Allstate Insurance v. Altman

21 Misc. 2d 162, 191 N.Y.S.2d 270, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3173
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 11, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 21 Misc. 2d 162 (Allstate Insurance v. Altman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allstate Insurance v. Altman, 21 Misc. 2d 162, 191 N.Y.S.2d 270, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3173 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Charles Margett, J.

The ultimate issue to be decided in this action for a declaratory judgment is whether an automobile accident, in which defendant was involved on July 23, 1957, was covered by any policy of liability insurance issued by the plaintiff carrier.

On April 10, 1956 plaintiff entered into a contract of automobile liability insurance with the defendant protecting him against any claims for personal injuries which might arise from the operation of his automobile for a period of one year from said date. The premium for said policy, in the sum of $119.20, was adjusted on a prorata basis in view of defendant’s residence for six months at 185 Erasmus Street, Brooklyn, New York, and for the remaining six months in Sullivan County, New York. This premium was fully paid in the following installments: $30.60 in April, 1956; $19.60 on May 2, 1956; $35 on July 26, 1956, and the same amount on August 2, 1956, or subsequently. The last payment, according to Mr. Engberg, plaintiff’s division supervisor of its accounting department, would have been due on October 10, 1956. He admitted that a cancellation notice, effective on September 13,1956, for the nonpayment of part of the 1956 premium, was mailed on September 1,1956, apparently as the result of an accounting mistake, since his records showed a payment by the defendant on July 26,1956, “ which caused the policy to be reinstated without lapse.”

On April 6, 1957, shortly before the expiration date of the policy referred to above, defendant called at the plaintiff’s Brooklyn office, where he made a written application to renew his policy for another year and paid $30 on account of the premium. Under the heading': Special Instructions ” on the form signed by the defendant, there is a notation: “ Send Renewal Policy & Bill — None Received to Date.”

[164]*164Thereafter, defendant received from the plaintiff an indorsement or supplement page extending the coverage of the initial policy for one year to 12:01 a.m., Standard Time on April 10, 1958. This document contains a statement of coverages and limits of liability together with their several premiums totalling $131.90; the payment of $30 made by defendant on April 6,1957, however, is not reflected; nor is there an installment payment schedule set forth, similar to that contained in the supplement page which accompanied the original policy of insurance.

Defendant testified that he never received any bills for or any schedule of installment payments for the new and increased premium and plaintiff’s principal witness, Mr. Bngberg, conceded that there was no way of ascertaining from plaintiff’s records whether any bill had ever been sent to the defendant. He admitted that the 1957-1958 supplement page or renewal certificate did not contain any schedule of installment payments but insisted that according to the 1956-1957 policy 40% of the premium was payable at renewal time; 30% three months later, and the final 30% within six months of the renewal date; that on April 10, 1957, an installment of $54.65 was due and payable on account of which defendant remitted only $30, leaving an unpaid balance of $24.65.

It is claimed by the plaintiff that on June 10, 1957, a notice of cancellation was mailed to the defendant at his residence in Brooklyn, New York, effective on June 22, 1957, unless the payment of $24.65 is received at any of its offices before that date, in which event the insurance will be continued. Defendant denied receiving this notice or, indeed, that it was ever mailed; that even if mailed, the notice was addressed to a place at which plaintiff knew he could not then be found, since the month of June was within the period of six months during which defendant lived in Ferndale, Sullivan County.

On July 23,1957 defendant was involved in an accident while operating his automobile in Sullivan County, causing personal injuries to a pedestrian. Plaintiff’s investigator interviewed the defendant at his home in upper Ferndale, New York, on the same day. He prepared a report of the accident based upon information supplied by the defendant whom he believed to be plaintiff’s assured. It was mailed the same day to the Motor Vehicle Bureau in Albany, where it was received on July 24, 1957, the day that that Bureau received from the plaintiff a form “ FS-4 ”, dated July 19, 1957, terminating defendant’s Financial Security Certificate of Insurance as of June 22, 1957.

On July 26, 1957 defendant mailed plaintiff a check for $70, dated that day. The envelope in which this check was enclosed [165]*165was one that had been supplied by plaintiff in prior correspondence. It was postmarked Ferndale, N. Y., July 27, 1957, at 8:00 a.m., and on the back thereof defendant supplied the number of his policy, his name and the address, 185 Erasmus St., Brooklyn, N. Y., as it appears on the supplement page renewing his policy. Although this page had a handwritten notation “ 6 months Brooklyn, 6 months Sullivan County” the Brooklyn address alone was typewritten. That address, incidentally, was the only one that was set forth in defendant’s application for renewal dated April 6, 1957.

On or about August 7, 1957 plaintiff returned defendant’s July 26 payment of premium by its own check for $70.05. Following a personal call at the Brooklyn office of the plaintiff, defendant sent this check back to the plaintiff which deposited it in its own account on August 27, 1957. Plaintiff then sent another check for $70.05 to defendant, dated September 16,1957, which was never cashed. On September 13, 1957 defendant paid to the plaintiff the balance of the premium in the sum of $31.90, which was returned by check dated October 1, 1957 and which likewise was never cashed.

By order dated September 20, 1957 the Bureau of Motor Vehicles revoked the defendant’s registration for lack of proof of financial security as of June 22, 1957. Defendant called immediately at the Brooklyn office of plaintiff for an explanation. On September 21, 1957, plaintiff issued a form ” FS-1 ” Certificate of Insurance to defendant covering “ policy period from 6/22/57 to 4/10/58.” On September 30, 1957 the Bureau of Motor Vehicles, acting upon the foregoing certificate, issued a notice of restoration terminating the revocation order of September 20,1957.

In the meantime, Esther Mandel, who had sustained personal injuries as the result of the July 23rd accident, commenced an action in this court against the defendant by the service of a summons and complaint verified August 9, 1957, which he promptly forwarded to the plaintiff. On September 9, 1957 plaintiff wrote a letter to defendant, signed by a firm of attorneys, notifying him that the action against him was being defended by its said attorneys but that since the amount sought to be recovered was in excess of the policy coverage, for which excess he will be personally responsible, it was his privilege to retain personal counsel at his own expense to co-operate with plaintiff’s attorneys in the defense of the action. Issue in said action was joined by an answer verified by one of the attorneys on September 9, 1957; a bill of particulars was demanded, defendant was examined before trial and the transcript of his [166]*166testimony was transmitted to him by the attorneys retained by the plaintiff on October 16,1957, for execution.

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Bluebook (online)
21 Misc. 2d 162, 191 N.Y.S.2d 270, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allstate-insurance-v-altman-nysupct-1959.