Modern Music Shop, Inc. v. Concordia Fire Insurance

131 Misc. 305, 226 N.Y.S. 630, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1291
CourtNew York City Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 131 Misc. 305 (Modern Music Shop, Inc. v. Concordia Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Modern Music Shop, Inc. v. Concordia Fire Insurance, 131 Misc. 305, 226 N.Y.S. 630, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1291 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

Eder, J.

For the agreed premium, which was paid, the defendant issued to the plaintiff its policy of insurance, insuring the property of the plaintiff against loss by fire, including the plaintiff’s insurable interest in the improvements and betterments to the building in question.

On July 15, 1926, and while the policy was in full force and effect, a fire occurred in the premises of the plaintiff covered by the policy, resulting in a loss for which it seeks recovery in this action.

[306]*306The damage, it is alleged, amounts to $850, and occurred to the improvements and betterments to the premises occupied by the plaintiff, and in which it had an insurable interest. The defendant conceded that this sum is the amount of the damage done by the fire to the betterments and improvements described in the proof of loss filed.

The plaintiff occupied the corner store on the southwest corner of the building, under a lease made April 27, 1920, for the term of seven years from May 1, 1920, for use as a music store, for the sale of music and musical instruments. In 1923 the landlord consented to the plaintiff using in connection with its business, as a showroom, the basement underneath the store, provided it bore all the expense and responsibility in connection with the change and use of the basement. Prior to its conversion into a showroom this basement had been used for storage purposes only, to store beers, wines and liquors, the store above and occupied by the plaintiff, having been previously used as a saloon. As to its condition prior to its conversion into a display room, the testimony is that the walls were in a very rough state; the ceiling was roughly finished and had steam pipes and pipes that contained the drain water, which were all around the basement. The floor, which was of concrete, was broken and uneven. Following the consent of the landlord to the change and use requested by the plaintiff, it proceeded to alter the basement into a showroom, first obtaining the permission of the municipal authorities to make the change, and the undisputed testimony is that the alteration work and improvements cost in the neighborhood of $3,000. •

The claim made at the trial was that the sound value of these improvements at the time of the fire was about $2,000. The nature of the improvements made consisted of framing all the walls of the basement, leveling of the cement floor, removal of certain plumbing, plastering of the walls, installation of beaver boards, paneling, painting and decorating, the installation of a metal ceiling, electrical fixtures, construction of display rooms and demonstration booths, erection of an iron stairway with marble seeps leading from the basement to the store, building of record racks, and installation of doors leading from the basement to the street. The pillars and posts were straightened out by making them square, with beveled mirrors around them, and the posts were sash wired with plastering on the sash wire.

When possession of the basement was taken, the steam pipes and the .pipes that contained the drain water which were all around the basement had to be supported, and framework had to be put on the ceiling to sustain the metal, and strips were placed all around [307]*307the ceiling in order to hold it. The waste outlets in the basement had to be improved as a precaution and protection against the contingency of flooding. As to the exit from the basement to the street, walls and two doors were constructed.

Considering the condition and use of the basement prior to its being converted into a display room, that the changes bettered and improved the premises, and come within the language of the terms of the policy relating to improvements and betterments to the building,” admit, I think of no doubt. The words “ betterments ” and “ improvements ” are terms of elasticity, and are really synonyms, being words of the same or like meaning. To better ” is in fact to improve, and to improve ” is to make better. As they are used in the policy, I think these words imply and mean a substantial or fairly substantial alteration, addition or change to the premises used and occupied by the assured, rising above and beyond and amounting to something more than a simple or minor repair. And I hold that the nature of the work done in converting the basement intq a display room, in the manner proved, brings it within that category, and that it was of the kind and character contemplated by this language of the policy, and is within the fair intendment of its terms. These terms, I think, mean to insure those alterations, additions or changes made by the assured to that part of the realty used and occupied by him for and in the conduct of his business.

If the plaintiff was the actual owner of the entire building, and had improved the basement from a mere repository to a display room, or store for business purposes, I do not believe any one will dispute that under such a policy as this, the plaintiff could recover for the damage to this improvement, or that it was not a betterment ” or improvement ” to the fee, embraced within these terms, and covered by the policy, and that he had an insurable interest therein. The premises, to the extent demised, are as much the assured’s, as if he held the absolute fee to them. A leasehold interest in real estate, for a term of years, is a chattel real, and as such is ranked as an estate in land. (Averill v. Taylor, 8 N. Y. 44, 51, 52.) As Professor Aron says in his “ Digest of the New York Real Property Law ” (Ed. 1923, p. 136): “ An estate for years represents for the time being the ownership of the property.” And in addition, there is, in the instant case, the undisputed fact that the landlord expressly agreed that the plaintiff should have the absolute title to the improvements and betterments which it made. Upon principle I am unable to perceive any distinction between the case of an absolute owner of the entire fee, and one who, in legal contemplation and effect, occupies the [308]*308same relation and status, to the extent specifically demised. To that extent, the plaintiff, though a tenant, was the owner of and had an “ insurable interest ” in the improvements and betterments to the building, within the terms of the policy.

The rule as to what constitutes an insurable interest is well stated in 32 Corpus Juris, 1111, as follows: In general a person has an insurable interest in the subject-matter insured where he has such a relation or connection with, or concern in it, that he will derive pecuniary benefit or advantage from its preservation and will suffer pecuniary loss or damage from its destruction, termination, or injury by the happening of the event insured against.”

An insurable interest ” says the court in Cone v. Niagara Fire Ins. Co. (60 N. Y. 619, 621), is that property or right of the assured in respect to which he is hable to loss. The assured has an insurable interest, when he has an interest in the subject insured, and the happening of the event insured against, might bring upon him pecuniary loss.” It is not even necessary that the assured shquld have, in the property damaged or destroyed, an interest, legal or equitable, but it is sufficient merely that he is so situated with respect to it that he would be hable to loss if it is destroyed or injured by the peril insured against. (Berry v. American Central Insurance Co., 132 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
131 Misc. 305, 226 N.Y.S. 630, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/modern-music-shop-inc-v-concordia-fire-insurance-nycityct-1927.