McKibbin v. . Peck

39 N.Y. 262, 6 Trans. App. 69
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1868
StatusPublished

This text of 39 N.Y. 262 (McKibbin v. . Peck) 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
McKibbin v. . Peck, 39 N.Y. 262, 6 Trans. App. 69 (N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The facts elicited upon the trial of this cause show that the Plaintiff agreed to carry the wheat by virtue of a contract made by his agents, Pease & Trowbridge, who had no actual interest in the contract, but who acted merely for the Plaintiff in procuring the cargo, and in effecting an insurance on the wheat and freight to New York for a sufficient amount to cover its value upon its arrival there. Although the certificate of insurance was in the names of the agents, and that fact was not disclosed, still it was effected for the Plaintiff’s benefit, under an open policy, and the premium paid by him. Sawyer, the agent of the Defendant, to whom the loss was payable, if any occurred, was a mere appointee to receive the money for the parties who' might be entitled to it.

As the freight was not paid, all the Defendant could have recovered would have been the value of the wheat at the place of delivery, deducting the amount of freight. The Defendant actually received upon the policy of insurance a larger amount than the value of the wheat in New York, and more than he was actually entitled to receive. What he received beyond this did not *74 belong to Mm, an.d was 'the freight for the wheat which the Plaintiff, who had performed this service, if any one, was entitled to receive. The Defendant having thus received from the company the value of the freight (which should have been paid to the Plaintiff) without any legal or equitable right thereto, I think' that he received it as the money of the Plaintiff, and is bound to account for the same to the Plaintiff, unless there is some insupera-' ble. legal difficulty in the way. Such an obstacle, I think, does not exist in this case.

It sufficiently appears that the Plaintiff was really the insured party, at least to the extent of the freight, although nominally the certificate stated that Pease & Trowbridge were insured.. The question whether the Plaintiff could recover upon the policy of insurance does not arise in this case; and whatever rule might apply if the action was brought directly upon the policy, it cannot now be claimed that the Plaintiff' cannot recover because he was not nominally the insured party. Here the insurance company.has actually paid the money, and the question to be determined is, who is entitled to that portion of it which remains after the Defendant has been paid the full value of the property lost % It matters, not that the Plaintiff could not originally have maintained an action upon the policy, and it is enough that the Defendant received money which the Plaintiff had an equitable title to receive. The action is not really to recover for the freight pro rata itineris, as is claimed by the Defendant, but in substance, and in fact, is an action for money had and received bj the Defendant.

It is claimed by the. Defendant that parol evidence was^not admissible to prove that the insurance was intended for any other person than the one for whom it is stated in the certificate to have been made. If an action lies to recover the money of the Defendant upon the ground that it was paid to him by the insurance company, and equitably belongs to the Plaintiff, as I think it does, then this objection cannot be sustained.

Even if this rule might be invoked, if the action was brought on the policy, it would not in my opinion be applicable in a case *75 where the right to recover depends upon the equitable right of the Plaintiff to the money. The evidence was admissible for the pirn-pose of showing who paid the money for the insurance that Pease & Trowbridge merely acted as agents of the Plaintiff, and that the money in the Defendant’s possession belonged to the Plaintiff;

In Dykers v. Townsend (24 N. Y. 57) it was held that a subscription by the agent of a party to he charged for stock purchased, is sufficient under the Statute of Frauds, though the name or existence of a principal does not appear upon the instrument; and parol evidence was held to he competent for the purpose of establishing that the subscription was in fact made by the Defendant. I think, therefore, that although the contract made was in the name of the Plaintiff’s agent, it was, in fact, a contract made by the Plaintiff, and the objection urged is not available.

The question made, whether there was an abandonment of the property, was a question between the insurer and the insured only, and is not,material; for if the money received by the Defendant was actually received for the benefit of the Plaintiff', then it is of no sort of importance whether or not there was an abandonment. There was,‘however, some evidence on that subject, and there was no error committed in submitting to the jury the question whether the cargo insured had been abandoned to .the underwriters, on the behalf of the Defendant, and with his authority, or that he had subsequently ratified such abandonment, and secured the full amount of the insurance upon a settlement made on the basis of such abandonment. The evidence tended to show that the abandonment was authorized by the Defendant. Roberts & Co., the consignees of the Defendant, gave notice to the company to that effect; the company assented to it, and paid the money to the consignees, who paid it over to the Defendant. I am inclined to think that even if we concede that the consignees had no power to bind the Defendant by the abandonment of the property, which is not entirely obvious, that the Defendant sanctioned and ratified the act of abandonment by receiving the benefits of the insurance; and having thus acquiesced in it, he is not in a position to object' to the act which he has *76 approved, without first returning the amount received by means thereof. He is precluded from denying its force and validity.

It was competent to prove what tools: place between McKib-bin, the Plaintiff, and Portier, the agent of the insurance company, after the disaster to the vessel. What actually became of the cargo after the boat was sunk, was a part of the res gestas. The testimony showed what disposition was made of the wheat, and the arrangement made in regard to it by the-insurance agent. It may also be observed that what passed between Portier and the Plaintiff was of no consequence, if the Defendant actually received an excess of money over the amount he could have recovered of the Plaintiff in an action brought by him for the loss of the wheat.

The testimony could not have changed the result, and the judgment will not be reversed for the admission of such evidence (The People v. Brandeth, 36 N. Y. 191).

The insurance was clearly intended to cover the freight, and, I think, it was not necessary that the freight should be insured eo nomine. By the .policy the amount to be paid was the value of the property at the place of destination, deducting the freight from the place of the disaster on t*he property which did not reach its destination. This included the value of the freight, deducting reasonable costs of transportation to the place of destination. But if it did not, the amount was actually paid the Defendant by the insurance company, and having received it, he is not in a position to claim that it was not. covered by the policy.

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Related

The People v. . Brandreth
36 N.Y. 191 (New York Court of Appeals, 1867)
Dykers v. . Townsend
24 N.Y. 57 (New York Court of Appeals, 1861)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.Y. 262, 6 Trans. App. 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckibbin-v-peck-ny-1868.