Frenkel & Co. v. L'Urbaine Fire Insurance

225 A.D. 332, 233 N.Y.S. 206, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11631

This text of 225 A.D. 332 (Frenkel & Co. v. L'Urbaine Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frenkel & Co. v. L'Urbaine Fire Insurance, 225 A.D. 332, 233 N.Y.S. 206, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11631 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

Merrell, J.

Plaintiff is a domestic corporation doing business in the city of New York. The defendant insurance company is a French corporation located at Paris, France. The plaintiff sues as assignee of Alfred Scharnberg and Robert Scharnberg, German subjects, composing the firm of Alfred Scharnberg & Co., doing business in Paris, France. It is alleged that the firm of Scharnberg & Co. was under contract with the defendant L’Urbaine Fire Insurance [334]*334Company of Paris, France, to receive commissions upon premiums received by it from fire insurance negotiated by said Scharnberg & Co., plaintiff alleging that said defendant had collected large sums of money upon which Scharnberg & Co. were entitled to commissions, payment of which commissions had been demanded by plaintiff of the defendant and refused by defendant. Plaintiff asked for an accounting of the commissions received and that the plaintiff, as assignee of Scharnberg & Co., be adjudged entitled to all the benefits and profits and commissions due Alfred Scharnberg & Co. under said agreement with defendant, and that the amount of said commissions be determined in the action, and that plaintiff have judgment therefor against defendant, together with costs and disbursements of the action. After the commencement of the action plaintiff’s complaint was amended to an extent immaterial to the questions involved upon this appeal.

The defendant answered the amended complaint, setting up five separate defenses. The plaintiff moved to set aside said defenses as insufficient, and the Special Term, to which plaintiff’s motion was addressed, granted the same as to three of the defenses and denied it as to two. Both plaintiff and defendant appealed to this court from the order of the Special Term, and this court struck out all five defenses alleged in the answer of the defendant to plaintiff’s amended complaint. (Frenkel & Co., Inc., v. L’ Urbaine Fire Ins. Co., 222 App. Div. 299.) The first separate defense alleged in the third amended answer here under review and which the court below held to be sufficient, denying plaintiff’s motion to strike out the same, was, in substance, the same defense set forth in the first answer to the plaintiff’s amended complaint, which was passed upon by this court on the first appeal above mentioned. This defense, in brief, was that all the property, rights and interests of the plaintiff’s assignor, Alfred Scharnberg & Co., a copartnership composed of German citizens, organized and doing business in France, and all right, title and interest in and to the contract in question between plaintiff’s assignors and defendant, as well as all accruals thereunder, were seized by the French Sequestrator acting under and pursuant to certain French laws and decrees applicable to such claims. Mr. Justice McAvoy wrote the opinion of this court, holding that the said first defense, although good, was imperfectly pleaded. In the course of his opinion, in which all the justices of this court concurred, Mr. Justice McAvoy wrote: The first defense, in effect, is that all the interest of Scharnberg & Co. was seized by the Sequester acting for and in behalf of the government of France. This defense would be good if the allegation further pleaded the laws of France governing the situation and alleged the facts showing that Scharnberg [335]*335& Co. and, this contract were subject to their provisions.” (Italics are the writer’s.)

Upon the decision of said appeal leave was granted defendant to serve an amended answer upon payment of costs. The costs were paid and the defendant served an amended answer setting up again four defenses, among them said first separate defense with additional allegations to meet the criticism of this court, pleading the laws of France governing the situation and alleging facts showing that plaintiff’s assignors were subject to the provisions of the French laws and decrees. Plaintiff again moved to strike out the four defenses contained in the said amended answer, and the motion was granted at Special Term. Upon appeal to this court the order striking out said four defenses was affirmed, without opinion. (Frenkel & Co., .Inc., v. L’ Urbaine Fire Ins. Co., 224 App. Div. 732.) The plaintiff, appellant, contends upon this appeal that this court did not intend to hold upon the first appeal that such a defense was good in any event, and that the justice presiding at Special Term on the second motion, in striking out the same defense with the added allegations as to the French law and decrees and their applicability to the situation presented, in effect held that such defense was not good. I am unable to agree with either of these contentions of the appellant. I think this court clearly indicated in its opinion its view that the defense, if properly pleaded, was good. All that the justice, in granting the motion to strike out said defense, among others, held, was that the defense as pleaded was imperfect because of the failure of the defendant to allege that the suspension of payment under the contract in question between plaintiff’s assignor and the defendant was in force during the period for which the accounting was sought in this action. The learned justice in his opinion stated: There is no allegation that such suspension was in force during the period for which an accounting is sought in this action. By the terms of the French Act it was to have force and effect during the whole period of the hostilities and up to a date which will be set later by decree.’ The Treaty of Versailles was signed on June 28, 1919. Plaintiff seeks an accounting for commissions earned between June, 1920, and June, 1926. The French Act of September 27, 1914, was a temporary regulation intended to prevent commercial intercourse between its citizens and those of belligerent nations during the war period. There certainly can be no presumption that it continued in force twelve months after the Treaty of Versailles was signed. If defendant claims that it was in force during any part of the period involved in this suit such part should be affirmatively alleged.” (Italics are the writer’s.)

Such a holding v/as far from deciding that the defense alleged was [336]*336not good, but on the contrary held that the defense alleged would be good with the further allegation that the French act was in full force and effect and unrepealed during the period for which an accounting is asked. Upon the granting of the motion to dismiss the defenses set forth in the second amended answer, leave was granted to defendant to amend upon payment of costs. Defendant met the terms imposed and served a third amended answer realleging as a first separate defense the same defense that all right, title and interest in the contract in question as well as all accruals thereunder were seized by the French Sequestrator and further alleging the enactment of the laws and decrees by the French government regulating the rights and duties of French citizens and German nationals, which decrees were made retroactive as of the date of the declaration of war. The last amended answer sets forth that by virtue of the Treaty of Versailles the French government reserved the right to retain and liquidate all property which the German nationals possessed in France on November 11, 1918, and thereafter established a Bureau of Private Goods and Interests which succeeded to the right, title and interest of plaintiff’s assignors theretofore seized by the French government, and all future accruals thereunder, and especially to the future accruals due the said Alfred Scharnberg & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
225 A.D. 332, 233 N.Y.S. 206, 1929 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 11631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frenkel-co-v-lurbaine-fire-insurance-nyappdiv-1929.