152 N.Y.S. 1048 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1915
The plaintiff has brought an action upon a policy of fire insurance. The answer sets up several defenses, including the defense that there was an award made of a lesser sum than the amount asked for in the complaint. At the trial defendant moved to dismiss on the ground that the complaint failed to set forth that sixty days elapsed since the proof of loss was given. The trial justice gave leave to amend the complaint in this regard. The plaintiff gave a rather vague statement of the amendment he desired. While perhaps technically insufficient, it did apprise the defendant of what it expected to meet and. both attorneys and the court appear to have regarded it as sufficient. Certainly if the defendant had pointed out in what manner it was insufficient the court would have permitted an amendment that would have fully covered the point. Thereafter the plaintiff put in some evidence, but before he had proceeded far the trial court clearly perceived that the real issue between the parties was the issue raised by the defense of the award, and he stated that to save time he would take proof of the award as such proof would probably end the case. Thereupon the defendant introduced the award in evidence. The plaintiff thereupon attempted to prove that this award was fraudulent, but the trial court refused to admit such evidence. Defendant
It was apparently the theory of the learned trial justice that while the making of the award was properly a defense to the present complaint, when proof was presented of such award it disposed of any right of action upon the policy; that in effect the award was then substituted for the policy and that the plaintiff could then sue only upon a complaint alleging the making of the award and setting forth his claim for its invalidity. The same contention was made in the case of Sullivan v. Traders' Insurance Co., 169 N. Y. 213, and the court, though divided upon this point, overruled the contention. It seems to be now established that though, where a valid award has been made, a suit under the policy in disregard of the award cannot be maintained, yet where there is an equitable defense to the award the insured has a right to bring his action upon the policy without first suing in equity to set aside the award, and if the insurance company sets up the award as a defense, the plaintiff may, even without a reply, show any facts which would constitute
It follows that the plaintiff should have been permitted to show that the award was made fraudulently or arbitrarily.
Judgment should be reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Hendrick and Cohalan, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.