54 N.Y.S. 307 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1898
This is a submission of a controversy on an agreed statement of facts, and the question presented is as to the liability of the defendant under a policy of insurance by which the defendant agreed to insure one Spencer D. C. Van Bokkelen against injuries resulting “through external, violent, and accidental means,”
An examination of the authorities cited by counsel and those we have been able to find where clauses of this character have been construed by the courts confirms the view above expressed. The decision of the United States circuit court of appeals in the case of Insurance Co. v. Vandecar, 57 U. S. App. 446, 30 C. C. A. 48, and 86 Fed. 282, is an express authority for the view we have taken of this clause. In that case the court says:
“The place specified in the contract,—‘in a passenger conveyance,’—is a place of little or no danger, and the risk assumed is slight, while on the platform of a conveyance, using the motive power described in the contract, and! especially, as" in this case, on the platform of a railway car, is an exceedingly dangerous place when the train to which the car is attached is in motion.”
This case was not unlike that of Assurance Corp. v. Thompson, 22 App. Div. 68, 47 N. Y. Supp. 830, where, under the policy, the liability of the defendant was limited to an insurance upon naval stores when in sheds or warehouses. We held that the policy did not attach to naval stores upon the trains or in the yards, or being shipped upon vessels, or which were not actually in the sheds or warehouses at the time of the fire. The case relied on by the counsel for the plaintiff (Theobald v. Assurance Co., 26 Law & Eq. Rep. 432) is distinguishable from the case at bar. The policy in that case insured the holder against any accident that happened to him “from railway accident while traveling in any class carriage on any line of railway.” The assured was a .passenger on a railway; train, and was injured in getting off the train after it had stopped;- and it was held to be a railway accident while traveling in a railroad carriage, within the meaning of the policy. The language-used was evidently intended to apply to a passenger using either of the various classes in which English railway trains are divided,
We are of the opinion, therefore, that the defendant is entitled to judgment, with costs. All concur.