71 N.Y.S. 525 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The action is brought upon a policy of life insurance issued by the defendant to one Patrick J. McGuinness, dated February. 5,. 1894, and assigned to the plaintiff on March 21, 1894; McGuinness died on April 3, 1895. Proofs of death, the policy, the assignment to the plaintiff, and a book containing receipts and payments on said policy from February 5, 1 894, to April 8, 1895, were delivered to the company and have ever since been retained by it. The policy contained the following clause :
“ Eighth. No suit or action at law or in equity shall be maintainable with respect to the payment of this Policy until after the tiling in the principal office of the Company of the above-mentioned proof of death nor unless such suit or action shall be commenced within six months next after the decease of the person insured under this Policy; and it is expressly agreed that, should any such suit or action be commenced after the expiration of said six months, the lapse of time ■ shall be deemed as conclusive evidence against the validity of such claim any statute of limitations to the contrary notwithstanding.’ ’
An action upon the policy was commenced by the plaintiff on October 3, 1895, in which an order was made on October twenty-eighth vacating the service of the summons as unauthorized and void. Subsequently and on December 26, 1895, and more than six months after the death of the insured, this action was commenced. At the close of the testimony the plaintiff asked for the direction of ■ a verdict, and the defendant moved for a dismissal on the ground that the claim was outlawed. The court directed a verdict for the plaintiff, and the defendant appeals to this court.
The motions made by the respective counsel compel the assumption that there was no question of fact to be submitted to the jury; and the only question which we are called upon to determine is whether there was evidence of a waiver by the defendant of the limitation clause of the policy. The only evidence of such waiver is the receipt and retention by the defendant of the papers above enumerated.
In Dougherty v. Metropolitan life Ins. Co. (3 App. Div. 313), this court, Mr. Justice Hatch writing, said (pp. 315, 316): “ The action was not begun within this time. But plaintiff gave evidence ’
In Sergent v. Liverpool & L. & Globe Ins. Co. (155 N. Y. 349, 355) the court said: “ It is well settled that when liability has become fixed by the capital fact of loss within the range of the responsibility assumed, in the contract, courts are reluctant to deprive the insured of the benefit of that liability by any narrow or technical construction of the conditions and stipulations which pre
The defendant’s counsel contends that Arthur v. Homestead Fire Ins. Co. (78 N. Y. 462) is authority against the maintenance •of this action. That case holds that the commencement of the first action and its successful defense does not estop the company from insisting that the second cannot be maintained because commenced too late, but this does not shake the authority of the cases .above cited upon the question of waiver.
Admittedly, the evidence of waiver in the present action was ■slight, consisting only of the acceptance and retention by the company of the papers, but within the authorities such acceptance and retention are sufficient to raise a question of fact as to the waiver of the limitation provision of the policy; and the court decided that question, as it could properly do, in favor of the plaintiff.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.