DeGroot v. Fulton Fire Insurance

4 Rob. 504
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedOctober 7, 1867
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Rob. 504 (DeGroot v. Fulton Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeGroot v. Fulton Fire Insurance, 4 Rob. 504 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1867).

Opinions

By the Court,

Robertson, Ch. J.

The main subjects of exceptions on the trial in this case were : (1.) Evidence of the value of some goods bought by Warren of the plaintiff before the fire. (2.) The admission of a book of entries of the plaintiff’s purchases in evidence. (3.) The admission of an appraisal (made by Messrs. Douglas and Van Saun) in evidence. (4.) Evidence of the acts of (Messrs. Boyd & Fellows, as) a committee of the underwriters. There are isolated questions excepted to, to be considered afterwards.

I cannot perceive how the value of the Warren purchase could form any basis for estimating the value of the rest of the stock. Articles of clothing, of the kind in question, are not like grains of wheat, so alike, unless they are all made from similar materials, and in a similar way, that a few can be taken as samples of the rest. The questions put to Warren, and excepted to, were, Whether he endeavored to find purchasers ? What was the best offer he got, and for what amount he sold the goods ? Those put to the purchaser, (Doland,) and so excepted to; were What he gave for such goods, and what was the fair cash value of them when he bought them ? Did they bring a fair value at auction ? and To what did the [507]*507account of sales amount ? These questions plainly referred to the whole quantity sold, and not to separate articles. But if they did not, and had been as to the value of specific articles, they were inadmissible. The goods so purchased consisted of one hundred and seventy-six coats, twenty-one overcoats, ninety-three pairs of pantaloons and forty-nine vests, and were taken in exchange for a house, valued at $2000. Mr. Douglas, the person employed by Warren to select them, says he took them by their selling marks, which generally were at a large profit, and selected them for the western market, as directed by Warren. Indeed, he took all the fine cloth coats and pantaloons he could find, some being frockcoats, and generally selected the most saleable articles. Doland said there were some fine overcoats among them. Upon looking over the schedules of goods remaining unconsumed, I cannot perceive how goods so purchased and selected, could be samples of the stock, or aid in determining its value, any more than some part of a house could fix what it was worth. There was no evidence that the goods were the same in any particular, or on the average, and I think the evidence was properly excluded.

In regard to the admission of the book of entries of the plaintiff's purchases. The plaintiff's father, (W. A. De-Groot,) upon cross-examination, testified to the accuracy of the entries in such book, as copied from a blotter, entries in which he compared with the original bills as they were paid ; that he had handed the original bills to Messrs. Boyd and Fellows, who acted for the insurance companies, who never returned them ; and that he knew of the accuracy of the amount paid, entered in such book, by paying out a portion himself, seeing the other portion paid by others, making entries of all he paid, or seeing the plaintiff make them, and comparing the entries with those in workmen’s books of cash paid, and a cash book of cash on hand, which was counted. He further stated, on such cross-examination, that he knew the account of purchases, as stated in that book, was correct, and that the money was paid there as charged. The counsel for the de-- ■ fendants first objected to 'the admission of such book or entries [508]*508in evidence, because it was secondary and not original entries, and subsequently excepted to its admission. There does not seem to have been any objection taken, upon the ground that no proof had been offered of any excuse for non-production of the original; nor did such book purport to be copies of any bills. The plaintiff’s father merely used the bills of purchases as memoranda to guide him in making entries, and I cannot perceive any reason why such use of them, while the facts were fresh in his memory, in order to be perfectly accurate as to amounts, would not make the entries in the books original memoranda, available as an artificial memory. Moreover, Messrs. Boyd and Fellows were officers of insurance companies who were underwriters on the same stock, acting in concert, and had been appointed a committee on behalf of all of them, to investigate the loss. This virtually traced the bills into the hands of the defendants’ agents, and authorized the plaintiff to give secondary evidence of their contents if necessary, but, in fact, they were only referred to as memoranda of amounts paid. I think the book was properly admissible in evidence.

The appraisal by Messrs. Douglas and Van Saun was received by the referee as evidence to show the amount of their appraisal, but not as conclusive evidence of the amount of damage, which he explained to mean as being, with the testimony of the appraisers, competent evidence for the plaintiff of the amount of damage, but subject to be contradicted by either party. The policy of insurance in question provided by its ninth condition, that in case of a partial damage to property, after its being put in as good order as the nature of the case will admit, the articles assorted and arranged according to their kinds, and the damaged separated from the undamaged, an inventory should be furnished to the underwriters of the whole, naming the quantity and cost of each article, and that the amount of sound value and damage, should be ascertained by the examination and appraisal of each article by disinterested appraisers mutually agreed upon, and until such appraisal, the loss should not be payable. And such [509]*509policy also provided that the true cash value of the property should he deemed to be such as it might cost to replace it.

Mr. Boyd, an agent of one of the- insurance companies, (The Unity,) who had insured the premises in question and professing to act for all, and Mr. Fellows as secretary of one, (The Rutgers,) professing to act for others, signed an instrument in writing together with the plaintiff, agreeing that Messrs. Van Saun and Douglas, with a third person to be appointed by them, should appraise and estimate at the true cash value, the damage by fire and water to the property insured, and that the appraisement and estimate of any two of them in writing as to the amount of such damage should be binding on both parties, without reference to any other matters of difference between them.

The evidence of the authority of Messrs. Boyd and Fellows to appoint appraisers of the damage by the fire to the undistroyed goods of the plaintiff, on the trial, appears to me sufficient to make their appraisal binding on the defendants. The acts of their president and secretary were admitted to be binding on them. Notices had been sent on behalf of the plaintiff to all the insurers immediately after the fire, of the loss, and representatives from them collected at the scene of it, including the secretary of the defendants. They informed the agent of the plaintiffs (W. H. DeG-root,) they should appoint a committee to “ settle ” the loss. All of them except one,, (The Montauk,) afterwards had a meeting at the office of one of the companies, (The Unity,) at which the president of the defendants presided and remained until it broke up, and at which a committee, consisting of Messrs. Boyd and Fellows, were appointed ' to investigate the loss, the presiding officer himself putting the question.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Rob. 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/degroot-v-fulton-fire-insurance-nysuperctnyc-1867.