Forgay v. Atlantic Mutual Insurance

2 Rob. 79
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedFebruary 13, 1864
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Rob. 79 (Forgay v. Atlantic Mutual 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
Forgay v. Atlantic Mutual Insurance, 2 Rob. 79 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1864).

Opinion

By the Court,

Robertson, J.

All the original owners of • the ship in question, (the Knickerbocker,) except two, (the Aitkens,) originally authorized and instructed the defendant Stanton and his former partner, James Thomson, Jr. then constituting the firm of Stanton & Thomson, to keep their separate interests in her insured, valuing her at a certain sum, ($50,000.) Each owner gave .this direction separately, without any reference to the interests of others. This fully appears in the testimony and findings by the court. By the death of. Thomson, in March, 1857, and the admission of another, (John) Thomson in his place, a change was made in the com- ' position of the firm, but its business and name continued the same. The policy in suit, and others, were taken out in the same name. In that name accounts were rendered, policies transferred, and the business of the vessel conducted by the new firm as ship’s husbands. There was, therefore, enough evidence of the ratification of their acts, as agents of the [89]*89owners, to warrant the conclusion of the continuance of the authority to such new firm to continue to make insurance on the several interests of the owners. Although it may not he very essential to the rights of parties to determine who was the actual agent, Stanton or the new firm, it relieves the case from embarrassment to consider the insurance agents as the same from the birth to the loss of the vessel.

In May, 1857, Stanton & Thomson, in pursuance of such authority and instructions, obtained from the defendants, the Atlantic Mutual Insurance Company, the policy in question. By it they are insured by their firm name, “ on account of whom it may concern.” Loss if any payable to them. It contains- the usual clause, limiting the liability of the underwriters in case of a prior insurance “ on the premises,” to so much as such prior insurance should fail to cover. The amount insured is exactly three sixteenths of the valuation of the vessel in the instructions to insure, ($9375,) which was the share of the vessel then owned by the plaintiffs and Fowler. No disclosure was made to the company, at the time of making such insurance, of either the parties or the interest to be insured. Only two other policies, each for one tenth of the valuation of the vessel, had then been taken out by Stanton & Thomson, pursuant to the instructions to them. Thus nothing on the face of the contract, or passing between the parties to it at the time of making it, disclosed for whose account they were in fact made. Unless there was some extrinsic evidence of the intention of Stanton & Thomson in making such insurance as to the persons and interests to be covered thereby, it would have covered only the interest of. Stanton himself as an owner. Or if the only evidence were proof of the instructions of all the owners to insure their interests, it might have enured to their joint benefit alone.

Whatever interest, or whoever.was protected by such policy of insurance, it is clear that the rights of any party insured by it were vested when it was made ; they 'could not be ambulatory until fixed by Stanton & Thomson, nor transferred by them as they thought proper, unless possibly they might have [90]*90the right of extinguishing any claim hy rescinding the contract, While it .remained a subsisting contract, nobody could claim any benefit under it, except they were designed to be protected by it at the time it took effect as a binding contract. Nothing, therefore, done or said by such agent, after such rights became so fixed, was admissible to prove a subsequent choice by such agents, of the parties to be covered by it or the extent to which they were to be benefited,- or a transfer by them of such right from one to another 5 including, of course, any°distribútion among the owners in severalty, hy way of separating their interests of policies, if originally made either by their intention or any operation of law, the property of all jointly. If any acts or declarations of Stanton & Thomson, after the making of the policy in question, were admissible in evidence at all, they were only so to establish the original intent in making the policy,- and not to prove subsequent changes of interest. They would, therefore,- be subject to the same restriction as to the proximity of the time of their occurrence, and the mode of making them, as all external conduct when admitted to prove mental intent. They would never, however, reach as far back as a continuous course of dealing by such agents with the interests of the plaintiffs under their instructions to insure would. Such a course might be followed as far back as it was unbroken, to settle the question of intent in the particular transaction.

If the question in this case were whether tlfe insurances were made for the owners jointly,- or severally,- alone, without reference to the persons for whom they were made, the fair presumption of fact, if not of law, would be, that they were not made for them jointly. It is not necessary, however, to discuss at length how far the insurance brokers would have violated their duty if they had made a joint insurance. The question would -still remain in any event, - if the insurances were, in fact, several, who was covered by the policy in question.

It is so well settled that a policy made “ on account of whom it may concern,” covers the interest of all whom it was [91]*91intended to protect, (Crosby v. N. Y. Mut. Ins. Co., 5 Bosw. 369,) as to be so stated in elementary works. (2 Pars. Marit. Law, 29-33, and cases cited. 2 Duer on Ins. §§ 8, 9, 21,24, 30.) Two statutes were passed by the British Parliament, (25 Geo. III, c. 44; 28 Geo. III, c. 56,) requiring the names of agents to be inserted in polices, without, however, stating their agency, (Bell v. Gilson, 1 B. & P. 346, n.) in order to remedy the evils of an earlier custom, of delivering policies in blank. (3 Steph. N. P. 2094, 2095.) Such a form as the present, answers the ends of such statutes. An authority to insure, tends to confer on those giving it the benefit of an insurance merely, by the evidence it affords of intent. It is only when the policy extends to those concerned at the' time of the loss, that subsequent assignees are covered. (Rogers v. Traders’ Insurance Co., 6 Paige, 583.) In this case, the protection of the policy is confined to those interested when it was made, and its applicability turns upon a question of intention in fact. If, then, it was intended to protect, not all, but only one or more, the question to be solved is, who those were.

The individual interest of the defendant Fowler is admitted by the plaintiffs to be covered by the policy ; the only question is as to the remaining two thirds, whether it belonged to the estate represented by Fowler (Peabody’s,) or to the plaintiffs. It is not necessary now to consider any new rights acquired by such defendant, as administrator against his co-defendants, the company, by their indorsement on the policy before the loss, which declares the interest under it to be transferred to such defendant, as .administrator. They could not bar the plaintiffs’ claim ; the pleadings are not framed to try any. issue upon them, and any infringement of them is not .the same cause of action as that set out in the complaint, since that grows wholly out of the original policy.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Rob. 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forgay-v-atlantic-mutual-insurance-nysuperctnyc-1864.