84 N.Y.S. 471 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This action was originally brought against the Firemen’s Insurance Company of Maryland to recover the amount of a fire loss alleged to be due the E. C. Bell Manufacturing Company under a policy of insurance issued to it by the insurance company. The claim arising under the policy was assigned to the plaintiff. The defendant, George Moore Smith, receiver of the Bell
When the case came on for trial, it was treated by both parties as a common-law action, triable by a jury, although the action had become one in equity, to be tried by the court without a jury. That was expressly held in Clark v. Mosher, 107 N. Y. 118, 14 N. E. 96, 1 Am. St. Rep. 798. That action had originally been begun as one at law. A third party, claiming to own the cause of action, was brought in and substituted as defendant, and the original defen 'ant was discharged on payment into court of the amount of the demand. It was held that the action became an equitable one, triable by the court, and neither party had a right to a trial by jury, and that where, in such an action, the trial judge impaneled a jury, and submitted a single question of fact, and disregarded their findings, and found the fact to the contrary, the judgment entered pursuant to the findings and conclusions of the court was regular. In the present case the parties chose to have the whole issues submitted to a jury, as in the trial of an action at law. The attention of the court does not seem to have been drawn by either party to the real status of the action. Having acquiesced in the mode of trial adopted, the case should have gone to the jury precisely in the same way as any other common-law issues would be submitted to a jury.
The defense set up was that the assignment to the plaintiff was void by reason of the insolvency, or the imminence of insolvency, of the corporation, well known to the parties to the transaction, at the time the assignment was made. The principal witness to the transaction was Eugene C. Bell, the president of the E. C. Bell Manufacturing Company. ' His testimony relating to the condition of the company at the time the assignment of the claim on the insurance policy was made to the plaintiff was, in one aspect of it, such as to indicate that the assignment was a bona fide transfer of the claim, was not made while the company was actually insolvent, or when insolvency was imminent, and would have justified a jury in concluding that the transaction was not tainted with the infirmity attrib
Judgment reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event. All concur; VAN BRUNT, P. J., in result.