Goodman v. Mercantile Credit Guarantee Co.

17 A.D. 474, 45 N.Y.S. 508
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 17 A.D. 474 (Goodman v. Mercantile Credit Guarantee Co.) 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
Goodman v. Mercantile Credit Guarantee Co., 17 A.D. 474, 45 N.Y.S. 508 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Barrett, J.:

The action is brought upon a policy of credit insurance, and the plaintiffs have recovered a verdict for the full amount claimed. Several objections are made to the recovery, which we will consider in order.

1. By the policy in question the defendant insures the plaintiffs to an amount not exceeding fifteen thousand dollars, against loss sustained by reason of the insolvency of debtors owing the indemnified for merchandise sold and delivered in the regular course of business, between the first day of September, 1892, at twelve o’clock noon, and the first day of September, 1893, at twelve o’clock noon, in excess of. one and three-fourths (If per cent.) per cent, on the total gross sales and deliveries made during said period, subject to the terms and conditions printed below and attached hereto.” By an attached rider it is provided: “ This contract covers all losses on sales of merchandise for one year back from August 31st, 1892, to August 31st, 1891, but any and all losses of - which Messrs. Goodman Bros., have had notice of or sustained prior to August 31st, 1892, or where any extension has been granted to debtors for goods sold between August 31st, 1891,. and August 31st, 1892, are not covered by this contract.”

In computing the amount of loss covered by the policy, there has been deducted from the total amount of the plaintiffs’ losses only a sum equal to one and three-fourths per cent of the sales made between [476]*476September 1, 1892, and.' September 1, 1893. - The defendant claims that the initial loss to be borne by the plaintiffs is one and three-fourths per cent of the amount of sales made during the period provided for in- the- rider,, as well as. in that, covered by the.policy .proper. We do not concur in this view. The clause in the policy, is plain, and provides for the deduction only of. one and three-fourths per cent of the amount of the sales made during the year from September 1,. 1892, ' to September 1, 1893. The rider is equally plain. It makes’ no provision for any deduction whatsoever-. Every ambiguity must be resolved against the defendant which drew this agreement. . Here there is no real ambiguity: To sustain the defendants contention we should have to read-into the policy something to its advantage. Nor is it a reasonable presumption- that the .parties meant to provide for an initial loss for the j>eriod between August 31, 1891, and August 31, 1892, similar to that for the'ensuing year. The nature of the. indemnity provided for in the policy proper is entirely different from that furnished by the rider. Any -loss. sustained -between September 1-,. 1892, and September 1, 1893, is the subject of insurance. On. the other hand, losses on. sales made during the preceding year are covered only if the plaintiffs. had not sustained or had notice of them prior to August 31, 1892, and even such losses are not.covered if any extension of credit, has been granted. Upon the accruing of a debt for goods sold between August 31,' 1891, and August 31, 1892, the debtor would be- apt, either to, pay or to secure an extension, or to exhibit some open evidence of insolvency. In -either case the debt would not be provable under this -policy. ’ Probably but a small percentage of debts for goods sold during the preceding year would, be provable under the terms of the ■ rider. Consequently the theory:—upon which the’ defendant’s contention rests-—which imports into the rider, by implication, each and every Condition of the policy, is lacking in force or plausibility. It is much more probable that the rider was meant as an incident' to the main insurance, and to be of benefit to the. plaintiffs,, than that it was intended as a system qf -insurance, co-ordinate to that of the policy, and subject to all of its conditions, which might very probably (as it in fact proved) be a heavy burden to the plaintiffs instead of an advantage; . ■ •

2. Complaint is made of, the allowance of the Thayer claim; This [477]*477brings up the question of the proper interpretation of the 2d clause of the .policy, which reads : “ The term 6 loss sustained by' reason of the insolvency of debtors ’ is agreed to mean losses upon sales made by the indemnified to debtors who have made a general assignment for the benefit of their, creditors, or who have been declared insolvent in legal or judicial proceedings, or whose business has been sold by the sheriff, marshal or other public officer, under an attachment, execution or other process, or against whom an execution has been returned unsatisfied upon a judgment obtained by the indemnified for sales ‘of merchandise made during the period covered by this contract.”

On January 4, 1893, Thayer, the debtor, executed a conveyance of “ the entire stock of goods, wares and merchandise in the store No. 265 Main street * * • * in the City of Memphis, Tennessee ” (a more specific description of the property following), to a trustee, with directions to sell and apply the proceeds, after payment of fees and expenses, to the payment of nine specified creditors, preferring them in the order in which they were named. The instrument refers in one place to the property transferred as a part of his, the said Y. B. Thayer’s, property and effects,” and in another as only a part of: his property.” On January 11, 1893, Thayer executed another instrument, which recited the former, and conveyed any unexpended surplus to the same trustee for the payment fro rata of eighty-three creditors. The plaintiffs rely wholly upon these instruments, which they claim constitute a general assignment for the benefit of creditors. They first contend that, by “general assignment” in the policy is meant any such disposition by a debtor of his property as induces insolvency in the ordinary meaning of the term — as renders it impossible for the plaintiffs to realize their claim. This seems to us to be reasoning -in a circle. The policy provides for indemnity against losses by “ insolvency,” and then undertakes to define of what insolvency shall; consist. This definition is binding upon the parties, and no loss which does not comply with it can be proved against the defendant. But the execution of a “general assignment ” is employed as a test of “ insolvency.” Consequently, to say that such an assignment as produces insolvency is meant is either to say nothing at all, or to abrogate the contract definition entirely and adopt one from some outside source, which may or may [478]*478not be like that provided for. “ Assignment ” - cannot be defined in terms of '“ insolvency ” at the same time that “ insolvency ” is. defined in terms of “ assignment.” -.

Discarding such a definition, we see no reason why the term “general assignment for the benefit of creditors” should, not be-given, its ordinary legal significance. Nor do we need to consider whether the law of -the- State where the debtor- did business and ' committed the alleged act of insolvency should :be applied. There is no evidence of what constitutes a general assignment in Tennessee, and -the Tennessee law will consequently be presumed to be the; common law. (Monroe v. Douglass, 5 N. Y. 452; Latham v. De Loiselle, 3 App. Div. 527.)

It is contended that it is not necessary that- an assignment, in order to be general,, must cover absolutely- all of the debtor’s property, and that, if substantially, all is transferred-, the assignment is general..' Such a doctrine has -obtained elsewhere (Mussey v. Noyes, 26 Vt. 462), but not in this State. The- question, however, need .not be considered, since the facts are quite.- insufficient to bring the.

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Bluebook (online)
17 A.D. 474, 45 N.Y.S. 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodman-v-mercantile-credit-guarantee-co-nyappdiv-1897.