in order that it might be surrendered for cancellation. He subsequently received the policy and forwarded it to the plaintiffs and the plaintiffs in turn mailed it to Mutual, enclosed in a letter requesting cancellation. The letter apparently was never received by Mutual. A fire occurred on September 21, 1947, resulting in a loss in the amount of $5,325. The defendants Continental and Fidelity contended that there was no effective cancellation of the Mutual policy and that therefore they were only liable for five-eighths of the loss under the provision of the policy entitled “Pro rata liability” and providing that the “ company shall not be liable for a greater proportion of any