New York Ice Co. v. Northwestern Insurance

10 Abb. Pr. 34, 31 Barb. 72, 20 How. Pr. 424
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1860
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Abb. Pr. 34 (New York Ice Co. v. Northwestern Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Ice Co. v. Northwestern Insurance, 10 Abb. Pr. 34, 31 Barb. 72, 20 How. Pr. 424 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1860).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.

—The plaintiffs brought their action against the defendants on a policy of insurance against loss by fire. In the complaint, they averred their claim on the policy for the loss, and they also averred facts from which they claimed that an error had occurred in the making out of the policy of insurance, and they demanded judgment against the defendant for the amount of the loss, and in case it should be necessary to the recovery, that the policy should be reformed and corrected, for a further judgment, as might be necessary.

It is apparent that both legal and equitable relief is prayed for in this complaint, although the main cause of action is to recover for the loss, and the equitable relief is merely sought for, if it shall be found necessary for the plaintiffs’ recovery. The equitable relief was to reform the policy, by correcting the alleged mistake.

It appears to me that this cause should have gone to the circuit for trial. There the plaintiffs could have tried their action to recover for the loss before a jury, and as both the legal and equitable relief is prayed for, the judge holding that court could have granted such relief, and then submitted the other questions to the jury.

But the parties have seen fit to bring the cause on for trial, as an equity case, before the special term, and the only question submitted to me is as to the right of the plaintiffs to have.the policy of insurance reformed, in what they allege to be a mistake.

Upon the trial, it appeared that the testimony of the witnesses [36]*36did not agree as to the facts. The broker who obtained the insurance states a case from which such a mistake might be inferred, while the agent of the defendants denies such statements, and shows, on his part, that no such mistake occurred, but that the policy was made out in strict compliance with the application of the broker, as to some of the matters stated by the plaintiffs’ witness. He is also contradicted by a clerk in the office of the defendants.

I am not able to say, under such circumstances, that the plaintiffs have made out a case entitling them to the relief they ask for.

1. Because the evidence is contradictory, and the weight of the evidence is against the plaintiffs.

'2. Because if the witnesses on both sides are correct in,their testimony, it shows that the contract was made under a mistake of the contracting parties, and not that the mistake occurred in filling up the policy. Equity has no authority to make a contract for parties which they never entered into, and where the relief sought is to reform a contract, that can only be to make the contract as both parties intended to make it. The plaintiff has no more right to have the contract made as he intended it to be, than the defendant has to alter it according to his understanding; and unless it clearly appears that both parties agreed together, as the plaintiffs allege they did, he cannot have the relief he seeks for.

The only conclusion I can adopt on this evidence is, that there was a mutual mistake as to the description of the premises, arising from a misunderstanding of the parties in the original negotiation of the" contract, and that the defendant’s agent, in making the policy, made it as he intended it to be when he agreed to insure the property. The policy was made out according to the "description entered by him in the books of the company, was delivered in that form to the plaintiff’s agent, and, although corrected afterwards in another matter, was never objected to for the cause now alleged, until after the fire had taken place. It is true, this agent says, his attention was never called to it" until after the fire, but still there is nothing’to show any error on the defendant’s part.

Upon this branch of the case, I am clearly of the opinion, that the plaintiff is not entitled to the equitable relief demanded.

[37]*37Another question is presented in this action, under the Code, which is not free from difficulty. The plaintiffs ask to have a further trial as to their right to recover on the policy of insurance as it is, although the equitable relief sought is denied.

Under the -former system, there was no doubt as to the rule, that if the equitable relief sought for was granted, a court off equity obtained jurisdiction over the whole subject-matter, and could adjudicate upon the same, although the plaintiff had a legal remedy. .(4 Cow., 707; 10 Johns., 596.)

But if the plaintiffs fail entirely in obtaining the equitable relief asked for by them, I am not aware that the court ever retained jurisdiction of the subject-matter, to enable the plaintiffs to recover the claim, for which, under other circumstances, or independent of the equitable relief sought, their remedy was purely legal. (1 Gil., 187.) By the constitution, this jurisdiction, both equitable and legal, is now vested in the same tribunal, and by the Code, the distinction between equitable and legal remedies is said to be abolished, although by some provisions therein such distinction is still maintained.

It has been doubted by some judges whether such distinction can be abolished by the Legislature, further than as to the mode of proceeding. A different construction was given to the Code by the Court of Appeals, in Giles a. Lyon (4 Comst., 600), Gardner, J., referring to the 69th section of the Code abolishing the distinction between actions at law and suits in equity, and the preamble to the Code declaring that such distinction should not be longer continued, says, “ They (the legal and equitable remedies) were to be blended and formed into a single system, which should combine the principles peculiar to each, and be administered thereafter through the same forms, and under the same appellation.” The case of Marquet a. Marquet and wife, seems to involve this question. This case was tried as an equity cause, before the special term, without a jury, and was one in which the plaintiff only demanded equitable relief.

Upon the trial, Mr. Justice Parker-decided that the plaintiff was not entitled to the relief demanded, but inasmuch as it appeared that the plaintiffs had a legal claim to recover back money paid by them to one of the defendants, he rendered judgment against one defendant, and dismissed the complaint as to the other.

[38]*38This decision was reversed at the general term, the court holding that, inasmuch as the plaintiff had failed as to the equitable relief demanded in the complaint, they could not recover against the defendant for a claim not stated in the complaint, and of an entirely different nature. (7 How. Pr. R., 417.) The Court of Appeals (in 2 Kern., 336) held that the special term was right in its judgment. They say, “ the case made by the complaint, and the limits of the issue, alone determined the power of the court. These expressions of the statute include the statement of the right of the plaintiffs, and its infringement by the defendants. These constitute the case.”

“ The addition to these material facts of others, which neither show a right in the plaintiffs nor a wrong thereto on the part of the defendants, do not add to or alter the legal case contained in the complaint.”

“ Those matters in the complaint which did not show a right in the plaintiffs, were simply to be disregarded if there were other facts which made out a cause of action.”

In Crary a. Goodman (2 Kern,

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Bluebook (online)
10 Abb. Pr. 34, 31 Barb. 72, 20 How. Pr. 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-ice-co-v-northwestern-insurance-nysupct-1860.