London Assurance Corpn. v. . Thompson

62 N.E. 1066, 170 N.Y. 94, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1044
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 25, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 62 N.E. 1066 (London Assurance Corpn. v. . Thompson) 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
London Assurance Corpn. v. . Thompson, 62 N.E. 1066, 170 N.Y. 94, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1044 (N.Y. 1902).

Opinions

Vann, J.

This is a controversy between insurers which turns upon the construction of a policy of reinsurance. The plaintiff is a foreign insurance corporation and the defendant is one of several individual underwriters, who issue what are known as Lloyds policies and. do business under the name of the Flew Jersey State .Fire Association. The policy of the plaintiff, issued to Patterson, Downing & Co., covered “ all risks by railroads and /or other inland conveyances and in warehouses, yards or elsewhere from the time bills of lading are signed for the goods until the same shall have been laden on board vessels or lighter at such ports for shipment; on rosin, turpentine and other goods commonly known as FTaval stores * * *. This policy also to cover goods as herein described, the property of the Downing Go.,'or in which said company may be interested as owner or agent.” There was also a marine risk which is not here important. ' The policy of the defendant was of the Flew York standard form, whereby the underwriters agreed to “ rei/nsu/re the London Assurance Corporation * * * against all direct loss or damage by fire * * * to the following described property while located and contained as described herein and not elsewhere, to wit, on the fire risk on naval stores, i. e., rosin, turpentine, etc., in barrels, while waiting shipment, in or on the warehouses, and /or sheds of Downing & Co. at Brunswick, Georgia, and insured under policies issued by the London Assurance Corporation, marine branch. The same being naval stores of other parties intended for foreign or *97 domestic shipment for which the London Assurance Corporation is liable under the terms of its marine policies issued to shippers. It is the true intent and meaning of this policy to fully indemnify the London Assurance Corporation for each and every loss by fire within the limits above named to the full extent of its interests as herein described, * * * in consideration of which and the indemnity hereby guaranteed the London Assurance Corporation hereby covenants and agrees to report to this association at the end of each month the total amount of insurance on naval stores that has been written by said corporation in the above described warehouses, déc., and to pay to this association its proportionate part of a premium at and after the rate of five cents for every one hundred dollars so insured. This policy is subject to the same fire risks, conditions, interpretations, valuations, indorsements and assignments as are or may be assumed or adopted by the London Assurance Corporation, and loss, if any, payable at the same time and in the same manner as they pay. * * * This policy shall continue to protect all merchandise already accepted by the London Assurance Corporation or for which they may be liable, until the same has passed beyond the limits of this policy.”

Of the part thus quoted from.the policy the words in italics are in manuscript, and, with this exception, all before the words “ to-wit ” is part of the printed form and all after is typewritten. The italicised words, “ in the above described warehouses, &c,” are interlined in manuscript in the typewritten part.

After a loss had occurred the plaintiff paid Patterson, Downing & Co. the amount called for by their policy, and then brought this action to recover from the defendant his proportion thereof according to the contract of reinsurance, without making any effort to reform it. The defendant, however, by a counterclaim, sought to reform it in his interest, but was defeated, and the attempt is now immaterial.

The referee adopted the short form of decision, but found specifically that a typewritten paper purporting to set forth *98 the-terms upon which said reinsurance was made, was prepared by the plaintiff and furnished to the said New Jersey State Fire Association and is attached to and forms part of the said policy of reinsurance ; thatsaid reinsurance is thereby declared to be,” quoting the part above set forth describing the risk.

The referee further found that “ a fire occurred at said yards of Downing & Co., in Brunswick, by which a large quantity of turpentine and rosin, covered by the policy issued by the plaintiff to said Patterson, Downing & Co., was destroyed. * * * None of the rosin which was destroyed or damaged by said fire was in or on the warehouses, and/ or sheds of Downing & Co., at Brunswick, but the whole thereof was deposited or stored, while waiting shipment, in the open yard of Downing & Co.” He held that the rosin was not covered by the policy of reinsurance, and gave judgment for the loss on the turpentine only.

It appeared from the evidence that the yard of Downing & Co. was 540 feet long by 190 feet wide, and was bounded on the east by the tracks of a railroad and on the west by navigable water connected with the Atlantic ocean. In the center of the yard was a shed 300 feet long by 50 feet wide and, contiguous thereto, a storehouse of the same width and 100 feet in length.

The plaintiff claims that as the contract was one of reinsurance, it was an insurance of the plaintiff’s identical risk, and not an independent insurance of specific property in a defined locality; that the intention was that the reinsurance should cover the plaintiff’s terminal risk, whatever it was, and that the words “in or on the warehouses and/ or sheds” should yield to an intention springing conclusively from the fact that the plaintiff’s undertaking was to reinsure.

While the insurable interest of the plaintiff depended upon the policy issued by it to Patterson, Downing & Co., it does not follow that the contract of reinsurance covered all the risks thus assumed, for the policy was valid if it covered only a part thereof. Thus, while the policy issued by the plaintiff covered three general risks, inland, terminal and marine, the policy *99 issued to it related to only one risk, which was the terminal. It was not essential that the contract of reinsurance should cover even the entire terminal risk assumed by the plaintiff, for it was within the power of the parties to agree that it should cover a part of that risk only and to limit it to the property in question, while it was in a certain place at the terminal port . When.the insurer for some reason finds it convenient that another shall bear either in whole or in part the liability to the insured which he has assumed, and agrees with another insurer to assume tlie whole or a part of his liability as regards the insured, it is termed a contract of reinsurance.” (1 Biddle on Insurance, sec. 378; Insurance Company of North America v. Hibernia Insurance Company, 140 U. S. 565.) While a contract of reinsurance implies the same subject-matter of insurance as the original policy, and runs against perils of the same kind, it need not be for the identical hazard insured against in the first policy, but may be for a less, though not for a greater risk. (Philadelphia Insurance Co. v. Washington Insurance Company, 23 Pa. St. 250, 253; 1 May on Insurance, secs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 N.E. 1066, 170 N.Y. 94, 1902 N.Y. LEXIS 1044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/london-assurance-corpn-v-thompson-ny-1902.