Continental Insurance v. Ætna Insurance Co. of Hartford

33 N.E. 724, 138 N.Y. 16, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 810
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 11, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 33 N.E. 724 (Continental Insurance v. Ætna Insurance Co. of Hartford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Insurance v. Ætna Insurance Co. of Hartford, 33 N.E. 724, 138 N.Y. 16, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 810 (N.Y. 1893).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The plaintiff sought to recover upon an open policy or contract of re-insurance made by defendant and two other compames in which they assumed certain obligations that are now in dispute, and hound themselves severally and not jointly, nor the one for the other, to the assured.”

The plaintiff had issued in each case an open policy of insurance to Twombly & Co., The X. Y. Lighterage & Transportation Company and John H. Starin, on account of whom it may concern, bearing date respectively September 1, 1881, [18]*18February 1, 1883, and December 6, 1882, “ Loss, if any, payable tc assured upon all kinds of lawful goods and merchandise laden on board the good lighter or lighters, as indorsed hereon, or in a book kept for that purpose, for the several amounts, and on the goods and merchandise as specified in the said indorsement, the said assured agreeing to enter for insurance all goods carried by them at the full value thereof, and to report the same to this company on Monday of each week (or at such times as they may require).

“At and from point or points in the harbor of New York as far south as the Narrows, and the inland waters of New Jersey, adjacent and tributary thereto, and on the North river as far as Piermont, and the East river as far as Throgg’s Neck. * * *

“ The said loss or damage to be estimated according to the true and actual cash value on the day of the disaster.”

On March 17, 1885, merchandise on board the lighter “ Chase ” was indorsed by Twombly & Co. for the amount to be insured of $16,000 in the book referred to in their policy, and the same was reported by them to the plaintiff at the time required. The cargo was lost by perils covered by the policy, and the loss adjusted upon the basis of the actual cash value of the cargo on the day of the disaster in the sum of $12,058.48.

On the 19th of March, 1885, merchandise on board the barge James W. Eaton was indorsed by the N. Y. Lighterage and Transportation Company, for the amount to be insured of $15,900, in the book referred to in their policy, and the same was reported by it to the plaintiff at the time required and in conformity with the contract. The cargo was .lost by perils within the policy, and the amount adjusted upon the actual cash value of the cargo on the date of the disaster at $12,451.26. On October 7,1885, goods on board the lighter 'Wa/rren were indorsed by John LI. Starinin the book referred to in the policy, for the amount to be insured of $16,000, and the same duly reported to the plaintiff, x There was a loss upon the goods included in this cargo which was subsequently [19]*19adjusted at $110. It is not questioned that the plaintiff in each of these cases had made with the shippers valid contracts of insurance and was liable for the loss as adjusted. The plaintiff claims that these losses were covered by the contract of re-insurance with the defendant and the other two companies, bearing date January 1, 1885, and by which they agreed to re-insure the plaintiff on account of whom it may concern, loss, if any, payable to them pro rata, “ Upon all kinds of lawful goods and merchandise laden on board the good lighter or lighters, as indorsed hereon, or in a book kept for that purpose, for the several amounts, and on the goods and merchandise as specified in the said indorsement, the said assured agreeing to enter for insurance all goods at the full value thereof, and to report the same to the assurers on Monday of each week (or at such times as they may require).

The said loss or damage to be estimated according to the true and actual cash value on the day of the disaster.”

The true meaning and construction of the following indorsement made upon this policy and bearing date February 2, 1885, raises the only question presented by this appeal.

“ On and after this date this policy covers the Continental "Insurance Company as re-insurance to the extent of one-half of the amount of each and every risk which equals or exceeds in value the sum of $15,000, and which the said Continental Insurance Company may have on cargo of any one barge or lighter and insured by them under their open policies issued to the following-named persons, viz.: Twombly and Company, John H. Starin, Hew York Lighterage and Transportation Company. "x" * *

“ On cargoes of the value of $50,000 and upwards, this policy is to cover the excess of $25,000, not exceeding the sum of $50,000 on any one cargo.

“JOHH HEWMAH, Agent”

The defendant’s contention is, that as the value of the several cargoes which were lost proved, in each case, upon the adjustment, to be less than $15,000, the loss is not covered by [20]*20the contract of re-insurance, and this view has been sanctioned by the courts below. The plaintiff, on the other hand, claims that as the entered or written value of the cargo, in each case, exceeded that sum, the defendant’s contract covers the plaintiff’s risk, and it is bound to make the plaintiff good for that part of the loss stipulated for in the contract of re-insurance. The plaintiff in each case treated the risk as re-insured, and it indorsed in the book referred to in defendant’s policy, the cargo for one-half the amount entered by the shippers, and reported the same to the defendant. The controversy, therefore, turns upon the meaning of the word “ risk,” as used by the parties in the above indorsement, which is the material part of the contract. In ascertaining the sense in which that word was used, the intention of the parties must govern, and the precise contract relations that each occupied to the other becomes important. The plaintiff, by its open policy issued to the carriers or shippers named, insured goods, the nature, character and value of which were not known, and could not he known, when the policy was issued, but the kind and value thereof were to be particularly specified thereafter, from time to time, as occasion required, by indorsement, or in a book kept for that purpose, to be reported to the -plaintiff once in each week, as required. When the goods were laden, and certainly when so entered at their full value, the contract was completed in every case, and the liability of the plaintiff began. When the goods and their value were reported to the plaintiff, it could then know the character and extent of its risk under the policy, and the true value of the goods at the time of any disaster was to be the basis of its liability. The defendant, and the two other re-insuring companies, agreed with the plaintiff to share one-half its liability for a certain class of those risks. That class was to be specified and defined, not by the result of a disaster, but by indorsement on the policy of re-insurance which the. plaintiff held. Accordingly, the parties limited the operation of the contract to “ each and every risk which equals or exceeds in value $15,000.” The defendant’s liability was not to attach to any other risks [21]*21that the plaintiff might take. It must be presumed from the nature of the business and the purpose of the contract that both parties intended to define the class of risks to be covered by the re-insurance, in such language as to enable each to know when the entry was reported, whether the risk was re-insured or not.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 N.E. 724, 138 N.Y. 16, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-insurance-v-tna-insurance-co-of-hartford-ny-1893.