Kenyon v. Knights Templar & Masonic Mutual Aid Ass'n

25 N.E. 299, 122 N.Y. 247, 33 N.Y. St. Rep. 467, 77 Sickels 247, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1595
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 7, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by110 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 299 (Kenyon v. Knights Templar & Masonic Mutual Aid Ass'n) 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
Kenyon v. Knights Templar & Masonic Mutual Aid Ass'n, 25 N.E. 299, 122 N.Y. 247, 33 N.Y. St. Rep. 467, 77 Sickels 247, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1595 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Bradley, J.

The defense is founded upon the charge that Kenyon, in his application for membership of the defendant, untruly answered some of the questions put to him, and that he ceased before his death to be a member by his failure to pay an assessment as required by the contract of insurance. He undertook that the statements he was called upon to make, and which were contained in his application, should be substantially true. This was part of the contract, and if they or any of them were untrue, there was a breach, of the warranty, which rendered the certificate void. The defendant alleged that his statements that Ms habits were and had always been sober and temperate, and that he did not habitually use intoxicating drinks as a beverage were untrue. The evidence was not such as to require the conclusion that this charge was sup *254 ported, and the jury were authorized to find, as it must be assumed they did, that those statements made by the applicant were substantially true. In the application was also the question : “ Is the person engaged in any way in the retailing of alcoholic liquors ? ” To which was written the answer: “Ko; keep no bar, and sell only at wholesale; have government license and town license.” Kenyon’s place of residence and business was the city of Watertown, H. Y. He kept a liquor store and sold alcoholic liquor by the barrel and in various quantities less than five gallons by measure, but he kept no bar, and it was not his business to sell by the drink or to be drank on the premises. He had a license from the Hnited States government; also one from the board of excise of the city. The latter is commonly known as a store license. The defendant’s counsel requested the court to charge the jury that'the assured, at the time the application was made, was engaged in retailing alcoholic liquors; that his answer to the question in that respect was not truthful, and for that reason the plaintiffs could not recover. The court declined to so charge, and exception was taken. And the court left to the jury the question whether or not such answer of the assured was untrue, to which the defendant’s counsel also excepted."

The question, therefore, arises whether or not it was for the court to determine the interpretation to be given to the statement so written in the application, and to hold as matter of law that it was untrue and constituted a breach of warranty. It may preliminarily be observed that, as a general rule, the construction of a written instrument is a question of law for the com't to determine, but when the language employed is not free from ambiguity, or when it is equivocal and its interpretation depends upon the sense in which the words were used in view of the subject to which they relate, the relation of the parties and the surrounding circumstances properly applicable to it, the intent of the parties becomes a matter of inquiry, and the interpretation of the language used by them is a mixed question of law and fact. (White v. Hoyt, 73 N. Y. 505; Dwight v. G. L. Ins. Co., 103 id. 341.) The inter *255 rogatory which the assured was called upon to answer was, in "its terms and apparent purpose, definite. If the parties under•stood alike the meaning of the term “ retailing of alcoholic liquors,” there was no difficulty in giving the definite answer ■of yes or no. . But for some reason the answer proceeded further and added to “ no ” that he kept no bar, by which he may have intended to be understood that he did not sell by the drink, and, therefore, did not sell at retail, and sold only ■at wholesale, and that to enable him to do so he liad both a .government license and a town license. The former one referred to was permission he had from the authority of the United States, pursuant to act of congress providing for internal revenue, to sell at wholesale, or, as for the purposes •of such act there defined, in quantities not less than five gallons, while the other may be understood to have been a storekeeper’s license from the local board of excise, permitting him to sell in quantities less than five gallons, not, however, to be ■drank on the premises. The question is whether the words of the answer as so written in the application did, in view of the ■subject to which it was directed, furnish any rational doubt or uncertainty as to the manner the assured was conducting his liquor trade business, or as to what was intended to be represented in that respect by such answer. Amongst the objects of the defendant in framing interrogatories to be ■answered by applicants for membership, was that to ascertain the character of the business in which they were engaged, and ■one of them called upon Iienyon to “ State precise nature of business ” which constituted his profession or occupation, to which he answered: “ Importer and wholesale dealer in wines and liquors.” And in the certificate issued to him he is ■described as a wholesale liquor dealer. This was true. He was engaged in that business. But the later inquiry in the ■same ajjplication drew upon him for the further information, whether his business in that traffic was confined to the wholesale trade. To ascertain the import of the answer it is to be considered as a whole. The insertion in it of the statement that he kept no bar, and that he had not' only a government *256 or wholesale license, but a store license which enabled him to> sell in small quantities, may have been intended as explanatory of the other portions of the answer, and to indicate the import,, as he understood it, of the terms wholesale and retail. What, then was the interpretation of which this combination of words-was susceptible;' and what was the meaning, so far as appears,, by them which it may be said the assured intended the answer-should have % He evidently intended to- be understood that, he was not engaged in dealing out liquors by the drink, or to-be drank at his store. And assuming, that the answer was-, made in good faith, the reference to the fact that he had a license which enabled him to sell in quantities less than five gallons not to be- drank there, may have been intended by him to-characterize to that extent the manner in which he was carrying on his business of selling liquors-. Ho other purpose of it is apparent. And in that view there is within the import of the; words the intention of the assured to be understood that his sales were at wholesale and not at retail because he was not selling-by the drink, although he was selling in small quantities by measure. Whatever view the defendant may have entertained of the meaning of the words wholesale and retail- as. applied to the sale of alcoholic liquors, if the applicant had stated that he was selling in the former manner only, and added he-was selling in small quantities, such as by the quart and pint,, by measure, not to be drank on his premises, it could not well be asserted by the defendant that in view of the facts as they appeared on the trial, the court should hold that the answer was substantially untrue, and that by it the applicant was chargeable with breach of warranty. Treating them, as they were susceptible of being treated, some of the words used in the answer of the applicant, as explanatory of others, the-import of it was not upon such a state of facts necessarily untrue in the sense requisite to constitute breach,of warranty..

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 299, 122 N.Y. 247, 33 N.Y. St. Rep. 467, 77 Sickels 247, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenyon-v-knights-templar-masonic-mutual-aid-assn-ny-1890.