Hoffman v. Ætna Fire Insurance

32 N.Y. 405
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by161 cases

This text of 32 N.Y. 405 (Hoffman v. Ætna Fire Insurance) 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
Hoffman v. Ætna Fire Insurance, 32 N.Y. 405 (N.Y. 1865).

Opinion

Porter, J.

The weight of judicial authority in this State is against the doctrine that a policy issued to a firm is forfeited by a transfer of interest as between the parties assured. As a contrary opinion has prevailed to some extent, it may be well briefly to retrace the history of this question in our courts.

It first arose in 1840, on the trial of the case of McMasters v. The Westchester Mutual Insurance Co. (25 Wend., 379). The policy was issued to McMasters & Bruce. Evidence was given tending to show that the interest of Bruce in the partnership property was assigned before the loss to McMasters. At the circuit, it was held by Judge Ruggles, as matter of law, that such a sale by one partner to another would not relieve the insurers. The plaintiffs recovered, and a new trial was denied; but it did not become necessary to consider this question on review, the jury having found specially that the interest was not in fact transferred.

The case of Howard & Ryckman v. The Albany Ins. Co. was decided in 1846, and turned on a mere question of misjoinder, arising on . a demurrer to the defendants’ plea that before the loss one of the plaintiffs transferred to the other his interest in the property insured. It was held that under these circumstances, a joint action could not be maintained *407 by the original parties; and from this decision Chief Justice Bbonson dissented. (3 Denio, 301.)

The case- mainly relied on by the appellants, is that of Murdock & Garrett v. The Chenango Mutual Insurance Company, decided in this court in 1849. (2 Comst., 210.) It did not involve the question now under discussion. The property insured was a building, owned at the date of the policy by the plaintiffs as tenants in common. Garrett after-' wards conveyed to Murdock, the other plaintiff, his undivided half of the property. The company indorsed a consent in wilting to the conveyance, with a stipulation that the policy should remain good to Murdock as sole owner of the'property. Under a special provision in the charter of the company, this gave the grantee, as the sole party in interest, a right to maintain the action in his own name—equivalent to that now given by the general law to the real party in interest. (Laws of 1836, 314; 42, sec. 7.) The building was afterwards destroyed by fire, and an action was brought in the joint names of Murdock and Garrett. It was claimed by the defendants and' adjudged by the court that the misjoinder of Garrett was fatal, as he had no interest in the action. Mr. Hill, who argued the cause for the defendants, insisted that, as Murdock was the sole owner at the time of the loss, the action might and should have been brought by him alone. Ho question was made, and under the stipulation indorsed on the policy none could be made, as to the liability of the company to Murdock for the entire loss, unless absolved from it on other grounds. Opinions were delivered by Judges Cady, Stbong and Jewett, all holding the misjoinder to be fatal. The opinion of Judge Stbong was put on the specific ground that Murdock succeeded to all the rights of Garrett, and the action should, therefore, have been brought in his own name. Judge Cady conceded that it was not material to inquire whether Murdock might not have maintained an action in his own name. The observations on this question in the course of his opinion are, therefore, not to be regarded as views expressed by the court, but as the obiter dieta, of the learned judge. They are entitled to high consideration as the views *408 of an able and eminent jurist, but they have not the controlling force of authority.

In 1850, the direct question now involved was first discussed and decided in the Supreme Court. (Tillou v. Kingston Mut. Ins. Co., 7 Barb., 570.) The policy in that case had been issued in 1842, to the firm of Tillou, Doty & Crouse. In 1844, it was assigned by them to one Ketchum, with the written consent of the company, as security for the payment of a mortgage on the premises. Subsequently, and before the loss, Crouse, without the consent of the company, sold his interest in the property to the other two partners. It was provided by law, in the act of incorporation, that any policy issued by the company should become void, ujpon the aUenat/ion, by sale or otherwise, of the property insured. (Laws of 1836, 44; 466.) The action was brought in the names of the original parties, for the benefit not only of the assignee of the policy, but also of the then owners of the property. The court adjudged that a sale by one joint owner to another, of his interest in the property insured, was not a cause of forfeiture within the intent and import of this provision. They also held—the decision in 2 Comstock not having then been reported—that the recovery could be sustained, not only for the amount due to the assignee of the policy, but also for the surplus due to the owners.

When the case came before this court on appeal, the judgment was sustained to the extent of the interest of the assignee, who, in virtue of the consent of the company, was entitled to sue in the names of the original parties, as the action was commenced before the adoption of the Code. The judgment was, of course, modified by striking out the excess recovered by the owners; as it had been settled in the case of Murdock v. The Chenango Insurance Co. that, to the extent of their claim, the misjoinder of Crouse as a plaintiff was a fatal ground of objection. The opinion of the court, delivered by Judge Boot, shows the modification to have been made on the authority of that decision. Through an oversight, such as occasionally happens in all reports, the point of the decision was misapprehended in *409 the note of the case on which the appellants rely. (5 N. Y., 405; 11 id., 399.)

The precise question was again presented for judgment in 1853, in the case of Wilson v. The Genesee Mut. Ins. Co. (16 Barb., 511). The insurance was on the mercantile stock of Dixon & Co., a firm in Michigan, consisting of A. H. Dixon and Samuel G. Goss. Shortly afterward the firm was dissolved. Dixon succeeded, by purchase, to the interest of Goss, and continued the business on his own account down to the time of the fire. The action was brought by Wilson, to whom Dixon subsequently assigned the claim. Two defenses were interposed. The first was, that .the policy was forfeited by the transfer from one partner to the other, of his interest in the property insured; the other was, that it was forfeited by Dixon’s afterwards obtaining a further insurance on the goods, without the written consent of the company; though such a consent was obtained from their local agent in Michigan. The court overruled both defenses, and held that the policy was not forfeited, either by the sale made by the retiring partner, or by the subsequent insurance effected by his successor in interest, with the consent of the Michigan agent.

The case was heard in this court, on appeal, in 1856.

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Bluebook (online)
32 N.Y. 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-tna-fire-insurance-ny-1865.