Adler v. Germania Fire Insurance

17 Misc. 347, 39 N.Y.S. 1070
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedJune 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 Misc. 347 (Adler v. Germania Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adler v. Germania Fire Insurance, 17 Misc. 347, 39 N.Y.S. 1070 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

The defendant, by its policy issued May 1, 1892, and thereafter continued and renewed for one year from May 1,. 1893, to May 1, 1894, insured plaintiff’s assignor against .loss or damage by fire in the sum of $2,000, as follows:.

$1,400 on stock of drugs and medicines and other merchandise, hazardous and extra-hazardous.”
“ $600 on store and .gas fixtures, including soda "fountain and connections, show cases, counter, shelving, drawers, mirrors, clocks, [348]*348glasg signs, bottles, glassware, paper on walls and ceilings, implements, utensils, including signs attached to outside of building.”

The premises were located at No. 19. Canal -street, this city.

On October 23, 1893, the plaintiff’s assignor, Samuel Zipris, mortgaged the fixtures to one Solomon ■ Mosesson to secure the payment of $477,. being the amount of twelve promissory notes for $39.75 each, payable one on the first day of each and every month until, the entire sum should be paid.

The mortgage was filed in' the office of the register of the' city and county of New York October 24", 1893,- was unsatisfied of record and appeared as an incumbrance upon the property at the time of the fire, although it was claimed by the plaintiff to have, been satisfied the, day after it was executed, haying been given as a temporary security pending the delivery of indorsed notes for the' loan which it secured. On November 26, 1893, fire broke out on the premises containing the insured property; part was damaged and pari destroyed.

The policy contains the following condition:

“ This entire policy, unless otherwise provided by agreement indorsed hereon or added hereto, shall be void, if the insured now has or shall hereafter make ór procure any other contract of insurance, whether valid or not, on property covered in whole or in part by this policy * * * if the subject of insurance be personal property, and be or become incumbered' by a chattel mortgage.”'

In Merrill v. Insurance Company, 73 N. Y. 452, the insurance covered fourteen different items, and it was. held that where a policy was made upon separate and distinct classes or species of property, each of which is separately valued, and the sum total of the valua- ' tions is insured on payment of premium in gross, the contract is severable; and a breach of the condition avoiding the policy as. to one of the items does not affect it as to the others, notwithstanding that the" policy contained a provision that if the condition were broken the policy should be void. The provision in the policy in- . .the case at bar is, that if the -condition be broken' the entire policy shall be void; and the question is, whether the use of that word works a different result, and avoids the policy as to- all the separate classes of property, though the condition, be broken as to only one class. It was held by the Court of Common Pleas, in American A. G. S. Company v. Glens Falls Insurance Company, 1 Misc. Rep. 114; 20 N. Y. Supp. 646, and by the Supreme Court, Third De[349]*349partment, in Knowles v. Am. Insurance Company, 21 N. Y. Supp. 50, that it did not. But the contrary was adjudged in Kiernan v. Insurance Company, 72 Hun, 519.

In the last case the court said that the word “ entire ” has no significance in the contract, unless it be held that mortgaging a part of the insured property makes it wholly void, for if the entire property insured be mortgaged, of course the policy is wholly void, and in such case the use of the word “ entire ” would have no significance. “ It has no meaning in the contract unless it be construed as making the policy void in toto in case a part only of the property insured be mortgaged.” And the court disagreed with the opposite conclusion reached by the Third Department and by the Common Pleas.

We do not think it so clear that the word “ entire ” has no significance in the contract unless it be held to apply to all the insurance upon all the different risks in the policy, and to intend that mortgaging a part of the insured property makes all the insurance under the policy void. In the first place it requires us to assume that the insurer by the use of the word “ entire ” intended to refer to the whole instrument; which could not be, if the policy is, in law, not an entire, but a divisible contract. In the Merrill case, above cited, the Court of Appeals says of a policy like the present, insuring different classes of goods for different sums: The contract before us is not entire; it is divisible; and the breach of the condition made by the plaintiff applied only to the class of property insured, which was the immediate subject of the act of incumbrance which constituted that breach.” It is not within the power of the insurer to make a divisible contract an - entire contract by calling it so, and we must seek an intention agreeable to the kind of contract which he was actually making. That is to say, a policy embracing more than one subject, and entire as to each subject. That intention, we think, is quite manifest.

It will be observed that the provision in which the words “ This entire contract ” occur, refers to the “ subject of insurance ” becoming incumbered, by chattel mortgages. The subject of insurance in a policy insuring separate risks means the subject of each separate risk, as to each of which .there is, under the cases, a divisible contract or policy; and the provision that the entire policy would be void if the subject of insurance becomes. incumbered means that the whole insurance upon that particular subject or risk should be so affected. A portion only of the goods separately in[350]*350sured might be mortgaged, but under this clause avoiding the entire policy in case the subject of insurance be mortgaged the insurer provided that the'entire insurance upon all the goods in that class ■should, be Void, though only a part were mortgaged. As to each-class of insurance the. policy is entire-and not otherwise, and the insurer must be deemed' to have had that legal distinction in view when employing the term under consideration.

Had it been the intention of the insurer to provide that all the insurance on all the risks named in the policy should be affected by an incumbrance of the .property’ covered by any ohe riskj upv propriate language could have ■ been employed, as’ in Smith v. Insurance Company, 118 N. Y. 518, where the policy provided that if the property, or any part thereof, should be encumbered, it must be so represented in the application, otherwise the entire policy and every part thereof should be void. That policy was held not to be severable, because it “ expressly provided that a.misrepreséntation of the situation of one of the subjects insured should-invalidate the insurance on all other property covered by the policy.” The condition of the policy before us shows no such provision, but on the- contrary is confined, by its' own language, to the subject of insurance incumbered by -the chattel mortgage.

As that subject of insurance was the fixtures, and they were incumbered within the terms of' the policy, the insurance as to them became void, and a recovery for loss on that account cannot be-sustained.. The verdict in-this case appears to include- such- a recovery, and a new trial, therefore, will have to be ordered.

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17 Misc. 347, 39 N.Y.S. 1070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adler-v-germania-fire-insurance-nyappterm-1896.