Merrill v. . Agricultural Ins. Co.

73 N.Y. 452, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 638
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 21, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 73 N.Y. 452 (Merrill v. . Agricultural Ins. Co.) 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
Merrill v. . Agricultural Ins. Co., 73 N.Y. 452, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 638 (N.Y. 1878).

Opinion

Folger, J.

One of the points presented for a reversal of judgment, is, that the plaintiff made a warranty to the defendant that she had a grant in fee of a freehold estate in the buildings. This contention arises upon a question and an answer in the application for insurance. The question was, “ What is your title to, or interest in, the property ?” The answer was in a single word, “ deed.” It is claimed *456 that this answer imported that she possessed ail unqualified grant in fee of a freehold estate. We do not think that the single word “ deed,” thus used, must, of necessity, have that meaning alone. In the first place, the question put does not ask only as to the legal title. It is in the alternative, and asks as to the title, or as to an interest. It imports a distinction of meaning in the two words. It plainly indicates that a title is something greater and more certain than an interest, as it sometimes is. A title is a lawful cause or ground for possessing that which is ours. (Co. Litt., 345 5, *155.) An interest, though primarily it included the terms estate, right and title (Co. Litt., 345 b, *155), has latterly come often to mean less, and to be the same as concern, share and the like. {Inhabitants of Northampton v. Smith, 11 Mete., 390.) Clearly it meant less in this question in the application. There is no reason, why we are bound to take the answer, as made in reply to the part of the question which aslfed of the title, rather than to the part which asked of an interest. Lather, to save a loss of rights by forfeiture, or lapse in the nature thereof, we may take the question and answer as will be most favorable to the party in danger of a loss of rights. If then there was no interest in land capable of creation by deed, or capable of resulting from the taking of a deed, save that suggested by the appellant, it may be that the plaintiff would be held to have declared by the use of that word that her interest in the premises was to that extent. That she had an interest in the premises at the time is not disputed ; that it had its origin in a deed to her, and was still based primarily upon that deed, is not disputed. Whatever the limit of that interest, or however complicated, it grew from a deed. It would not have been false then, either in words or in substance, to have said that her interest was “ by deed," which phrase is the natural and obvious meaning of the use of the single word “ deed," in answer to the question put in the application. Again, if the question and answer be applied to an inquiry for the title, rather than, or as well as, the interest, the answer is not false* The answer by the word deed, *457 alone, is elliptical in meaning. It could not have been understood to have meant other than that she had a title by deed. That she had some title to the premises at the time, the facts of the case fully disclose, and that "whatever it was it came to her in its inception by deed. If an instrument had been framed expressly to create and lodge in her just the title and interest in the premises which, it appears from the record, she then had, and which would have been effectual therefor, it would not have been impropérly called a deed. It was not then a breach of a warranty that she had title by deed, that the relations existed between the plaintiff and Cooper which appeared upon the trial.

It does not appear, nor is any claim made, that the defendant or its agent was purposely misled by the plaintiff or her agent. It is simply a question whether there was a breach of a warranty committed in fact, but without design. If the answer had stated an untruth, there would have been such a breach. To make it untrue it is necessary to restrict the single word of the answer, to one of many meanings which it has when used as a single word, and besides that to shut out the elliptical meaning with which it was evidently charged. This we are not called upon to do.

Another point made, is, that the plaintiff warranted that there was no incumbrance upon the premises at the time of the insurance. She did so warrant. It is true that she had made before that two mortgages to Cooper which were not discharged of record, and had been foreclosed,, sale had and judgment for deficiency entered. But the amount of them all had been actually paid to, and received by, the attorney and agent of Cooper. Thus they were in fact and legally extinguished, and did not exist as incumbrances upon the premises, though not technically discharged on the record. The payment was after that approved and enforced as an extinguishment, by the court. There is not in the facts disclosed, a legal reason why the defendants should not, in this respect, be held to the performance of their contract.

*458 The next contention of the defendant is this : That by the giving of some mortgages upon the lands, after the issuing of the policy of insurance, the policy was made void. The condition in the policy is, that if the property insured should become incumbered b'y mortgage, judgment, or otherwise, the policy should be null and void' until the written consent of the defendant at its home office was obtained.

The policy was issued upon buildings and upon chattel property in them. Some part of both were burned. The trial court ruled that by reason of the mortgages given after the risk was taken, the condition became operative, so far that the plaintiff could not recover for her loss by the destruction of the buildings, but that she might recover, notwithstanding that condition, for the chattels lost.

It is claimed by the defendant, that not only was the policy avoided as to the buildings insured, but as to the chattel property as well. This depends upon whether the contract was entire or severable ; whether a condition admitted to have been broken as to a part of the whole subject of insurance, was thereby broken as to each subject of insurance.

It has become the law of the case, by the ruling at the circuit, that by the subsequent incumbrance upon the land and the buildings, the policy became null and void as to the insurance effected upon the latter. But it was held that the policy was a severable contract, and remained in force as to the chattel property. The whole contract of the parties is contained in one written and printed instrument. So that physically, and so far as the material expression and embodiment of it is concerned, it is one entire contract not severable. Whether it is severable in law, depends upon the rules which have been laid down, and their application to the facts in the case. If the part to be performed by one party consists of' several distinct and separate items, and the price to be paid by the other is apportioned to each item to be performed, such a contract will be generally held to be severable. Thus where one had bought and paid for two distinct pieces of *459 land, a fixed and separate sum for each, and was evicted from one while he remained in possession of the other undisturbed, it was held that he might recover for the loss of the one, on the ground that the bargain for the land consisted of two distinct contracts. (Johnson v. Johnson, 3 B. & P., 162; see, also, Mayfield v. Wadsley, 3 B.

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.Y. 452, 1878 N.Y. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrill-v-agricultural-ins-co-ny-1878.