Gates v. . the Madison Co. Mutual Ins. Co.

5 N.Y. 469
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 5 N.Y. 469 (Gates v. . the Madison Co. Mutual Ins. Co.) 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
Gates v. . the Madison Co. Mutual Ins. Co., 5 N.Y. 469 (N.Y. 1851).

Opinions

Jewett, J.

The action in this case was brought in the court below upon a policy of insurance against fire. The property insured was a dwelling or tavern-house, a store, and a barn and shed adjoining the store, situated in the village of Durhamville, town of Verona, in the county of Oneida, and on the north side of the Erie canal; the insurance was for five years, from the 12th of March 1838. The property insured was consumed by fire, on the 25th day of August 1840, of which notice was given to the defendants, as required by the terms of the policy. The policy refers to the plaintiffs’ application for insurance “for a more particular description” of the property insured, and as “forming a part of this policy,” and thus, by express words, was made part of the contract. Burritt v. Saratoga County Mutual Insurance Co., 5 Hill 188; Jennings v. Chenango County Mutual Insurance Co., 2 Denio 75.)

The plaintiffs were required, by the form of the application with which they were furnished, to state, first, *442 wh-61® property *which they proposed to have insured was situated; secondly, “how bounded, and the distance from other buildings, if less than ten rods, and for what purpose occupied, and by whom ?” To the first question they answered, “'situated in the village of Durhamville, town of Verona, in the county of Oneida, and on the north side of the Erie canal.” To the second, that “the nearest building east, is the dwelling-house occupied by Charles Eggleston, which is about forty-eight feet; on the north, and about five rods distance, is a shop, used in the season of navigation of the canal, for manufacturing setting-poles, and on the west, the nearest building to the west end of the barn and shed, is the dwelling-house occupied by Benjamin Frasee, which is about fourteen feet distance; the tavern-stand is occupied, at present, by Eliphalet Sears.”

This cause has been tried three times at the circuit On the second trial, it was proved, among other things, tliat there were several other buildings within ten rods of the insured buildings, besides those specified in the application, at the time it was made, of a hazardous character, and for that reason, the plaintiffs were non-suited ; not, however, upon the ground that the answer to the second question amounted to a warranty that there were no other buildings than those stated, within ten rods of the building insured; but upon the ground, that it amounted to the withholding of information, material to the risk, which was called for by the question put. A motion for a new trial was made by the plaintiffs, in this court, founded upon a bill of exceptions taken at the trial, when it was held, that the answer to the question contained in the application: “How bounded, and distance from other buildings, if less than ten rods ?” was not a warranty that there were no othei buildings than those specified, within the distance of ten rods from the premises insured; that “ the call was not for all the buildings within ten rods of the appli *443 cant’s premises; but for the distance of those premises *from other buildings in any direction, if less than ten rods.” That the plaintiffs might very well have understood that the information sought of them by this question, was, how near the buildings, in each direction, if less than ten rods, approached to them; and that their answer showed that they understood the call in that sense — as it stated the distance of their tenements from the buildings nearest thereto, in every direction, and did not profess to state all the buildings within ten rods. That the term “ nearest” used by them, implied that there were, or might be other buildings more remote, but within the range of ten rods; and that the acceptance of the plaintiffs’ answer, in the form given, by the insurance company, and acting upon it by issuing the policy, showed that the company intended by their interrogatory, to ask for the very information thus obtained; or else they would have called for an explanation and further answer — as they must have seen that the nearest buildings only were given, and that those were not stated to be only buildings within ten rods of the premises in question; but virtually disclaimed that the buildings specified were all there were within the distance mentioned, by stating them to be the nearest. It was also held, that assuming that the omission to state or describe the other buildings which existed within the ten rods, in the application, to be a concealment of which the company had a right to avail themselves in their defence, the question presented, in the absence of a warranty, would be upon the materiality of the fact concealed, to the risk, and that that question was for the jury, and ought to have been submitted to them; and that, therefore, the ruling of the circuit judge, that the plaintiffs’ right to recover was defeated, upon the ground that the fact of the existence of buildings within ten rods of the insured buildings, at the time of the insurance, not mentioned or described in the plaintiffs’ application, *444 was of itself conclusive against their recovery, thereby precluding all inquiry into the materiality of the omission to the risk, was erroneous.

decision must be regarded as settling the question, that the answer to the interrogatory in the application, in respect to the distance of the insured premises from other buildings within ten rods, did not amount to a warranty that there were no other buildings within ten rods than those mentioned in it.

In Jennings v. Chenango County Mutual Insurance Co. (2 Denio 75), where the application .and conditions of insurance were made a part of the policy, and among other particulars, the insured was required, by the conditions of insurance, and by the form of the application, to state the “relative situation (of the grist-mill) as to other buildings, distance from each, if less than ten rods” — and the answer given was, “ the mill is bounded by space on all sides,” there being a large barn standing within six rods of the mill, it was held to be a warranty that there was no building within ten rods of the mill, which the existence of the barn within that distance falsified, on the ground, that the answer “ that the mill was bounded by space on all sides,” was to be understood and taken as an affirmance that there was no building in any direction within ten rods of the mill. Notwithstanding the learned judge, in delivering the judgment of the court in this cause, on the former occasion, was unable to see clearly that it amounted to a warranty, I still think, that it did. For although the insured, in the language of Mr. Justice Bronson, in Burritt v. Saratoga County Mutual Insurance Company (5 Hill 188), did not, in terms, say, there was no building within ten rods, he must have intended, that his answer should be received and understood by the company, as affirming that fact; and as the answer is to be regarded as parcel of the contract, I could not resist the conclusion, that the insured agreed that there was no building within the ten

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Bluebook (online)
5 N.Y. 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-the-madison-co-mutual-ins-co-ny-1851.