Clark v. President of the Manufacturers' Insurance

49 U.S. 235, 12 L. Ed. 1061, 8 How. 235, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1670
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 28, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 49 U.S. 235 (Clark v. President of the Manufacturers' Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. President of the Manufacturers' Insurance, 49 U.S. 235, 12 L. Ed. 1061, 8 How. 235, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1670 (1850).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WOODBURY

delivered the opinion of the court.

The original action in this case was assumpsit by the plaintiffs in error on a-policy of insurance, made August 13, 1845.

From the detailed statement of the facts, it will be seen that the loss occurred on the 13th of March, 1846, and was to be paid to the Ogdensbui’g Bank, which held the title to the property insured, but was under a contract in a certain event to convey it to the plaintiffs, they having already paid for it in part.

The original insurance was made in 1834, by Jonathan Steams, who had mortgaged to the bank the factory insured, and who continued most of the time till the loss to conduct its operations under insurances renewed yearly, often in different names, — stipulating that any loss should be paid to the 'bank.

In April, 1834, when application was first made for insurance, the defendants, doing business in Boston (Mass.), put numerous written interrogatories to Stearns, who lived in Malone (New York), where the factory was situated, and to one of them he replied, that no lamps were “used in the picking-room.” These interrogatories, and the answers to them, were not annexed to the policy, but were put on file in the office ; and the policy purported to have been “made and accepted upon the representation of the said assured, contained in his application therefor, to which reference is to be had,” &c., &c.

No new representations appear to have been made at the different renewals, but only a general reference to representations, like that just named; and in three or four instances, when the policy was in a new name, a specific statement was inserted that the insurance was entered into “ agreeably to the representations heretofore made by Jonathan Stearns.”

Referring to the record and preliminary statement of this case for other details, the plaintiff objected first to the competency of parol evidence, which was offered to pmve that the representations signed by Stearns, and on file wit >. his application, were those made by him, and to the instruction of the court, that, if they were adopted by the plaintiffs, the present policy as well as the original one must be considered as found- < d on them and void, if they were not true.

It will be proper, then, to consider first whether this parol evidence was competent for the purpose for which it was offered.

*246 Without meaning to impugn the great elementary principle, that written instruments are not to be varied or contradicted by parol, it suffices to say here that this testimony was not admitted to vary or contradict any portion of what had been written. See Phillips v. Preston, 5 Howard, 291.

It merely went to identify what the writing in the policy referred to, as a part or parcel of the contract, like a reference in one deed or contract to another deed or contract. 13 Wendell, 92; Jennings v. Chenango Ins. Co., 2 Denio, 82; Phillips on Ins. 47; 16 Pick. 502; 1 D. & E. 343; 2 Brod. & Bingh. 553; 4 Russ. 540; 20 Pick. 121; 1 Paige, 291; 8 Metcalf, 114, 350; 4 Howard, 353; 3 Barn. & Ald. 299; Wigram on Ext. Ev. 54, 55; 1 Hen. Bl. 254; 2 Hen. Bl. 577; 6 D. & E. 710; 1 Duer on Ins. 74.

It added to what was written nothing, it subtracted nothing, it changed nothing, and we think its admission was legal.

In the next place, the instruction that the plaintiffs were bound by those representations, if adopting them subsequently at the time of making .their insurance, accorded with both the law and equity of the transaction. If they adopted them and induced the defendants to act on them, it would operate fraudulently to let them be- disavowed after a loss. So if the plaintiffs ratified them, in their subsequent application, if no other representations were made or relied on except these, if their attention was called to these; if the bank was a party in interest through all these insurances, without repudiating these representations, and if these were the only set of representations used in all of them, it surely must comport with justice, as well as law, to have them govern.

The cases of like subsequent adoptions and ratifications of what had been done before by others are very numerous. Among them see those collected in Story on Agency, §§ 252, 253. Even “ slight circumstances and small matters will sometimes suffice to raise the presumption of a ratification.” Ward v. Evans, 2 Ld. Raym. 928; 3 Wash. C. C. 151; 13 Wend. 114; 3 Chitty Com. L. 197.

This view of the case, standing alone, would entitle the defendants to be discharged, for the picking-room, contrary to these representations, had a lamp, and indeed lamps, in it; and their use was proved to be the cause of the fire which destroyed the factory.

We should, therefore, affirm the judgment below without further inquiry, did not the bill of exceptions disclose another ruling, which, as the record now stands, requires consideration. When the judgment below is, as here, well sustained by the *247 opinion entertained on a decisive point, it is usually of no consequence whether another point was correctly ruled or not. But as the bill of exceptions in this case was drawn up by the plaintiffs, it states that the jury were instructed to find a verdict for the defendants on the last ground, if on the facts the first one failed; and hence, looking to the record, the -last ground may have been passed on by the jury, and have influenced their verdict. To be sure, the report of this case below (in 2 Woodb. & Min. 472) shows that a verdict was taken by agreement of parties, or only proforma, in order to bring the questions of law to the Supreme Court; and therefore, that no jury could in truth in this case have been thus influenced or misled. Yet this fact not appearing on the record brought here, the case, till revised and corrected below in .this particular, must be considered as if the jury had actually examined both grounds, and had really decided upon them. But even on that hypothesis, if the second point was properly ruled, no occasion would exist for sending the case back for correction in the statement as to the verdict, in connection with the first point. ^

Whether it was properly ruled or not involves a question of much novelty, being in one aspect of it a case, perhaps, of the first impression, and without any precedent to govern us, and is of so much importance in insurances as to deserve great caution in settling it. From the report of the case below, before referred to, the Circuit Court, though alluding to the last point, do not appear to have gone into any critical discussion and opinion on it.

But the bill of exceptions being so drawn up as to exhibit a positive instruction given on it by that court to the jury, it is necessary for us to examine with care whether an instruction like that presented here could legally be given.

First, then, what is the substance of that supposed instruction?

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49 U.S. 235, 12 L. Ed. 1061, 8 How. 235, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-president-of-the-manufacturers-insurance-scotus-1850.