McNally v. Phœnix Insurance

33 N.E. 475, 137 N.Y. 389, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 680, 92 Sickels 389, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 698
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 28, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by112 cases

This text of 33 N.E. 475 (McNally v. Phœnix Insurance) 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
McNally v. Phœnix Insurance, 33 N.E. 475, 137 N.Y. 389, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 680, 92 Sickels 389, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 698 (N.Y. 1893).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The plaintiffs sought to recover upon a policy of insurance for $2,500, issued May 2, 1885, upon a building situated on the shores of Gravesend bay, which was destroyed *394 by fire June 7, 1885, or a little more than a month after the insurance was effected.

At the close of the plaintiffs’ testimony on the trial the court, upon the motion of counsel for the defendant, granted a nonsuit, to which the counsel for the plaintiffs excepted, after having requested that the case be submitted to the jury. The motion for a nonsuit was made and granted upon three grounds:

1. ‘ That there was a breach of the warranty in the policy that the building was occupied at the túne of the insurance.

2. That the final proofs of the loss were not furnished until June 7, 1886, a year from the time of the loss.

3. That this suit was commenced on the same day that the final proofs of loss were served, and as the claims were not due, by the terms of the policy, until sixty days after compliance with all the requirements thereof, the action was premature.

In reviewing a judgment upon a nonsuit the plaintiffs are entitled to the benefit of every fact that the jury could have found from the evidence given, and to every legitimate inference that is warranted by the proofs: This dispo-

sition of a cause by the trial court is never warranted unless it appears that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover, after giving him the benefit of the most favorable view that a jury would be warranted in taking of the evidence. The plaintiffs’ theory with respect to the facts, so far as they are supported by evidence, must be deemed to be established, and where inferences are to be drawn from facts and circumstances, not in themselves certain or incontrovertible, it is generally for the jury and not the court.

It appears from the evidence that one of the plaintiffs applied for the insurance directly at the principal office of the company in Brooklyn, and it was not procured through any local agent. He was introduced to a person in charge of the office and who, it seems, was the defendant’s cashier. He stated to him the amount "of the insurance required; that the building was in process of construction, not quite complete, *395 and not yet occupied or used; that when complete it was to be used as a storage ice-house. The policy was not then procured, but the cashier made a memorandum of something, told him he would not do anything in the matter until the secretary arrived, and to call in a few days after. It seems that the party who introduced him to the officers of the company had an office in the same building, and had some claim upon the property which was the subject of insurance by way of mortgage. This mortgage, however, was paid off by the owners before this suit was commenced, and no question was made in regard to it upon the trial as an obstacle to the right of the plaintiffs to recover. The circumstance is important now only as it tends to show that the party thus introducing the owners or one of them to the defendant, and to whom the policy was afterwards delivered, was perhaps as much interested in procuring the insurance as the plaintiffs themselves. It does not appear that any of the plaintiffs had any further negotiations with the company prior to issuing the policy, but they left the matter with Nostrand who had or was about to take the mortgage, and who had opened the transaction by introducing one of the owners and had himself one or more interviews with some of the defendant’s officers in regard to the matter, representing, as he says, himself and his interest as well as the owners. The policy was delivered to him on the day of its date, and on the same day Nostrand, describing himself as agent, signed a written application in which the building is described as “ used as a storage ice house.” The building was entirely new and at the date of the policy and at the time of the fire was unoccupied. The evidence tended to show that the building was constructed and intended for use in the business of receiving and storing ice to be transferred by boat down the Hudson river, but was destroyed before the owners commenced to use it for that purpose.

Notwithstanding the statement in the application and in the policy as to the use and occupancy of the building the jury might have found, from the testimony, that the officers of the defendant had been fully informed prior to the execution or delivery of the *396 application or the policy of the condition of the subject of the insurance with respect to its use and occupancy, and of all the facts bearing upon the nature of the risk, and if the company had knowledge before the contract was made that the building was not quite completed, and was neither used nor occupied that would be evidence upon which to base a waiver on its part of • the condition that the policy should become forfeited in case of non-occupation. When a policy is issued with full knowledge on the part of the underwriter of facts in direct conflict with the statement on the same subject in the application it is reasonable to assume that there was no intention to insist upon the condition, or claim a forfeiture under it. (Van Shoick v. Niagara Fire Ins. Co., 68 N. Y. 434; Richmond v. Niagara Fire Ins. Co., 19 id. 230; Woodruff v. Imperial Ins. Co., 83 id. 133; Short v. Home Ins. Co., 90 id. 16; Haight v. Continental Ins. Co., 92 id. 51; Bennett v. North British Ins. Co., 81 id. 213; McCall v. Sun Mut. Ins. Co., 66 id. 511.)

If it be true that when the contract was made the defendant had knowledge that the building was in fact unoccupied it is necessary to presume that the statement in the application and in the policy to the contrary was inserted by mistake in order to relieve it from the imputation of a fraudulent intent to deliver and receive pay for an invalid instrument, or that it intended to hold itself estopped from setting up a breach of the condition or warranty as a defense. If an action to reform the contract was necessary, as to which we now express no opinion, it is sufficient to say upon this appeal that no such point was made at the trial. It appeared that after the defendant had received the proofs of loss from the plaintiffs that it returned the same for the reason, among others, that a magistrate’s certificate, required by the policy as to certain facts which will be hereafter noticed, was not attached and which was subsequently supplied by the plaintiffs. If the defendant at the time intended to avail itself of the breach of the warranty above referred to this requirement was, of course, wholly unnecessary; and when an insurance company, *397

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.E. 475, 137 N.Y. 389, 50 N.Y. St. Rep. 680, 92 Sickels 389, 1893 N.Y. LEXIS 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcnally-v-phnix-insurance-ny-1893.