Mulville v. Adams

19 F. 887, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2134
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York
DecidedMarch 4, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 19 F. 887 (Mulville v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulville v. Adams, 19 F. 887, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2134 (circtndny 1884).

Opinion

Wallace, J.

The complainant, as trustee for 21 insurance companies that had issued policies of fire insurance to the defendant Adams, took an assignment of a bond and mortgage executed by Adams to one Dodge, and has filed this bill to foreclose the mortgage and obtain a decree against Adams on the bond. The property of; Adams insured by said policies had been burned, and suits had been brought, some by Adams and some by Dodge, against the several companies to recover the loss, when it was arranged between all the parties that Dodge should assign the bond and mortgage to the complainant, and the pending suits should be discontinued. The assignment contained the following clause:

“The said Mulville, in consideration of receiving said assignment and the discontinuance of such actions, agrees to and with the said Dodge that he will within thirty days commence a suit to foreclose the said mortgage, to which suit the said Adams shall be made a party, and a claim made against him for any deficiency, and that if any of the said policies of insurance were valid as to the interest of said Adams therein at the time of the lire, May 15, 1877, that then such of them as were then valid shall bo deemed a good and sufficient defense to the extent that such policies may liaye been valid.”

The property insured consisted of “a saw-mill building, a stone boiler-house attached thereto, and a brick chimney standing detached, all known as the Clinton Mills, together with the engines, boilers, machinery, tools, and all fixtures and appurtenances contained in the buildings.” The total insurance was $20,500, of which $5,473.50 was upon the buildings and $15,026.50 was upon the personal property and fixtures.

[888]*888The bill alleges generally that the several insurance policies issued by the companies- to Adams were invalid and void on account of misrepresentations, concealment, and breach of warranty on the part of Adams. The specific allegations are that the insurance was- made and issued upon a survey and written description of the property, and that by the terms of the policies such survey and description were to be taken and deemed a part of such policy and a warranty on the part of the assured; and that by other conditions of the policies any false representations by the assured of the condition, situation, or occupancy of the property, any omission to make known every fact material to the risk, any overvaluation, or any misrepresentation whatever, either in a written application or otherwise, should render the policies void: The bill further alleges that in the said survey and description of the premises, among other things, the insured represented the premises described in said policies as being disconnected and detached from a building known' and described as a lath and shingle mill; and further represented that there was no planer or planing machine on said premises, nor in the said adjoining building; that there was no woodland or woods within one quarter of a mile of said premises; and that there were no other buildings than those set forth in the application within 150 feet of the buildings insured,—all of which representations were false. The bill also alleges that the insured represented and warranted that there was no incumbrance or mortgage on the property insured, whereas there was in fact at the . time of the application for insurance a mortgage thereon in favor of one Dodge. By an amendment to the bill it is alleged that by the terms of the several policies it was conditioned that if the property covered by the insurance should be sold, conveyed, or transferred, the policies should become void, and that they did become void because of a conveyance made by Adams to his son after procuring the insurance and before the fire.

The case turns upon the validity of the policies as affected by the misrepresentations and breaches thus set forth. If none of them are invalid because of these misrepresentations and breaches, they were valid at the time of the fire. The bill contains further allegations intended to show that a recovery could not have been had against the insurance companies upon the policies because of breaches of conditions which took place after the loss, such as failure of the assured to comply with the conditions respecting proofs of loss, failure to-furnish certified copies of invoices;: of property destroyed, refusal of the assured to arbitrate, and overvaluation and false swearing in the proofs of loss. These allegations must be deemed irrelevant to the real controversy, because by the agreement under which the complainant acquired the mortgage the only question open to contestation is whether the policies were valid at the time of the fire. If they were then valid, they are a good defense to the mortgage. The language of the agreement does not permit the complainant to contest. [889]*889generally the question whether the plaintiffs in the pending suits against the insurance companies were entitled to recover upon the policies.

The validity of the policies lias boon assailed in the arguments of counsel upon several grounds, which must be disregarded because the allegations of the bill do not present them. No overvaluation is alleged except in the proofs of loss, and no concealment, as distinct from misrepresentation, is alleged. The controversy is therefore narrowed to the specific issues of misrepresentation or breach of warranty as follows: That the insured premises were disconnected from the shingle mill; that there was no planing-machine in the saw-mill or shingle-mill; that there was no woods or woodlands within one quarter of a mile; that there were no other buildings, except those shown in the survey, within 150-feet of the insured premises; that there was no mortgage to Dodge upon the property; and whether there was a breach of condition whereby the policies are void because of the conveyance of Adams to his son.

There were no oral representations made by Adams, or in his behalf, as a basis for the insurance. The policies were obtained through one Moies, an insurance broker employed by Adams. Moies applied to ono Woodward, an insurance agent, and produced to him a written application which had been used by Adams several years before for obtaining a policy on the same property from the Imperial Fire Insurance Company. There was a survey or diagram showing the ground plan of the saw-mill, the shingle-mill, and the chimney, annexed to the application. Woodward was agent for four insurance companies—the Farmville, the Humboldt, the Safeguard, and the Boyal Canadian. He made a synopsis of the Imperial application, which is spoken of in the proofs as a “digest,” annexing to it a copy of the diagram and a description of the property to be insured. This was shown by him to the officers or agents of some of the companies, and the policies issued by these companies were based upon it as the application for insurance. Every policy in suit was obtained upon this “digest,” except the policies issued'by the companies for which Woodward was agent and those issued by the Merchants Insurance Company, the St. Louis Insurance Company, and the American Central Insurance Company. The policies issued by the Farmville, the Humboldt, the Safeguard, the Boyal Canadian, the Merchants, the St. Louis, and the American Central Companies were obtained upon the original or Imperial application.

1. There was no misrepresentation or breach of warranty which avoids the policies issued upon the basis of the “digest.” Every representation contained in this application was a warranty by the terms of the policies, but none of the representations wore untrue.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F. 887, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulville-v-adams-circtndny-1884.