Lee v. . Adsit

37 N.Y. 78
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 37 N.Y. 78 (Lee v. . Adsit) 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
Lee v. . Adsit, 37 N.Y. 78 (N.Y. 1867).

Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 80

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 81

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 82

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 83 Lee Hall, the plaintiffs, were lumber commission merchants, and, for several years prior to August 2, 1856, were in the habit of receiving from Adsit Co., the defendants, consignments of lumber for sale. On that day, lumber of the defendants to the value of about $5,000, remaining unsold in the plaintiffs' yard, was destroyed by an accidental fire. This action was brought to recover a balance of account for charges and advances over and above the proceeds of the lumber sold. The plaintiffs' demand is not questioned; and the whole controversy grows out of the defendants' claim on account of their loss by the fire.

A referee allowed this claim, and judgment was entered on his report against the plaintiffs for $2,116.50, with interest and costs. Exceptions were taken, and, on the plaintiffs' appeal, a General Term sitting in the third district reversed the judgment and granted a new trial. The defendants appealed to this court, consenting that in case of affirmance judgment absolute be rendered against them.

The complaint alleges that it was "expressly agreed * * that the plaintiffs were not required to effect any * * insurance against fire, * * and that so far as concerned the *Page 84 plaintiffs, the defendants should take the risk." The answer contains two separate defenses. The first defense echoes, in its precise words, a denial of this alleged express agreement; but it contains no claim on account of the loss. That claim is set up in the second defense, which recites what it alleges to be "the entire agreement."

As stated, this agreement consists of ordinary stipulations between a consignor and consignee on other matters, but without any which could be construed as referring to insurance, and without any allusion whatever to that subject, except a statement that the agreed eight per cent commission to the plaintiffs was to be in full for sales, guaranty, and all charges connected with receiving, piling, storing and sale, "not including charges for insurance." The defense does not allege instructions to insure, but avers that the defendants "never did, at any time or in any manner, forbid or prohibit the plaintiffs from procuring and effecting, as such factors as aforesaid, for the security and benefit of the defendants, an insurance or insurances on the lumber." Except in the somewhat indirect and incidental way hereafter particularly stated, the defense does not intimate that there was any duty to insure; and, except by reason of the insurance actually effected by the plaintiffs, it does not make any claim against them.

The precise ground of defendants' claim is thus stated: Prior to January 1, 1856, the plaintiffs, without the defendants' knowledge, constantly kept on foot insurance effected in their own names, upon all lumber held by them in trust or on commission; the expenses of such insurances assignable to plaintiffs' lumber did not exceed one-half of one per cent on the sales thereof; the plaintiffs, concealing their said insurances and the cost thereof, fraudulently, with intent to extort, etc., charged to defendants, from time to time, as upon insurance by the plaintiffs personally, and not as and for the expense of procuring insurance, a larger sum than such actual cost; and prior to January, 1856, the defendants protested against such charges, and refused to pay such percentage thereafter. *Page 85

This defense then alleges that in 1856, prior to the loss in question, but without express directions, the plaintiffs, as they lawfully might, and as they were bound to do, in the proper and faithful discharge of their duty to the defendants as factors and consignees, "did procure and effect * * insurances * * upon lumber held by the said plaintiffs in trust or on commission." It further alleges that these insurances covered the defendants' interest; that on learning of their existence after the loss, the defendants notified the plaintiffs that they adopted and ratified the same as having been effected for their benefit, and that afterward the plaintiffs recovered the whole amount insured.

The following facts appeared on the trial: At the time of the fire, the plaintiffs held policies, amounting, in the aggregate, to $30,000, by the terms of which the insurers "do insure Lee Hall against loss or damage by fire on lumber, their own, or held by them in trust or on commission, or sold, but not delivered, contained" in their lumber yard. The policies required the insured to furnish a statement and an affidavit of the interest of the assured therein; and they also contained a printed clause in these words: "Property held in trust, or on commission, must be insured as such, otherwise the policy will not cover such property; and, in case of loss, the names of the respective owners shall be set forth in the preliminary proofs of such loss, together with their respective interests therein."

There was in the plaintiffs' yard at the time of the fire, and destroyed thereby, not only the defendants' lumber, and about $4,000 worth of lumber belonging to James Morgan Co., held on the same terms, but also $30,000 worth of lumber held on commission from other consignors, for whom the plaintiffs had agreed to insure at specified rates. The plaintiffs included in their claims upon the insurers the lumber of this latter class, received substantially the whole amount insured, and paid it over to their consignors. But they made no claim upon the insurers for the property of the defendants, or of James Morgan Co. *Page 86

For the business of 1853, the plaintiffs charged and received from the defendants one and one-half per cent on account of insurance. Then, and before the business of 1854 commenced, the defendants refused to pay one and one-half per cent for insurance, on the ground that it was too much. At the close of the years 1854 and 1855, accounts were settled between the parties, no charge being made for insurance in either instance. At an interview between the defendant Adsit and the plaintiff Lee in 1856, before the business season commenced, Adsit expressed a willingness to pay one per cent for insurance, but Lee charged one and a half per cent, which Adsit refused to pay. In the winter of 1855-6, Adsit stated to two persons that the defendants did not get their lumber insured, but ran their own risk, or insured themselves.

The defendants had no knowledge of the insurances in question until three days after the fire. They then gave the notice of adoption and ratification alleged in the answer. The plaintiffs paid no attention to this notice.

The defendants' lumber, being piled separately, was not included in the inventories taken by the plaintiffs at intervals of ten or fifteen days during 1856, for the purpose of keeping their insurances full. Each of the plaintiffs testified that he did not intend to insure the defendants' lumber.

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Bluebook (online)
37 N.Y. 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-adsit-ny-1867.