103 A.D. 12 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
The relief sought in this action was the reformation of a policy of fire insurance issued by the defendant to the plaintiffs and to recover the amount due under said policy. The court decreed the reformation of the policy by striking out a warranty that the premises insured were occupied exclusively for dwelling purposes by not more than two families, and awarded the plaintiffs judgment for the amount due upon the policy. From that judgment the defendant appeals.
From the plaintiffs’ testimony it appears that the plaintiffs were the owners of the premises No. 322 Second avenue in the city of New York, and had been such owners since the year 1884 ; that the plaintiffs occupied a portion of the premises and rented the remaining portion to several families; that the plaintiffs first became acquainted with a firm of insurance brokers known as Weed & Kennedy over fifteen years prior to the taking out of the policy in question; and that a Mr. Fislibeck, who was connected with that firm, had acted for the plaintiffs in obtaining insurance. One of the plaintiffs testified that Fish beck applied to the insurance companies
On behalf of the defendant it was shown that on April 15, 1902, the New York Fire Insurance Exchange passed a resolution which provided that, “ to cover the distinction between dwellings and the-recently created class designated as ‘ Flat Houses,’ ” the policies should contain either a warranty that the building insured was occupied exclusively for dwelling purposes by not more than two families, or flat house, or a warranty that the building, was occupied exclusively for dwelling purposes, and that in pursuance of this
Fishbeclc, called for the defendant, testified that he was employed by the plaintiffs to obtain insurance for them; that the policy of insurance of which the one in suit was to take the place had been issued by the Orient Insurance Company; that when that policy was issued there was no requirement in existence by which the insurance companies were required to stamp the warranty in question upon policies upon dwelling houses; that that company had gone out of business and reinsured its risks, and when the policy expired the witness obtained a new policy with the defendant company; that Weed & Kennedy were the sole agents of this new company in this locality; that he applied to the indemnity department of Weed & Kennedy for a policy and the policy clerk annexed to the policy this covenant of warranty ; that the defendant company was selected either by the man in Weed & Kennedy’s employ, known as a placer in the brokerage department, or by the witness; that both the witness and the representative of Weed & Kennedy supposed that the building upon which this policy was issued was used as a dwelling for a single family ; that the rate for insurance was fixed, based upon that assumption. ' Fishbeclc further testified that procuring this insurance was his individual business and not the business of Weed & Kennedy, although the bill for premiums was sent out in the name of Weed & Kennedy, and the money for the premiums was returned to them and credited to Fishbeclc, less a proportion of his commissions which was reserved by Weed & Kennedy as his contribution towards office rent and expenses. The difference between the premium paid upon this policy and upon a policy for a tenement house occupied by more than two families would be two dollars, and there is not the slightest reason to suppose that the application for insurance would have been rejected if the application had stated that the building was occupied by more than two families. The learned trial court found that “Weed & Kennedy were the agents of both plaintiffs and defendant in effecting the insurance in question, and that the witness Fishbeck was the representative of said firm of Weed & Kennedy in this transaction ; that said ‘ Dwelling Warranty ’ was inserted in said policy by said Weed & Kennedy by inadvertence and mistake, and without
The defendant would have been entitled to a credit upon the amount due upon the policy of $10, the additional premiums, but as from the finding it is stated that the sum of $1,800 was the amount agreed upon by the attorneys for the parties, and as no claim is made that the judgment should be modified in this respect, the plaintiffs are entitled to an affirmance of the judgment.
It follows that the judgment appealed from must be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., McLaughlin, Hatch and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.