Kamen Soap Products Co. v. Prusansky & Prusansky, Inc.

5 A.D.2d 620, 173 N.Y.S.2d 706, 1958 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5940
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 13, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 A.D.2d 620 (Kamen Soap Products Co. v. Prusansky & Prusansky, Inc.) 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
Kamen Soap Products Co. v. Prusansky & Prusansky, Inc., 5 A.D.2d 620, 173 N.Y.S.2d 706, 1958 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5940 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

BeegaN, J.

Plaintiffs have a judgment against the defendants for $145,185.63 based on a jury’s finding that defendants as insurance brokers negligently managed a fire insurance service with the result that there was insufficient coverage at the time of a fire. Although the judgment runs in favor of three plaintiffs without segregation or apportionment, for convenience we treat Kamen Soap Products, Inc., as the plaintiff.

The Kamen corporation has its principal office in New York, but had a soap factory and crayon plant at Barberton, Ohio. In addition to these products it manufactured napalm, a highly combustible war material, for the United States Government.

There had been several fires in the plant before its total destruction in July, 1954, which caused the loss on which this action is based. The plaintiff’s fire loss was $434,776.50; it collected $291,075.61 in insurance; recovery measured by the uninsured loss is sought from the defendants.

Defendants had been performing insurance service to the Kamen corporation since about 1949. A number of disputes arose between the defendant brokers and their client about the servicing of this account; and substantial segments of the testimony in the record, and much of the argument pursued by [622]*622the plaintiff in its brief, revolve about its contention that tbe handling of tbe account was confused and unsatisfactory since 1952.

Tbe resolution of tbe controversy by tbe jury, which has become tbe foundation of tbe judgment appealed from, however, sharpens and narrows tbe area left in dispute on appeal and makes irrelevant much of tbe argument pursued by respondent. Many of tbe facts and occurrences relied on have a merely historical interest in tbe transactions between tbe parties, without importance in tbe residual controversy.

Tbe jury by its verdict found in effect that two fire insurance policies which bad been obtained through defendant brokers bad been cancelled early in 1954 by tbe insurance companies before their expiration date; and that tbe defendants negligently failed to advise their client, Kamen corporation, of these cancellations with tbe result that plaintiff, in tbe belief that such insurance continued in effect, failed to provide for additional coverage. In respect of other policies in controversy, tbe jury’s verdict was for defendants and plaintiff does not appeal.

Plaintiff in defending tbe judgment pursues an argument which suggests that somehow tbe cancellations of these two policies themselves are to be attributed to tbe brokers; but tbe record makes it perfectly clear that tbe cancellations were not effected by tbe insurance companies due to any failure of tbe brokers to pay premiums. Tbe premiums not only were paid, but tbe unearned premiums were rebated in each of tbe two cancellations and credited to plaintiff’s account with defendants; nor is there any proof whatever that a request for cancellation or any other act by tbe brokers brought about tbe cancellations which, on tbe contrary, were effected by tbe carriers themselves upon their own decision based on tbe nature of tbe risk involved.

Nevertheless, it is argued at random, for example, that tbe failure to utilize a credit balance in 1952 to pay a premium on a policy not found to be a basis for this judgment; tbe failure to utilize other credits in tbe same year for premiums on other policies; and “defendants’ unauthorized cancellations” of still other policies in 1952 are somehow to be treated as having importance in tbe issue before us.

Tbe significant issue is quite different from all this. Tbe two policies now important are one written by tbe Home Insurance Co., No. 8546471, running from December 1,1951 to December 1, 1954, for $75,000, cancelled January 27, 1954; and one written by Lloyd’s Insurers, No. 29070, running from February 9, 1952 to February 9, 1955, for $147,000, cancelled February 1, 1954. [623]*623The Home policy was a 11 warranty ” or guaranty ” policy on which the continuance of Lloyd’s policy would depend; and the cancellation of the Home policy would he expected to bring about the cancellation of Lloyd’s.

Since neither the careless and confused way in which the defendants may have handled plaintiff’s insurance business generally in 1952 or 1953, nor their failure to pay premiums, nor any act or direction of theirs is shown by plaintiff to have been a cause of the cancellation by the insurers of January 27 and February 1,1954, a recovery based on negligence must necessarily rest on a showing that plaintiff did not know of these cancellations ; that defendants negligently failed to communicate their knowledge of the cancellations to plaintiff; and the fact plaintiff did not obtain other insurance was the product of such failure of communication without any concurring negligence by plaintiff. On showing these facts, of course, plaintiff had the burden of proof.

It is very clear in the record that plaintiff had prompt knowledge of the cancellation of Home Insurance Policy No. 8546471 on January 27, 1954, which, as it has been noted, was the warranty policy on which the continuance of Lloyd’s coverage was based. Plaintiff’s president Abraham L. Kamen, testified that he had received written notice of this cancellation on February 1,1954, and a copy of the notice is in evidence. Liability could not, therefore, be predicated on a failure of defendants to advise plaintiff of this cancellation.

When we turn to the cancellation of the Lloyd’s policy on February 1, the record strongly suggests that plaintiff had notice of this cancellation at or immediately after the time of cancellation; and that its purported reliance on the defendants to see that this particular policy of insurance continued, or to notify plaintiff of cancellation, had nothing to do with plaintiff’s failure to be adequately insured five months later at the time of the July, 1954 fire.

There is direct proof in the record that in accordance with the practice followed by defendants in doing business with plaintiff a written memorandum, numbered 8818, was sent to plaintiff shortly after February 1,1954 showing the cancellation on that day of the Lloyd’s policy in issue and stating that a return premium credit of $358.57 was due; and there is adequate proof that plaintiff received credit for this premium. Plaintiff denied receiving this notice; but as the result of further discussions between plaintiff and defendants during the spring of 1954 as to what credits or debits ought to be entered in their [624]*624account, defendants on April 20, 1954 sent a letter to plaintiff enclosing a long capitulated list of credits and debits, running from May 25,1952 to February 1,1954.

These discussions and the list of credits .seem to have followed upon a letter of February 23, 1954 in which plaintiff wrote to defendants enclosing a copy of “ the latest report which we received ” from “ our new brokers It asked defendants to “cooperate” in explaining a balance shown on defendant’s statement to plaintiff, by a statement which would show a breakdown of the account with the “ policy number ”, type of insurance, period of coverage, and expiration date, and ‘ ‘ the amount of reimbursement we will receive on all the cancellations ”.

The letter from defendants to plaintiff of April 20 called attention to the fact that there were enclosed ‘ ‘ invoices and credits all of which you will find on the statements ”.

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Bluebook (online)
5 A.D.2d 620, 173 N.Y.S.2d 706, 1958 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kamen-soap-products-co-v-prusansky-prusansky-inc-nyappdiv-1958.